1,429 research outputs found
Unusual localisation effects in quantum percolation
We present a detailed study of the quantum site percolation problem on simple
cubic lattices, thereby focussing on the statistics of the local density of
states and the spatial structure of the single particle wavefunctions. Using
the Kernel Polynomial Method we refine previous studies of the metal-insulator
transition and demonstrate the non-monotonic energy dependence of the quantum
percolation threshold. Remarkably, the data indicates a ``fragmentation'' of
the spectrum into extended and localised states. In addition, the observation
of a chequerboard-like structure of the wavefunctions at the band centre can be
interpreted as anomalous localisation.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figure
Singular kernels, multiscale decomposition of microstructure, and dislocation models
We consider a model for dislocations in crystals introduced by Koslowski,
Cuiti\~no and Ortiz, which includes elastic interactions via a singular kernel
behaving as the norm of the slip. We obtain a sharp-interface limit
of the model within the framework of -convergence. From an analytical
point of view, our functional is a vector-valued generalization of the one
studied by Alberti, Bouchitt\'e and Seppecher to which their rearrangement
argument no longer applies. Instead we show that the microstructure must be
approximately one-dimensional on most length scales and exploit this property
to derive a sharp lower bound
The electronic structure of amorphous silica: A numerical study
We present a computational study of the electronic properties of amorphous
SiO2. The ionic configurations used are the ones generated by an earlier
molecular dynamics simulations in which the system was cooled with different
cooling rates from the liquid state to a glass, thus giving access to
glass-like configurations with different degrees of disorder [Phys. Rev. B 54,
15808 (1996)]. The electronic structure is described by a tight-binding
Hamiltonian. We study the influence of the degree of disorder on the density of
states, the localization properties, the optical absorption, the nature of
defects within the mobility gap, and on the fluctuations of the Madelung
potential, where the disorder manifests itself most prominently. The
experimentally observed mismatch between a photoconductivity threshold of 9 eV
and the onset of the optical absorption around 7 eV is interpreted by the
picture of eigenstates localized by potential energy fluctuations in a mobility
gap of approximately 9 eV and a density of states that exhibits valence and
conduction band tails which are, even in the absence of defects, deeply located
within the former band gap.Comment: 21 pages of Latex, 5 eps figure
The Link between General Relativity and Shape Dynamics
We show that one can construct two equivalent gauge theories from a linking
theory and give a general construction principle for linking theories which we
use to construct a linking theory that proves the equivalence of General
Relativity and Shape Dynamics, a theory with fixed foliation but spatial
conformal invariance. This streamlines the rather complicated construction of
this equivalence performed previously. We use this streamlined argument to
extend the result to General Relativity with asymptotically flat boundary
conditions. The improved understanding of linking theories naturally leads to
the Lagrangian formulation of Shape Dynamics, which allows us to partially
relate the degrees of freedom.Comment: 19 pages, LaTeX, no figure
Finite size effects and localization properties of disordered quantum wires with chiral symmetry
Finite size effects in the localization properties of disordered quantum
wires are analyzed through conductance calculations. Disorder is induced by
introducing vacancies at random positions in the wire and thus preserving the
chiral symmetry. For quasi one-dimensional geometries and low concentration of
vacancies, an exponential decay of the mean conductance with the wire length is
obtained even at the center of the energy band. For wide wires, finite size
effects cause the conductance to decay following a non-pure exponential law. We
propose an analytical formula for the mean conductance that reproduces
accurately the numerical data for both geometries. However, when the
concentration of vacancies increases above a critical value, a transition
towards the suppression of the conductance occurs.
This is a signature of the presence of ultra-localized states trapped in
finite regions of the sample.Comment: 5 figures, revtex
Towards new background independent representations for Loop Quantum Gravity
Recently, uniqueness theorems were constructed for the representation used in
Loop Quantum Gravity. We explore the existence of alternate representations by
weakening the assumptions of the so called LOST uniqueness theorem. The
weakened assumptions seem physically reasonable and retain the key requirement
of explicit background independence. For simplicity, we restrict attention to
the case of gauge group U(1).Comment: 22 pages, minor change
The UL15 protein of herpes simplex virus type 1 is necessary for the localization of the UL28 and UL33 proteins to viral DNA replication centres
The UL15, UL28 and UL33 proteins of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) are thought to comprise a terminase complex responsible for cleavage and packaging of the viral genome into pre-assembled capsids. Immunofluorescence studies confirmed that shortly after infection with wild-type HSV-1 these three proteins localize to viral DNA replication compartments within the nucleus, identified by the presence of the single-stranded DNA-binding protein, ICP8. In cells infected with either UL28- or UL33-null mutants, the other two terminase proteins also co-localized with ICP8. In contrast, neither UL28 nor UL33 was detectable in replication compartments following infection with a UL15-null mutant, although Western blot analysis showed they were present in normal amounts in the infected cells. Provision of UL15 in a complementing cell line restored the ability of all three proteins to localize to replication compartments. These data indicate that UL15 plays a key role in localizing the terminase complex to DNA replication compartments, and that it can interact independently with UL28 and UL33
Einstein gravity as a 3D conformally invariant theory
We give an alternative description of the physical content of general
relativity that does not require a Lorentz invariant spacetime. Instead, we
find that gravity admits a dual description in terms of a theory where local
size is irrelevant. The dual theory is invariant under foliation preserving
3-diffeomorphisms and 3D conformal transformations that preserve the 3-volume
(for the spatially compact case). Locally, this symmetry is identical to that
of Horava-Lifshitz gravity in the high energy limit but our theory is
equivalent to Einstein gravity. Specifically, we find that the solutions of
general relativity, in a gauge where the spatial hypersurfaces have constant
mean extrinsic curvature, can be mapped to solutions of a particular gauge
fixing of the dual theory. Moreover, this duality is not accidental. We provide
a general geometric picture for our procedure that allows us to trade foliation
invariance for conformal invariance. The dual theory provides a new proposal
for the theory space of quantum gravity.Comment: 27 pages. Published version (minor changes and corrections
Equivalent Fixed-Points in the Effective Average Action Formalism
Starting from a modified version of Polchinski's equation, Morris'
fixed-point equation for the effective average action is derived. Since an
expression for the line of equivalent fixed-points associated with every
critical fixed-point is known in the former case, this link allows us to find,
for the first time, the analogous expression in the latter case.Comment: 30 pages; v2: 29 pages - major improvements to section 3; v3:
published in J. Phys. A - minor change
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