883 research outputs found
p-Wave superfluid and phase separation in atomic Bose-Fermi mixture
We consider a system of repulsively interacting Bose-Fermi mixtures of spin
polarized uniform atomic gases at zero temperature. We examine possible
realization of p-wave superfluidity of fermions due to an effective attractive
interaction via density fluctuations of Bose-Einstein condensate within
mean-field approximation. We find the ground state of the system by direct
energy comparison of p-wave superfluid and phase-separated states, and suggest
an occurrence of the p-wave superfluid for a strong boson-fermion interaction
regime. We study some signatures in the p-wave superfluid phase, such as
anisotropic energy gap and quasi-particle energy in the axial state, that have
not been observed in spin unpolarized superfluid of atomic fermions. We also
show that a Cooper pair is a tightly bound state like a diatomic molecule in
the strong boson-fermion coupling regime and suggest an observable indication
of the p-wave superfluid in the real experiment.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figur
Banking in Japan: Will "Too Big To Fail" Prevail?
This paper reviews the evolution of the Japanese banking sector and the development of the banking crisis in Japan in the context of "too big to fail." It describes the deterioration of the Japanese financial sector caused by the bad loan problems and the failure of policymakers to get a grip on the underlying problems. Even at the start of the new century, Japanese policymakers still continue to struggle to find the right policy response to tackle the banking problems and how to avoid moral hazard behavior intertwined with "too big to fail" concerns. The increasing concentration in the Japanese banking industry, which is now dominated by five huge financial conglomerates, should make it more difficult to definitely end "too big to fail" in Japanese prudential policy. In this respect, we believe that the "too big to fail" policy in Japan will prevail.Too big to fail, Banking crisis, Japan
Constraints on color dipole-nucleon cross section from diffractive heavy quarkonium production
We study the hard color dipole-nucleon cross section within perturbative QCD
and discuss its relation to observables in diffractive leptoproduction of heavy
quarkonium. The dipole cross section calculated with the unintegrated gluon
density of the nucleon substantially differs from the well-known perturbative
form for fm, where is the transverse
separation of the dipole. We show the measured ratio of to
photoproduction cross sections constrains the dipole cross section at
intermediate , and in fact excludes the simple
behavior. We also calculate the -slopes of the diffractive productions. We emphasize the difference of -slopes, , is dominated by the dipole-nucleon dynamics. This difference is
found to be about with our dipole cross section.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, to be published in proceedings of International
Workshop on Diffraction in High-Energy Physics (Diffraction2000
Diffusion of water in thermally fractured granite rock cores studied by PFG NMR and MRI: Diffusion of water in thermally fractured granite rock coresstudied by PFG NMR and MRI
Diffusion of water in thermally fractured granite was studied by using pulsed field gradient NMR (PFGNMR) and MRI methods. Two different approaches gave consistent results, indicating that these methods can be applied for materials of low porosity with fracture networks
First-principles method justifying the Dieke diagram and beyond
We present a method to determine the model Hamiltonians to treat rare-earth
multiplets in solids from the results of the quasiparticle self-consistent
\textit{GW} (QSGW) method. We apply the method to trivalent Eu compounds
EuCl, EuN, and Eu-doped GaN after examining free rare-earth ions. We solve
the model Hamiltonian by the exact diagonalization. Our results justify
applying the Dieke diagram to ions in solid, while its limitation is clarified.
In particular, we show that the crystal fields cause sizable breaking of the
Russell-Saunders coupling.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 2 table
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