4,141 research outputs found
Liouville-von Neumann approach and time-dependent Gaussian approximation
We show that Liouville-von Neumann approach to quantum mechanical systems,
which demands the existence of invariant operators, reproduces the
time-dependent variational Gaussian approximation. We find the effective action
of the time-dependent systems and show that many aspects of the dynamics are
independent of the details of time evolution, e.g., the squeezing of the
wave-function is determined by the effective potential of the final stage of
time-evolution.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Casimir energy of a spherical shell in Minkowski spacetime
We study the Casimir energy of a spherical shell of radius in
-Minkowski spacetime for a complex field with an asymmetric ordering
and obtain the energy up to . We show that the vacuum breaks
particle and anti-particle symmetry if one requires the spectra to be
consistent with the blackbody radiation at the commutative limit.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures, add more analysi
Post Gaussian effective potential in the Ginzburg Landau theory of superconductivity
The post Gaussian effective potential in D=3 dimensions and the Gaussian
effective potential in D=2+epsilon are evaluated for the Ginzburg-Landau theory
of superconductivity. It is shown that, the next order correction to the
Gaussian approximation of the Ginzburg-Landau parameter (kappa) is significant,
whereas contribution from the two dimensionality is rather small. This strongly
indicates that strong correlation plays a more dominant role than the two
dimensionality does in high T_c superconductivity.Comment: 15 pages, RevTeX, 4 figures, minor changes has been mad
The electron temperature of the inner halo of the Planetary Nebula NGC 6543
We investigate the electron temperature of the inner halo and nebular core
regions of NGC 6543, using archival Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Wide Field
Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) images taken through narrow band [O III] filters.
Balick et al. (2001) showed that the inner halo consists of a number of
spherical shells. We find the temperature of this inner halo to be much higher
(~15000 K) than that of the bright core nebula (~8500 K). Photo-ionization
models indicate that hardening of the UV radiation from the central star cannot
be the main source of the higher temperature in the halo region. Using a
radiation hydrodynamic simulation, we show that mass loss and velocity
variations in the AGB wind can explain the observed shells, as well as the
higher electron temperature.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, to be published in A&
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