6,916 research outputs found
Comprehensive Health Care Reform and Biomedical Innovation
Considers ways to control the costs of development, adoption, and diffusion of new technologies as part of comprehensive healthcare reform. Discusses how cost control interventions might affect coverage, physician payments, and care processes
Photon spheres in Einstein and Einstein-Gauss-Bonnet theories and circular null geodesics in axially-symmetric spacetimes
In this article we extend a recent theorem proven by Hod (Phys. Lett. B, {\bf
727}, 345--348, 2013) to -dimensional Einstein and Einstein-Gauss-Bonnet
theories, which gives an upper bound for the photon sphere radii of spherically
symmetric black holes. As applications of these results we give a universal
upper bound for the real part of quasinormal modes in the WKB limit and a
universal lower bound for the position of the first relativistic image in the
strong lensing regime produced by these type of black holes. For the
axially-symmetric case, we also make some general comments (independent of the
underlying gravitational theory) on the relation between circular null
geodesics and the fastest way to circle a black hole.Comment: In this post-publisher version two typos were corrected: the
signature of the metric in eq.(1) and a factor in eq.(102). We thanks Gary
Gibbons and Chris Pope for bringing to our attention these typo
A Jacobian elliptic single-field inflation
In the scenario of single-field inflation, this field is done in terms of
Jacobian elliptic functions. This approach provides, when constrained to
particular cases, analytic solutions already known in the past, generalizing
them to a bigger family of analytical solutions. The emergent cosmology is
analysed using the Hamilton-Jacobi approach and then, the main results are
contrasted with the recent measurements obtained from the Planck 2015 data.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Equation of State of the Fermionic 2D Hubbard Model
We present results for the equation of state of the two-dimensional Hubbard
model on an isotropic square lattice as obtained from a controlled and
numerically exact large-cluster dynamical mean field simulation. Our results
are obtained for large but finite systems and are extrapolated to infinite
system size using a known finite size scaling relation. We present the energy,
entropy, double occupancy and nearest-neighbour spin correlations extrapolated
to the thermodynamic limit and discuss the implications of these calculations
on pseudogap physics of the 2D-Hubbard model away from half filling. We find a
strong behavioural shift in energy below a temperature which becomes more
pronounced for larger clusters. Finally, we provide reference calculations and
tables for the equation of state for values of doping away from half filling
which are of interest to cold atom experiments.Comment: 8 pages 6 figures - See Source for Supplementary Material File
Non-geometric Kaluza-Klein monopoles and magnetic duals of M-theory R-flux backgrounds
We introduce a magnetic analogue of the seven-dimensional nonassociative
octonionic R-flux algebra that describes the phase space of M2-branes in
four-dimensional locally non-geometric M-theory backgrounds. We show that these
two algebras are related by a Spin(7) automorphism of the 3-algebra that
provides a covariant description of the eight-dimensional M-theory phase space.
We argue that this algebra also underlies the phase space of electrons probing
a smeared magnetic monopole in quantum gravity by showing that upon appropriate
contractions, the algebra reduces to the noncommutative algebra of a spin foam
model of three-dimensional quantum gravity, or to the nonassociative algebra of
electrons in a background of uniform magnetic charge. We realise this set-up in
M-theory as M-waves probing a delocalised Kaluza-Klein monopole, and show that
this system also has a seven-dimensional phase space. We suggest that the
smeared Kaluza-Klein monopole is non-geometric because it cannot be described
by a local metric. This is the magnetic analogue of the local non-geometry of
the R-flux background and arises because the smeared Kaluza-Klein monopole is
described by a U(1)-gerbe rather than a U(1)-fibration.Comment: 19 pages, 2 figures; v2: dimensionful factors corrected throughout,
exposition improved; Final version to be published in JHE
Optical conductivity in cluster dynamical mean field theory: formalism and application to high temperature superconductors
The optical conductivity of the one-band Hubbard model is calculated using
the 'Dynamical Cluster Approximation' implementation of dynamical mean field
theory for parameters appropriate to high temperature copper-oxide
superconductors. The calculation includes vertex corrections and the result
demonstrates their importance. At densities of one electron per site, an
insulating state is found with gap value and above-gap absorption consistent
with measurements. As carriers are added the above gap conductivity rapidly
weakens and a three component structure emerges, with a low frequency 'Drude'
peak, a mid-infrared absorption, and a remnant of the insulating gap. The
mid-infrared feature obtained at intermediate dopings is shown to arise from a
pseudogap structure in the density of states. On further doping the
conductivity evolves to the Drude peak plus weakly frequency dependent tail
structure expected for less strongly correlated metals.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Two-particle response in Cluster Dynamical Mean-Field Theory: Formalism and application to the Raman Response of High-temperature Superconductors
A method is presented for the unbiased numerical computation of two-particle
response functions of correlated electron materials via a solution of the
dynamical mean-field equations in the presence of a perturbing field. The power
of the method is demonstrated via a computation of the Raman and
scattering intensities of the two dimensional Hubbard model, in
parameter regimes believed to be relevant to high-temperature
superconductivity. The theory reproduces the `two-magnon' peak characteristic
of the Raman intensity of the insulating parent compounds of high- copper
oxide superconductors and shows how it evolves to a quasiparticle response as
carriers are added. The method can be applied in any situation where a solution
of the equilibrium dynamical mean-field equations is feasible
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