21,812 research outputs found
Monte Carlo evaluation of path integrals for the nuclear shell model
We present in detail a formulation of the shell model as a path integral and
Monte Carlo techniques for its evaluation. The formulation, which linearizes
the two-body interaction by an auxiliary field, is quite general, both in the
form of the effective `one-body' Hamiltonian and in the choice of ensemble. In
particular, we derive formulas for the use of general (beyond monopole) pairing
operators, as well as a novel extraction of the canonical (fixed-particle
number) ensemble via an activity expansion. We discuss the advantages and
disadvantages of the various formulations and ensembles and give several
illustrative examples. We also discuss and illustrate calculation of the
imaginary-time response function and the extraction, by maximum entropy
methods, of the corresponding strength function. Finally, we discuss the
"sign-problem" generic to fermion Monte Carlo calculations, and prove that a
wide class of interactions are free of this limitation.Comment: 38 pages, RevTeX v3.0, figures available upon request; Caltech
Preprint #MAP-15
"Flags and Slots": Special Interest Groups and Selective Admissions
This paper combines the results of two studies, one from the perspective of institutions and one from the perspective of students, to determine and define the role played by special interest groups in selecting students for admission to college and university. Although there have been allusions to the existence of selection processes that categorize applicants in terms of various special talents and skills, and of racial, ethnic, or geographic origin, relatively little is known about how wide- spread those processes are and how they actually operate at highly selective colleges and universities. Also, little is known about how special interest group selection is perceived by applicants and their schools. The studies indicate how and why special interest group selection works, and shows that the process is widely used. The studies also indicate that, although applicants are aware of the process, their perception of it does not coincide with either the motives or the expectations of the colleges and universities that deploy it.Cet article, qui regroupe les résultats de deux études, l'une axée sur l'optique des établissements et l'autre sur celle des étudiants, vise à déterminer et à définir le rôle que jouent les groupes d'intérêt spéciaux dans le processus de sélection des étudiants ayant fait une demande d'admission au collège et à l'université. Bien qu'il ait été fait allusion à l'existence de processus de sélection classant par catégorie les candidats, selon leurs compétences et talents particuliers, ainsi que leur origine raciale, ethnique et géographique, on détient en fait assez peu de données sur la mesure dans laquelle ces processus sont généralisés et sur la manière dont ils sont appliqués dans les universités et collèges hautement sélectifs. En outre, on sait peu de chose sur la manière dont les candidats et leur école perçoivent la sélection des groupes d'intérêt spéciaux. Les études expliquent la manière dont fonctionne la sélection des groupes d'intérêt spéciaux et les raisons pour lesquelles celle-ci marche bien et montrent que le processus est appliqué à grande échelle. Les études indiquent aussi que, si les candidats sont au courant de l'existence du processus, la façon dont ils le perçoivent ne correspond ni aux motifs ni aux attentes des collèges et universités qui y ont recours
The Treasury bill futures market and market expectations of interest rates
Interest rates ; Treasury bills
Cleaning the USNO-B Catalog through automatic detection of optical artifacts
The USNO-B Catalog contains spurious entries that are caused by diffraction
spikes and circular reflection halos around bright stars in the original
imaging data. These spurious entries appear in the Catalog as if they were real
stars; they are confusing for some scientific tasks. The spurious entries can
be identified by simple computer vision techniques because they produce
repeatable patterns on the sky. Some techniques employed here are variants of
the Hough transform, one of which is sensitive to (two-dimensional)
overdensities of faint stars in thin right-angle cross patterns centered on
bright (<13 \mag) stars, and one of which is sensitive to thin annular
overdensities centered on very bright (<7 \mag) stars. After enforcing
conservative statistical requirements on spurious-entry identifications, we
find that of the 1,042,618,261 entries in the USNO-B Catalog, 24,148,382 of
them (2.3 \percent) are identified as spurious by diffraction-spike criteria
and 196,133 (0.02 \percent) are identified as spurious by reflection-halo
criteria. The spurious entries are often detected in more than 2 bands and are
not overwhelmingly outliers in any photometric properties; they therefore
cannot be rejected easily on other grounds, i.e., without the use of computer
vision techniques. We demonstrate our method, and return to the community in
electronic form a table of spurious entries in the Catalog.Comment: published in A
Out-of-plane fluctuation conductivity of layered superconductors in strong electric fields
The non-Ohmic effect of a high electric field on the out-of-plane
magneto-conductivity of a layered superconductor near the superconducting
transition is studied in the frame of the Langevin approach to the
time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau equation. The transverse fluctuation
conductivity is computed in the self-consistent Hartree approximation for an
arbitrarily strong electric field and a magnetic field perpendicular to the
layers. Our results indicate that high electric fields can be effectively used
to suppress the out-of-plane fluctuation conductivity in high-temperature
superconductors and a significant broadening of the transition induced by a
strong electric field is predicted. Extensions of the results are provided for
the case when the electric field is applied at an arbitrary angle with respect
to the layers, as well as for the three-dimensional anisotropic regime of a
strong interlayer coupling.Comment: to be published in Phys. Rev.
A Four-Unit-Cell Periodic Pattern of Quasiparticle States Surrounding Vortex Cores in Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+d
Scanning tunneling microscopy is used to image the additional quasiparticle
states generated by quantized vortices in the high-Tc superconductor
Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+d. They exhibit a Cu-O bond oriented 'checkerboard' pattern, with
four unit cell (4a0) periodicity and a ~30 angstrom decay length. These
electronic modulations may be related to the magnetic field-induced, 8a0
periodic, spin density modulations of decay length ~70 angstroms recently
discovered in La1.84Sr0.16CuO4. The proposed explanation is a spin density wave
localized surrounding each vortex core. General theoretical principles predict
that, in the cuprates, a localized spin modulation of wavelength L should be
associated with a corresponding electronic modulation of wavelength L/2, in
good agreement with our observations.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
VLA Detection of the Ionized Stellar Winds Arising from Massive Stars in the Galactic Center Arches Cluster
The Galactic center Arches stellar cluster, detected and studied until now
only in the near-infrared, is comprised of at least one hundred massive (M>20
Msun) stars. Here we report the detection at centimeter wavelengths of radio
continuum emission from eight radio sources associated with the cluster. Seven
of these radio sources have rising spectral indices between 4.9 and 8.5 GHz and
coincide spatially with the brightest stars in the cluster, as determine from
JHK photometry and Brackett alpha and Brackett Gamma spectroscopy. Our results
confirm the presence of powerful ionized winds in these stars. The eighth radio
source has a nonthermal spectrum and its nature is yet unclear, but it could be
associated with a lower mass young star in the cluster.Comment: 6 pages, 2 embedded figures, accepted to ApJLetter
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