4,141 research outputs found

    Liouville-von Neumann approach and time-dependent Gaussian approximation

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    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 κ−\kappa-Minkowski spacetime

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    We study the Casimir energy of a spherical shell of radius aa in κ\kappa-Minkowski spacetime for a complex field with an asymmetric ordering and obtain the energy up to O(1/κ2)O(1/\kappa^2). 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

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    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

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    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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