52,702 research outputs found
Hermitian scattering behavior for the non-Hermitian scattering center
We study the scattering problem for the non-Hermitian scattering center,
which consists of two Hermitian clusters with anti-Hermitian couplings between
them. Counterintuitively, it is shown that it acts as a Hermitian scattering
center, satisfying , i.e., the Dirac probability current
is conserved, when one of two clusters is embedded in the waveguides. This
conclusion can be applied to an arbitrary parity-symmetric real Hermitian graph
with additional PT-symmetric potentials, which is more feasible in experiment.
Exactly solvable model is presented to illustrate the theory. Bethe ansatz
solution indicates that the transmission spectrum of such a cluster displays
peculiar feature arising from the non-Hermiticity of the scattering center.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Non-Hermitian description of the dynamics of inter-chain pair tunnelling
We study inter-chain pair tunnelling dynamics based on an exact two-particle
solution for a two-leg ladder. We show that the Hermitian Hamiltonian shares a
common two-particle eigenstate with a corresponding non-Hermitian Hubbard
Hamiltonian in which the non-Hermiticity arises from an on-site interaction of
imaginary strength. Our results provides that the dynamic processes of
two-particle collision and across-legs tunnelling are well described by the
effective non-Hermitian Hubbard Hamiltonian based on the eigenstate
equivalence. We also find that any common eigenstate is always associated with
the emergence of spectral singularity in the non-Hermitian Hubbard model. This
result is valid for both Bose and Fermi systems and provides a clear physical
implication of the non-Hermitian Hubbard model.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Analysis-by-synthesis: Pedestrian tracking with crowd simulation models in a multi-camera video network
For tracking systems consisting of multiple cameras with overlapping field-of-views, homography-based approaches are widely adopted to significantly reduce occlusions among pedestrians by sharing information among multiple views. However, in these approaches, the usage of information under real-world coordinates is only at a preliminary level. Therefore, in this paper, a multi-camera tracking system with integrated crowd simulation is proposed in order to explore the possibility to make homography information more helpful. Two crowd simulators with different simulation strategies are used to investigate the influence of the simulation strategy on the final tracking performance. The performance is evaluated by multiple object tracking precision and accuracy (MOTP and MOTA) metrics, for all the camera views and the results obtained under real-world coordinates. The experimental results demonstrate that crowd simulators boost the tracking performance significantly, especially for crowded scenes with higher density. In addition, a more realistic simulation strategy helps to further improve the overall tracking result
Potentiation Decay of Synapses and the Length Distributions of Synfire Chains Self-organized in Recurrent Neural Networks
Synfire chains are thought to underlie precisely-timed sequences of spikes
observed in various brain regions and across species. How they are formed is
not understood. Here we analyze self-organization of synfire chains through the
spike-timing dependent plasticity (STDP) of the synapses, axon remodeling, and
potentiation decay of synaptic weights in networks of neurons driven by noisy
external inputs and subject to dominant feedback inhibition. Potentiation decay
is the gradual, activity-independent reduction of synaptic weights over time.
We show that potentiation decay enables a dynamic and statistically stable
network connectivity when neurons spike spontaneously. Periodic stimulation of
a subset of neurons leads to formation of synfire chains through a random
recruitment process, which terminates when the chain connects to itself and
forms a loop. We demonstrate that chain length distributions depend on the
potentiation decay. Fast potentiation decay leads to long chains with wide
distributions, while slow potentiation decay leads to short chains with narrow
distributions. We suggest that the potentiation decay, which corresponds to the
decay of early long-term potentiation of synapses (E-LTP), is an important
synaptic plasticity rule in regulating formation of neural circuity through
STDP
Generation of GHZ and W states for stationary qubits in spin network via resonance scattering
We propose a simple scheme to establish entanglement among stationary qubits
based on the mechanism of resonance scattering between them and a
single-spin-flip wave packet in designed spin network. It is found that through
the natural dynamical evolution of an incident single-spin-flip wave packet in
a spin network and the subsequent measurement of the output single-spin-flip
wave packet,multipartite entangled states among n stationary qubits,
Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) and W states can be generated.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
A two component jet model for the X-ray afterglow flat segment in short GRB 051221A
In the double neutron star merger or neutron star-black hole merger model for
short GRBs, the outflow launched might be mildly magnetized and neutron rich.
The magnetized neutron-rich outflow will be accelerated by the magnetic and
thermal pressure and may form a two component jet finally, as suggested by
Vlahakis, Peng & K\"{o}nigl (2003). We show in this work that such a two
component jet model could well reproduce the multi-wavelength afterglow
lightcurves, in particular the X-ray flat segment, of short GRB 051221A. In
this model, the central engine need not to be active much longer than the
prompt ray emission.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure; Accepted for publication by ApJ
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