10,724 research outputs found
2-16 mu m spectroscopy of micron-sized enstatite (Mg,Fe)(2)Si2O6 silicates from primitive chondritic meteorites
We present mid-infrared spectra from individual enstatite silicate grains separated from primitive type 3 chondritic meteorites. The 2-16 mu m transmission spectra were taken with microspectroscopic Fourier-transform infrared (FT-IR) techniques as part of a project to produce a data base of infrared spectra from minerals of primitive meteorites for comparison with astronomical spectra. In general, the wavelength of enstatite bands increases with the proportion of Fe. However, the wavelengths of the strong En(100) bands at 10.67 and 11.67 decrease with increasing Fe content. The 11.67-mu m band exhibits the largest compositional wavelength shift (twice as large as any other). Our fits of the linear dependence of the pyroxene peaks indicate that crystalline silicate peaks in the 10-mu m spectra of Herbig AeBe stars, HD 179218 and 104237, are matched by pyroxenes of En(90-92) and En(78-80), respectively. If these simplistic comparisons with the astronomical grains are correct, then the enstatite pyroxenes seen in these environments are more Fe-rich than are the forsterite (Fo(100)) grains identified in the far-infrared which are found to be Mg end-member grains. This differs from the general composition of type 3 chondritic meteoritic grains in which the pyroxenes are more Mg-rich than are the olivines from the same meteorite
Multiple Reflections and Diffuse Scattering in Bragg Scattering at Optical Lattices
We study Bragg scattering at 1D atomic lattices. Cold atoms are confined by
optical dipole forces at the antinodes of a standing wave generated inside a
laser-driven cavity. The atoms arrange themselves into an array of lens-shaped
layers located at the antinodes of the standing wave. Light incident on this
array at a well-defined angle is partially Bragg-reflected. We measure
reflectivities as high as 30%. In contrast to a previous experiment devoted to
the thin grating limit [S. Slama, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 94, 193901 (2005)]
we now investigate the thick grating limit characterized by multiple
reflections of the light beam between the atomic layers. In principle multiple
reflections give rise to a photonic stop band, which manifests itself in the
Bragg diffraction spectra as asymmetries and minima due to destructive
interference between different reflection paths. We show that close to
resonance however disorder favors diffuse scattering, hinders coherent multiple
scattering and impedes the characteristic suppression of spontaneous emission
inside a photonic band gap
Frustration of decoherence in -shaped superconducting Josephson networks
We examine the possibility that pertinent impurities in a condensed matter
system may help in designing quantum devices with enhanced coherent behaviors.
For this purpose, we analyze a field theory model describing Y- shaped
superconducting Josephson networks. We show that a new finite coupling stable
infrared fixed point emerges in its phase diagram; we then explicitly evidence
that, when engineered to operate near by this new fixed point, Y-shaped
networks support two-level quantum systems, for which the entanglement with the
environment is frustrated. We briefly address the potential relevance of this
result for engineering finite-size superconducting devices with enhanced
quantum coherence. Our approach uses boundary conformal field theory since it
naturally allows for a field-theoretical treatment of the phase slips
(instantons), describing the quantum tunneling between degenerate levels.Comment: 11 pages, 5 .eps figures; several changes in the presentation and in
the figures, upgraded reference
Exact Coupling Coefficient Distribution in the Doorway Mechanism
In many--body and other systems, the physics situation often allows one to
interpret certain, distinct states by means of a simple picture. In this
interpretation, the distinct states are not eigenstates of the full
Hamiltonian. Hence, there is an interaction which makes the distinct states act
as doorways into background states which are modeled statistically. The crucial
quantities are the overlaps between the eigenstates of the full Hamiltonian and
the doorway states, that is, the coupling coefficients occuring in the
expansion of true eigenstates in the simple model basis. Recently, the
distribution of the maximum coupling coefficients was introduced as a new,
highly sensitive statistical observable. In the particularly important regime
of weak interactions, this distribution is very well approximated by the
fidelity distribution, defined as the distribution of the overlap between the
doorway states with interaction and without interaction. Using a random matrix
model, we calculate the latter distribution exactly for regular and chaotic
background states in the cases of preserved and fully broken time--reversal
invariance. We also perform numerical simulations and find excellent agreement
with our analytical results.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figure
The k-Point Random Matrix Kernels Obtained from One-Point Supermatrix Models
The k-point correlation functions of the Gaussian Random Matrix Ensembles are
certain determinants of functions which depend on only two arguments. They are
referred to as kernels, since they are the building blocks of all correlations.
We show that the kernels are obtained, for arbitrary level number, directly
from supermatrix models for one-point functions. More precisely, the generating
functions of the one-point functions are equivalent to the kernels. This is
surprising, because it implies that already the one-point generating function
holds essential information about the k-point correlations. This also
establishes a link to the averaged ratios of spectral determinants, i.e. of
characteristic polynomials
Parametric correlations versus fidelity decay: the symmetry breaking case
We derive fidelity decay and parametric energy correlations for random matrix
ensembles where time--reversal invariance of the original Hamiltonian is broken
by the perturbation. Like in the case of a symmetry conserving perturbation a
simple relation between both quantities can be established.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Supersymmetric Extensions of Calogero--Moser--Sutherland like Models: Construction and Some Solutions
We introduce a new class of models for interacting particles. Our
construction is based on Jacobians for the radial coordinates on certain
superspaces. The resulting models contain two parameters determining the
strengths of the interactions. This extends and generalizes the models of the
Calogero--Moser--Sutherland type for interacting particles in ordinary spaces.
The latter ones are included in our models as special cases. Using results
which we obtained previously for spherical functions in superspaces, we obtain
various properties and some explicit forms for the solutions. We present
physical interpretations. Our models involve two kinds of interacting
particles. One of the models can be viewed as describing interacting electrons
in a lower and upper band of a one--dimensional semiconductor. Another model is
quasi--two--dimensional. Two kinds of particles are confined to two different
spatial directions, the interaction contains dipole--dipole or tensor forces.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figure
Complex scattering within D" observed on the very dense Los Angeles Region Seismic Experiment passive array
Several seismic phases that scattered within a few hundred kilometers of the base of the mantle are observed in a very dense seismic section. The Los Angeles Region Seismic Experiment passive phase array was composed of 88 seismometers placed along a 175 km profile. Records from two deep earthquakes in Tonga and one earthquake near Honshu, Japan show a secondary arrival between clear P and PcP arrivals. Modeling with layered structures shows that the Tonga and Honshu seismic sections are consistent with an increase in seismic velocity 140 and 240 km above the core-mantle boundary, respectively, and a ≃10-km thick low-velocity zone at the base of the mantle beneath a region in the mid Pacific. Several of these arrivals are not coherent enough to appear in higher resolution stacks from the much larger Southern California Seismic Network. This experiment illustrates that fine-scale passive array data can reveal small-scale deep Earth structure invisible to larger-scale seismic networks
Anomalous slow fidelity decay for symmetry breaking perturbations
Symmetries as well as other special conditions can cause anomalous slowing
down of fidelity decay. These situations will be characterized, and a family of
random matrix models to emulate them generically presented. An analytic
solution based on exponentiated linear response will be given. For one
representative case the exact solution is obtained from a supersymmetric
calculation. The results agree well with dynamical calculations for a kicked
top.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Sleep-Dependent Memory Consolidation and Incremental Sentence Comprehension : Computational Dependencies during Language Learning as Revealed by Neuronal Oscillations
We hypothesize a beneficial influence of sleep on the consolidation of the combinatorial mechanisms underlying incremental sentence comprehension. These predictions are grounded in recent work examining the effect of sleep on the consolidation of linguistic information, which demonstrate that sleep-dependent neurophysiological activity consolidates the meaning of novel words and simple grammatical rules. However, the sleep-dependent consolidation of sentence-level combinatorics has not been studied to date. Here, we propose that dissociable aspects of sleep neurophysiology consolidate two different types of combinatory mechanisms in human language: sequence-based (order-sensitive) and dependency-based (order-insensitive) combinatorics. The distinction between the two types of combinatorics is motivated both by cross-linguistic considerations and the neurobiological underpinnings of human language. Unifying this perspective with principles of sleep-dependent memory consolidation, we posit that a function of sleep is to optimize the consolidation of sequence-based knowledge (thewhen) and the establishment of semantic schemas of unordered items (thewhat) that underpin cross-linguistic variations in sentence comprehension. This hypothesis builds on the proposal that sleep is involved in the construction of predictive codes, a unified principle of brain function that supports incremental sentence comprehension. Finally, we discuss neurophysiological measures (EEG/MEG) that could be used to test these claims, such as the quantification of neuronal oscillations, which reflect basic mechanisms of information processing in the brain
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