21,800 research outputs found
Localized gap soliton trains of Bose-Einstein condensates in an optical lattice
We develop a systematic analytical approach to study the linear and nonlinear
solitary excitations of quasi-one-dimensional Bose-Einstein condensates trapped
in an optical lattice. For the linear case, the Bloch wave in the energy
band is a linear superposition of Mathieu's functions and ;
and the Bloch wave in the band gap is a linear superposition of
and . For the nonlinear case, only solitons inside the band gaps are
likely to be generated and there are two types of solitons -- fundamental
solitons (which is a localized and stable state) and sub-fundamental solitons
(which is a lacalized but unstable state). In addition, we find that the
pinning position and the amplitude of the fundamental soliton in the lattice
can be controlled by adjusting both the lattice depth and spacing. Our
numerical results on fundamental solitons are in quantitative agreement with
those of the experimental observation [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf92}, 230401
(2004)]. Furthermore, we predict that a localized gap soliton train consisting
of several fundamental solitons can be realized by increasing the length of the
condensate in currently experimental conditions.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publicaiton in PR
An approach for assessing software prototypes
A procedure for evaluating a software prototype is presented. The need to assess the prototype itself arises from the use of prototyping to demonstrate the feasibility of a design or development stategy. The assessment procedure can also be of use in deciding whether to evolve a prototype into a complete system. The procedure consists of identifying evaluations criteria, defining alterative design approaches, and ranking the alternatives according to the criteria
Thermal correlators of anyons in two dimensions
The anyon fields have trivial -commutator for not integer.
For integer the commutators become temperature-dependent operator
valued distributions. The -point functions do not factorize as for quasifree
states.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX (misprints corrected, a reference added
Reconstructed Intentions in Collaborative Problem Solving Dialogues
We provide evidence that speech act recognition, is 1) difficult for humans to do and 2) likely to misidentify proposals involving reconstructed intentions. We examine the reliability of coding for speech acts in collaborative dialogues and we present an approach for recognizing reconstructed proposals using domain context and other more easily recognized features. 1 Introduction Speech act recognition plays a prominent role in dialogue understanding, in traditional approaches that infer a plan using plan construction operators [PA80], [LA90], [LC91, LC92], and in more recent techniques relying on statistical correlations or finite state machines [RM95, QDL + 97]. Both approaches recognize surface speech acts, using surface form and information provided by the discourse context and the discourse operators, or by a finite state approximation of the planning information. These approaches assume that it is (relatively) simple to recognize speech acts, and that speech acts are a requi..
(Never) Mind your p's and q's: Von Neumann versus Jordan on the Foundations of Quantum Theory
In two papers entitled "On a new foundation [Neue Begr\"undung] of quantum
mechanics," Pascual Jordan (1927b,g) presented his version of what came to be
known as the Dirac-Jordan statistical transformation theory. As an alternative
that avoids the mathematical difficulties facing the approach of Jordan and
Paul A. M. Dirac (1927), John von Neumann (1927a) developed the modern Hilbert
space formalism of quantum mechanics. In this paper, we focus on Jordan and von
Neumann. Central to the formalisms of both are expressions for conditional
probabilities of finding some value for one quantity given the value of
another. Beyond that Jordan and von Neumann had very different views about the
appropriate formulation of problems in quantum mechanics. For Jordan, unable to
let go of the analogy to classical mechanics, the solution of such problems
required the identication of sets of canonically conjugate variables, i.e., p's
and q's. For von Neumann, not constrained by the analogy to classical
mechanics, it required only the identication of a maximal set of commuting
operators with simultaneous eigenstates. He had no need for p's and q's. Jordan
and von Neumann also stated the characteristic new rules for probabilities in
quantum mechanics somewhat differently. Jordan (1927b) was the first to state
those rules in full generality. Von Neumann (1927a) rephrased them and, in a
subsequent paper (von Neumann, 1927b), sought to derive them from more basic
considerations. In this paper we reconstruct the central arguments of these
1927 papers by Jordan and von Neumann and of a paper on Jordan's approach by
Hilbert, von Neumann, and Nordheim (1928). We highlight those elements in these
papers that bring out the gradual loosening of the ties between the new quantum
formalism and classical mechanics.Comment: New version. The main difference with the old version is that the
introduction has been rewritten. Sec. 1 (pp. 2-12) in the old version has
been replaced by Secs. 1.1-1.4 (pp. 2-31) in the new version. The paper has
been accepted for publication in European Physical Journal
Symmetric three-particle motion in Stokes flow: equilibrium for heavy spheres in contrast to "end-of-world" for point forces
A stationary stable solution of the Stokes equations for three identical
heavy solid spheres falling in a vertical plane is found. It has no analog in
the point-particle approximation. Three spheres aligned horizontally at equal
distances evolve towards the equilibrium relative configuration while the point
particles collapse onto a single point in a finite time.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figure
An astronomical search for evidence of new physics: Limits on gravity-induced birefringence from the magnetic white dwarf RE J0317-853
The coupling of the electromagnetic field directly with gravitational gauge
fields leads to new physical effects that can be tested using astronomical
data. Here we consider a particular case for closer scrutiny, a specific
nonminimal coupling of torsion to electromagnetism, which enters into a
metric-affine geometry of space-time. We show that under the assumption of this
nonminimal coupling, spacetime is birefringent in the presence of such a
gravitational field. This leads to the depolarization of light emitted from
extended astrophysical sources. We use polarimetric data of the magnetic white
dwarf to set strong constraints on the essential coupling
constant for this effect, giving k^2 \lsim (19 {m})^2 .Comment: Statements about Moffat's NGT modified. Accepted for publication in
Phys.Rev.
Accurate Reaction-Diffusion Operator Splitting on Tetrahedral Meshes for Parallel Stochastic Molecular Simulations
Spatial stochastic molecular simulations in biology are limited by the
intense computation required to track molecules in space either in a discrete
time or discrete space framework, meaning that the serial limit has already
been reached in sub-cellular models. This calls for parallel simulations that
can take advantage of the power of modern supercomputers; however exact methods
are known to be inherently serial. We introduce an operator splitting
implementation for irregular grids with a novel method to improve accuracy, and
demonstrate potential for scalable parallel simulations in an initial MPI
version. We foresee that this groundwork will enable larger scale, whole-cell
stochastic simulations in the near future.Comment: 33 pages, 10 figure
Role of interactions in ferrofluid thermal ratchets
Orientational fluctuations of colloidal particles with magnetic moments may
be rectified with the help of external magnetic fields with suitably chosen
time dependence. As a result a noise-driven rotation of particles occurs giving
rise to a macroscopic torque per volume of the carrier liquid. We investigate
the influence of mutual interactions between the particles on this ratchet
effect by studying a model system with mean-field interactions. The stochastic
dynamics may be described by a nonlinear Fokker-Planck equation for the
collective orientation of the particles which we solve approximately by using
the effective field method. We determine an interval for the ratio between
coupling strength and noise intensity for which a self-sustained rectification
of fluctuations becomes possible. The ratchet effect then operates under
conditions for which it were impossible in the absence of interactions.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figure
Electrostatics of ions inside the nanopores and trans-membrane channels
A model of a finite cylindrical ion channel through a phospholipid membrane
of width separating two electrolyte reservoirs is studied. Analytical
solution of the Poisson equation is obtained for an arbitrary distribution of
ions inside the trans-membrane pore. The solution is asymptotically exact in
the limit of large ionic strength of electrolyte on the two sides of membrane.
However, even for physiological concentrations of electrolyte, the
electrostatic barrier sizes found using the theory are in excellent agreement
with the numerical solution of the Poisson equation. The analytical solution is
used to calculate the electrostatic potential energy profiles for pores
containing charged protein residues. Availability of a semi-exact interionic
potential should greatly facilitate the study of ionic transport through
nanopores and ion channels
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