1,450 research outputs found
Landau damping of transverse quadrupole oscillations of an elongated Bose-Einstein condensate
We study the interaction between low-lying transverse collective oscillations
and thermal excitations of an elongated Bose-Einstein condensate by means of
perturbation theory. We consider a cylindrically trapped condensate and
calculate the transverse elementary excitations at zero temperature by solving
the linearized Gross-Pitaevskii equations in two dimensions. We use them to
calculate the matrix elements between thermal excited states coupled with the
quasi-2D collective modes. The Landau damping of transverse collective modes is
investigated as a function of temperature. At low temperatures, the damping
rate due to the Landau decay mechanism is in agreement with the experimental
data for the decay of the transverse quadrupole mode, but it is too small to
explain the slow experimental decay of the transverse breathing mode. The
reason for this discrepancy is discussed.Comment: 6 pages, LaTeX, 1 figur
Dynamics of Alpha-Helix Formation in the CSAW Model
We study the folding dynamics of polyalanine (Ala), a protein fragment
with 20 residues whose native state is a single alpha helix. We use the CSAW
model (conditioned self-avoiding walk), which treats the protein molecule as a
chain in Brownian motion, with interactions that include hydrophobic forces and
internal hydrogen bonding. We find that large scale structures form before
small scale structures, and obtain the relevant relaxation times. We find that
helix nucleation occurs at two separate points on the protein chain. The
evolution of small and large scale structures involve different mechanisms.
While the former can be describe by rate equations governing the growth of
helical content, the latter is akin to the relaxation of an elastic solid.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figure
Temperature-induced resonances and Landau damping of collective modes in Bose-Einstein condensed gases in spherical traps
Interaction between collective monopole oscillations of a trapped
Bose-Einstein condensate and thermal excitations is investigated by means of
perturbation theory. We assume spherical symmetry to calculate the matrix
elements by solving the linearized Gross-Pitaevskii equations. We use them to
study the resonances of the condensate induced by temperature when an external
perturbation of the trapping frequency is applied and to calculate the Landau
damping of the oscillations.Comment: revtex, 9 pages, 5 figure
Coherent resonant tunneling in ac fields
We have analyzed the tunneling transmission probability and electronic
current density through resonant heterostructures in the presence of an
external electromagnetic field. In this work, we compare two different models
for a double barrier : In the first case the effect of the external field is
taken into account by spatially dependent AC voltages and in the second one the
electromagnetic field is described in terms of a photon field that irradiates
homogeneously the whole sample. While in the first description the tunneling
takes place mainly through photo sidebands in the case of homogeneous
illumination the main effective tunneling channels correspond to the coupling
between different electronic states due to photon absorption and emission. The
difference of tunneling mechanisms between these configurations is strongly
reflected in the transmission and current density which present very different
features in both cases. In order to analyze these effects we have obtained,
within the Transfer Hamiltonian framework, a general expression for the
transition probability for coherent resonant tunneling in terms of the Green's
function of the system.Comment: 16 pages,Figures available upon request,to appear in Phys.Rev B (15
April 1996
Charmonium states in QCD-inspired quark potential model using Gaussian expansion method
We investigate the mass spectrum and electromagnetic processes of charmonium
system with the nonperturbative treatment for the spin-dependent potentials,
comparing the pure scalar and scalar-vector mixing linear confining potentials.
It is revealed that the scalar-vector mixing confinement would be important for
reproducing the mass spectrum and decay widths, and therein the vector
component is predicted to be around 22%. With the state wave functions obtained
via the full-potential Hamiltonian, the long-standing discrepancy in M1
radiative transitions of and are alleviated
spontaneously. This work also intends to provide an inspection and suggestion
for the possible among the copious higher charmonium-like states.
Particularly, the newly observed X(4160) and X(4350) are found in the
charmonium family mass spectrum as MeV and MeV, which strongly favor the assignments
respectively. The corresponding radiative transitions, leptonic and two-photon
decay widths have been also predicted theoretically for the further
experimental search.Comment: 16 pages,3 figure
Experimental investigation of the impact of optical injection on vital parameters of a gain-switched pulse source
An analysis of optical injection on a gain-switched distributed feedback (DFB) laser and its impact on pulse parameters that influence the performance of the pulse source in high-speed optical communication systems is presented in this paper. A range of 10 GHz in detuning and 5 dB in injected power has been experimentally identified to attain pulses, from an optically injected gain-switched DFB laser, with durations below 10 ps and pedestal suppression higher than 35 dB. These pulse features are associated with a side mode suppression ratio of about 30 dB and a timing jitter of less than 1 ps. This demonstrates the feasibility of using optical injection in conjunction with appropriate pulse compression schemes for developing an optimized and cost-efficient pulse source, based on a gain-switched DFB laser, for high-speed photonic systems
Granular Solid Hydrodynamics
Granular elasticity, an elasticity theory useful for calculating static
stress distribution in granular media, is generalized to the dynamic case by
including the plastic contribution of the strain. A complete hydrodynamic
theory is derived based on the hypothesis that granular medium turns
transiently elastic when deformed. This theory includes both the true and the
granular temperatures, and employs a free energy expression that encapsulates a
full jamming phase diagram, in the space spanned by pressure, shear stress,
density and granular temperature. For the special case of stationary granular
temperatures, the derived hydrodynamic theory reduces to {\em hypoplasticity},
a state-of-the-art engineering model.Comment: 42 pages 3 fi
Quantized charge transport through a static quantum dot using a surface acoustic wave
We present a detailed study of the surface acoustic wave mediated quantized
transport of electrons through a split gate device containing an impurity
potential defined quantum dot within the split gate channel. A new regime of
quantized transport is observed at low RF powers where the surface acoustic
wave amplitude is comparable to the quantum dot charging energy. In this regime
resonant transport through the single-electron dot state occurs which we
interpret as turnstile-like operation in which the traveling wave amplitude
modulates the entrance and exit barriers of the quantum dot in a cyclic fashion
at GHz frequencies. For high RF powers, where the amplitude of the surface
acoustic wave is much larger than the quantum dot energies, the quantized
acoustoelectric current transport shows behavior consistent with previously
reported results. However, in this regime, the number of quantized current
plateaus observed and the plateau widths are determined by the properties of
the quantum dot, demonstrating that the microscopic detail of the potential
landscape in the split gate channel has a profound influence on the quantized
acoustoelectric current transport.Comment: 9 page
Effect of boundaries on the force distributions in granular media
The effect of boundaries on the force distributions in granular media is
illustrated by simulations of 2D packings of frictionless, Hertzian spheres. To
elucidate discrepancies between experimental observations and theoretical
predictions, we distinguish between the weight distribution {\cal P} (w)
measured in experiments and analyzed in the q-model, and the distribution of
interparticle forces P(f). The latter one is robust, while {\cal P}(w) can be
obtained once the local packing geometry and P(f) are known. By manipulating
the (boundary) geometry, we show that {\cal P}(w) can be varied drastically.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
KAM for the quantum harmonic oscillator
In this paper we prove an abstract KAM theorem for infinite dimensional
Hamiltonians systems. This result extends previous works of S.B. Kuksin and J.
P\"oschel and uses recent techniques of H. Eliasson and S.B. Kuksin. As an
application we show that some 1D nonlinear Schr\"odinger equations with
harmonic potential admits many quasi-periodic solutions. In a second
application we prove the reducibility of the 1D Schr\"odinger equations with
the harmonic potential and a quasi periodic in time potential.Comment: 54 pages. To appear in Comm. Math. Phy
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