16,113 research outputs found
Numerical Methods for the 3-dimensional 2-body Problem in the Action-at-a-Distance Electrodynamics
We develop two numerical methods to solve the differential equations with
deviating arguments for the motion of two charges in the action-at-a-distance
electrodynamics. Our first method uses St\"urmer's extrapolation formula and
assumes that a step of integration can be taken as a step of light ladder,
which limits its use to shallow energies. The second method is an improvement
of pre-existing iterative schemes, designed for stronger convergence and can be
used at high-energies.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figure
Finite times to equipartition in the thermodynamic limit
We study the time scale T to equipartition in a 1D lattice of N masses
coupled by quartic nonlinear (hard) springs (the Fermi-Pasta-Ulam beta model).
We take the initial energy to be either in a single mode gamma or in a package
of low frequency modes centered at gamma and of width delta-gamma, with both
gamma and delta-gamma proportional to N. These initial conditions both give,
for finite energy densities E/N, a scaling in the thermodynamic limit (large
N), of a finite time to equipartition which is inversely proportional to the
central mode frequency times a power of the energy density E/N. A theory of the
scaling with E/N is presented and compared to the numerical results in the
range 0.03 <= E/N <= 0.8.Comment: Plain TeX, 5 `eps' figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Solution of a minimal model for many-body quantum chaos
We solve a minimal model for quantum chaos in a spatially extended many-body
system. It consists of a chain of sites with nearest-neighbour coupling under
Floquet time evolution. Quantum states at each site span a -dimensional
Hilbert space and time evolution for a pair of sites is generated by a
random unitary matrix. The Floquet operator is specified by a
quantum circuit of depth two, in which each site is coupled to its neighbour on
one side during the first half of the evolution period, and to its neighbour on
the other side during the second half of the period. We show how dynamical
behaviour averaged over realisations of the random matrices can be evaluated
using diagrammatic techniques, and how this approach leads to exact expressions
in the large- limit. We give results for the spectral form factor,
relaxation of local observables, bipartite entanglement growth and operator
spreading.Comment: Accepted in PR
Role of oxygen-oxygen hopping in the three-band copper-oxide model: quasiparticle weight, metal insulator and magnetic phase boundaries, gap values and optical conductivity
We investigate the effect of oxygen-oxygen hopping on the three-band
copper-oxide model relevant to high- cuprates, finding that the physics is
changed only slightly as the oxygen-oxygen hopping is varied. The location of
the metal-insulator phase boundary in the plane of interaction strength and
charge transfer energy shifts by eV or less along the charge transfer
axis, the quasiparticle weight has approximately the same magnitude and doping
dependence and the qualitative characteristics of the electron-doped and
hole-doped sides of the phase diagram do not change. The results confirm the
identification of LaCuO as a material with intermediate correlation
strength. However, the magnetic phase boundary as well as higher-energy
features of the optical spectrum are found to depend on the magnitude of the
oxygen-oxygen hopping. We compare our results to previously published one-band
and three-band model calculations.Comment: 13.5 pages, 16 figure
Direct numerical computation of disorder parameters
In the framework of various statistical models as well as of mechanisms for
color confinement, disorder parameters can be developed which are generally
expressed as ratios of partition functions and whose numerical determination is
usually challenging. We develop an efficient method for their computation and
apply it to the study of dual superconductivity in 4d compact U(1) gauge
theory.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures. Final revised version published in PR
Variational principle for the Wheeler-Feynman electrodynamics
We adapt the formally-defined Fokker action into a variational principle for
the electromagnetic two-body problem. We introduce properly defined boundary
conditions to construct a Poincare-invariant-action-functional of a finite
orbital segment into the reals. The boundary conditions for the variational
principle are an endpoint along each trajectory plus the respective segment of
trajectory for the other particle inside the lightcone of each endpoint. We
show that the conditions for an extremum of our functional are the
mixed-type-neutral-equations with implicit state-dependent-delay of the
electromagnetic-two-body problem. We put the functional on a natural Banach
space and show that the functional is Frechet-differentiable. We develop a
method to calculate the second variation for C2 orbital perturbations in
general and in particular about circular orbits of large enough radii. We prove
that our functional has a local minimum at circular orbits of large enough
radii, at variance with the limiting Kepler action that has a minimum at
circular orbits of arbitrary radii. Our results suggest a bifurcation at some
radius below which the circular orbits become saddle-point extrema. We give a
precise definition for the distributional-like integrals of the Fokker action
and discuss a generalization to a Sobolev space of trajectories where the
equations of motion are satisfied almost everywhere. Last, we discuss the
existence of solutions for the state-dependent delay equations with slightly
perturbated arcs of circle as the boundary conditions and the possibility of
nontrivial solenoidal orbits
Covariant EBK quantization of the electromagnetic two-body problem
We discuss a method to transform the covariant Fokker action into an implicit
two-degree-of-freedom Hamiltonian for the electromagnetic two-body problem with
arbitrary masses. This dynamical system appeared 100 years ago and it was
popularized in the 1940's by the still incomplete Wheeler and Feynman program
to quantize it as a means to overcome the divergencies of perturbative QED. Our
finite-dimensional implicit Hamiltonian is closed and involves no series
expansions. The Hamiltonian formalism is then used to motivate an EBK
quantization based on the classical trajectories with a non-perturbative
formula that predicts energies free of infinities.Comment: 21 page
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