104,827 research outputs found
Dark Energy from Quantum Uncertainty of Distant Clock
The observed cosmic acceleration was attributed to an exotic dark energy in
the framework of classical general relativity. The dark energy behaves very
similar with vacuum energy in quantum mechanics. However, once the quantum
effects are seriously taken into account, it predicts a completely wrong result
and leads to a severe fine-tuning. To solve the problem, the exact meaning of
time in quantum mechanics is reexamined. We abandon the standard interpretation
of time in quantum mechanics that time is just a global parameter, replace it
by a quantum dynamical variable playing the role of physical clock. We find
that synchronization of two spatially separated clocks can not be precisely
realized at quantum level. There is an intrinsic quantum uncertainty of distant
clock time, which implies an apparent vacuum energy fluctuation and gives an
observed dark energy density  at
tree level approximation, where  and  are the Planck and Hubble
scale cutoffs. The fraction of the dark energy is given by
, which does not evolve with the internal clock
time. The "dark energy" as a quantum cosmic variance is always seen comparable
with the matter energy density by an observer using the internal clock time.
The corrected distance-redshift relation of cosmic observations due to the
distant clock effect are also discussed, which again gives a redshift
independent fraction . The theory is consistent with
current cosmic observations.Comment: 7 pages, no figure; v2:added discussion on distance-redshift
  relation; v3:improved discussion on distance-redshift relation, an
  independent calculation to the redshift variance over redshift squared is
  given, dark energy fraction agrees with 2/pi; v4:typos corrected, updated to
  the final version published in Journal of High Energy Physics, Volume 2015,
  Issue 
Probing the QCD Critical Point with Higher Moments of Net-proton Multiplicity Distributions
Higher moments of event-by-event net-proton multiplicity distributions are
applied to search for the QCD critical point in the heavy ion collisions. It
has been demonstrated that higher moments as well as moment products are
sensitive to the correlation length and directly connected to the thermodynamic
susceptibilities computed in the Lattice QCD and Hadron Resonance Gas (HRG)
model. In this paper, we will present measurements for kurtosis (),
skewness () and variance () of net-proton multiplicity
distributions at the mid-rapidity () and  GeV/ for
Au+Au collisions at =19.6, 39, 62.4, 130 and 200 GeV, Cu+Cu
collisions at =22.4, 62.4 and 200 GeV, d+Au collisions at
=200 GeV and p+p collisions at =62.4 and 200 GeV.
The moment products  and  of net-proton
distributions, which are related to volume independent baryon number
susceptibility ratio, are compared to the Lattice QCD and HRG model
calculations. The  and  of net-proton
distributions are consistent with Lattice QCD and HRG model calculations at
high energy, which support the thermalization of the colliding system.
Deviations of  and  for the Au+Au collisions at
low energies from HRG model calculations are also observed.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, Proceedings of 27th Winter Workshon on Nuclear
  Dynamics. Feb. 6-13 (2011
Two-loop Renormalization Group Equations in General Gauge Field Theories
The complete set of two-loop renormalization group equations in general gauge
field theories is presented. This includes the \beta functions of parameters
with and without a mass dimension
Dynamics of conduction blocks in a model of paced cardiac tissue
We study numerically the dynamics of conduction blocks using a detailed
electrophysiological model. We find that this dynamics depends critically on
the size of the paced region. Small pacing regions lead to stationary
conduction blocks while larger pacing regions can lead to conduction blocks
that travel periodically towards the pacing region. We show that this
size-dependence dynamics can lead to a novel arrhythmogenic mechanism.
Furthermore, we show that the essential phenomena can be captured in a much
simpler coupled-map model.Comment: 8 pages 6 figure
Optimizing Hartree-Fock orbitals by the density-matrix renormalization group
We have proposed a density-matrix renormalization group (DMRG) scheme to
optimize the one-electron basis states of molecules. It improves significantly
the accuracy and efficiency of the DMRG in the study of quantum chemistry or
other many-fermion system with nonlocal interactions. For a water molecule, we
find that the ground state energy obtained by the DMRG with only 61 optimized
orbitals already reaches the accuracy of best quantum Monte Carlo calculation
with 92 orbitals.Comment: published version, 4 pages, 4 figure
A Tri-band-notched UWB Antenna with Low Mutual Coupling between the Band-notched Structures
A compact printed U-shape ultra-wideband (UWB) antenna with triple band-notched characteristics is presented. The proposed antenna, with compact size of 24×33 mm2, yields an impedance bandwidth of 2.8-12GHz for VSWR<2, except the notched bands. The notched bands are realized by introducing two different types of slots. Two C-shape half-wavelength slots are etched on the radiating patch to obtain two notched bands in 3.3-3.7GHz for WiMAX and 7.25-7.75GHz for downlink of X-band satellite communication systems. In order to minimize the mutual coupling between the band-notched structures, the middle notched band in 5-6GHz for WLAN is achieved by using a U-slot defected ground structure. The parametric study is carried out to understand the mutual coupling. Surface current distributions and equivalent circuit are used to illustrate the notched mechanism. The performance of this antenna both by simulation and by experiment indicates that the proposed antenna is suitable and a good candidate for UWB applications
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