8,961 research outputs found
Quantum Gravity at the Planck Length
I describe our understanding of physics near the Planck length, in particular
the great progress in the last four years in string theory. These are lectures
presented at the 1998 SLAC Summer Institute.Comment: 33 pages, LaTeX, 11 epsf figure
Photo-excited zero-resistance states in the GaAs/AlGaAs system
The microwave-excited high mobility two-dimensional electron system exhibits,
at liquid helium temperatures, vanishing resistance in the vicinity of , where , m is an
effective mass, e is the charge, and \textit{f} is the microwave frequency.
Here, we summarize some experimental results.Comment: 7 color figures, 5 page
Fast and robust two-qubit gates for scalable ion trap quantum computing
We propose a new concept for a two-qubit gate operating on a pair of trapped
ions based on laser coherent control techniques. The gate is insensitive to the
temperature of the ions, works also outside the Lamb-Dicke regime, requires no
individual addressing by lasers, and can be orders of magnitude faster than the
trap period
Kinetic Antiferromagnetism in the Triangular Lattice
We show that the motion of a single hole in the infinite Hubbard model
with frustrated hopping leads to weak metallic antiferromagnetism of kinetic
origin. An intimate relationship is demonstrated between the simplest versions
of this problem in 1 and 2 dimensions, and two of the most subtle many body
problems, namely the Heisenberg Bethe ring in 1-d and the 2-dimensional
triangular lattice Heisenberg antiferromagnet.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, 5 supplementary figures; Figures fixe
The lattice Schwarzian KdV equation and its symmetries
In this paper we present a set of results on the symmetries of the lattice
Schwarzian Korteweg-de Vries (lSKdV) equation. We construct the Lie point
symmetries and, using its associated spectral problem, an infinite sequence of
generalized symmetries and master symmetries. We finally show that we can use
master symmetries of the lSKdV equation to construct non-autonomous
non-integrable generalized symmetries.Comment: 11 pages, no figures. Submitted to Jour. Phys. A, Special Issue SIDE
VI
Time reversal symmetry breaking superconductivity
We study time reversal symmetry breaking superconductivity with ( or )
symmetries. It is shown that the behavior of such superconductors could be {\em
qualitatively} different depending on the minor components () and its
phase at lower temperatures. It is argued that such {\em qualitatively
different} behaviors in thermal as well as in angular dependencies could be a
{\em source} of consequences in transport and Josephson physics.
Orthorhombicity is found to be a strong mechanism for mixed phase (in case of
). We show that due to electron correlation the order parameter is
more like a pure symmetry near optimum doping.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures (attached), to be published in Physical Review
Tunnel junctions of unconventional superconductors
The phenomenology of Josephson tunnel junctions between unconventional
superconductors is developed further. In contrast to s-wave superconductors,
for d-wave superconductors the direction dependence of the tunnel matrix
elements that describe the barrier is relevant. We find the full I-V
characteristics and comment on the thermodynamical properties of these
junctions. They depend sensitively on the relative orientation of the
superconductors. The I-V characteristics differ from the normal s-wave RSJ-like
behavior.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, 4 (encapsulated postscript) figures (figures
replaced
Heating in current carrying molecular junctions
A framework for estimating heating and expected temperature rise in current
carrying molecular junctions is described. Our approach is based on applying
the Redfield approximation to a tight binding model for the molecular bridge
supplemented by coupling to a phonon bath. This model, used previously to study
thermal relaxation effects on electron transfer and conduction in molecular
junctions, is extended and used to evaluate the fraction of available energy,
i.e. of the potential drop, that is released as heat on the molecular bridge.
Classical heat conduction theory is then applied to estimate the expected
temperature rise. For a reasonable choice of molecular parameters and for
junctions carrying currents in the nA range, we find the temperature rise to be
a modest few degrees. It is argued, however, that using classical theory to
describe heat transport away from the junction may underestimate the heating
effect.Comment: 29 pages, 16 figures. J. Chem. Phys., in pres
Continuous Symmetries of Difference Equations
Lie group theory was originally created more than 100 years ago as a tool for
solving ordinary and partial differential equations. In this article we review
the results of a much more recent program: the use of Lie groups to study
difference equations. We show that the mismatch between continuous symmetries
and discrete equations can be resolved in at least two manners. One is to use
generalized symmetries acting on solutions of difference equations, but leaving
the lattice invariant. The other is to restrict to point symmetries, but to
allow them to also transform the lattice.Comment: Review articl
Static cylindrical symmetry and conformal flatness
We present the whole set of equations with regularity and matching conditions
required for the description of physically meaningful static cylindrically
symmmetric distributions of matter, smoothly matched to Levi-Civita vacuum
spacetime. It is shown that the conformally flat solution with equal principal
stresses represents an incompressible fluid. It is also proved that any
conformally flat cylindrically symmetric static source cannot be matched
through Darmois conditions to the Levi-Civita spacetime. Further evidence is
given that when the Newtonian mass per unit length reaches 1/2 the spacetime
has plane symmetry.Comment: 13 pages, Late
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