20,481 research outputs found
Effects on the Non-Relativistic Dynamics of a Charged Particle Interacting with a Chern-Simons Potential
The hydrogen atom in two dimensions, described by a Schr\"odinger equation
with a Chern-Simons potential, is numerically solved. Both its wave functions
and eigenvalues were determined for small values of the principal quantum
number . The only possible states correspond to . How the result
depends on the topological mass of the photon is also discussed. In the case
, the energy of the fundamental state corresponding to different choice
for the photon mass scale are found to be comprehended in the interval , corresponding to a mean
radius of the electron in the range ~cm
~cm. In any case, the planar
atom is found to be very weekly bounded showing some features similar to the
Rydberg atoms in three dimensions with a Coulombian interaction.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
The Coester Line in Relativistic Mean Field Nuclear Matter
The Walecka model contains essentially two parameters that are associated
with the Lorentz scalar (S) and vector (V) interactions. These parameters are
related to a two-body interaction consisting of S and V, imposing the condition
that the two-body binding energy is fixed. We have obtained a set of different
values for the nuclear matter binding energies at equilibrium densities. We
investigated the existence of a linear correlation between and ,
claimed to be universal for nonrelativistic systems and usually known as the
Coester line, and found an approximate linear correlation only if remains
constant. It is shown that the relativistic content of the model, which is
related to the strength of , is responsible for the shift of the Coester
line to the empirical region of nuclear matter saturation.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Transport properties of a two impurity system: a theoretical approach
A system of two interacting cobalt atoms, at varying distances, was studied
in a recent scanning tunneling microscope experiment by Bork et. al.[Nature
Phys. 7, 901 (2011)]. We propose a microscopic model that explains, for all
experimentally analyzed interatomic distances, the physics observed in these
experiments. Our proposal is based on the two-impurity Anderson model, with the
inclusion of a two-path geometry for charge transport. This many-body system is
treated in the finite-U slave boson mean-field approximation and the
logarithmic-discretization embedded-cluster approximation. We physically
characterize the different charge transport regimes of this system at various
interatomic distances and show that, as in the experiments, the features
observed in the transport properties depend on the presence of two impurities
but also on the existence of two conducting channels for electron transport. We
interpret the splitting observed in the conductance as the result of the
hybridization of the two Kondo resonances associated with each impurity.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Mapping the train model for earthquakes onto the stochastic sandpile model
We perform a computational study of a variant of the ``train'' model for
earthquakes [PRA 46, 6288 (1992)], where we assume a static friction that is a
stochastic function of position rather than being velocity dependent. The model
consists of an array of blocks coupled by springs, with the forces between
neighbouring blocks balanced by static friction. We calculate the probability,
P(s), of the occurrence of avalanches with a size s or greater, finding that
our results are consistent with the phenomenology and also with previous models
which exhibit a power law over a wide range. We show that the train model may
be mapped onto a stochastic sandpile model and study a variant of the latter
for non-spherical grains. We show that, in this case, the model has critical
behaviour only for grains with large aspect ratio, as was already shown in
experiments with real ricepiles. We also demonstrate a way to introduce
randomness in a physically motivated manner into the model.Comment: 14 pages and 6 figures. Accepted in European Physical Journal
A Complex Case of Cholestasis in a Patient with ABCB4 and ABCB11 Mutations
The low-phospholipid-associated cholelithiasis (LPAC) syndrome is a form of symptomatic cholelithiasis occurring in young adults, characterized by recurrence of symptoms after cholecystectomy and presence of hepatolithiasis. The case refers to a healthy 39-year-old Caucasian male who presented with abdominal pain and jaundice. His blood tests showed conjugated hyperbilirubinemia and elevated liver enzymes (total bilirubin 6.65 mg/dL, γ-glutamyltransferase 699 IU/L) and abdominal computed tomography revealed dilation of common bile duct and left intrahepatic ducts. Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography identified choledocholithiasis, retrieved by endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, after which there was a worsening of jaundice (total bilirubin 23 mg/dL), which persisted for several weeks, possibly due to ciprofloxacin toxicity. After an extensive workup including liver biopsy, the identification of two foci of hepatolithiasis on reevaluation abdominal ultrasound raised the hypothesis of LPAC syndrome and the patient was started on ursodeoxycholic acid, with remarkable improvement. Genetic testing identified the mutation c.1954A>G (p.Arg652Gly) in ABCB4 gene (homozygous) and c.1331T>C (p.Val444Ala) in ABCB11 gene (heterozygous). In conclusion, we describe the unique case of an adult male with choledocholithiasis, hepatolithiasis, and persistent conjugated hyperbilirubinemia after retrieval of stones, fulfilling the criteria for LPAC syndrome and with possible superimposed drug-induced liver injury, in whom ABCB4 and ABCB11 mutations were found, both of which had not been previously described in association with LPAC.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Clustering Properties of Dynamical Dark Energy Models
We provide a generic but physically clear discussion of the clustering
properties of dark energy models. We explicitly show that in quintessence-type
models the dark energy fluctuations, on scales smaller than the Hubble radius,
are of the order of the perturbations to the Newtonian gravitational potential,
hence necessarily small on cosmological scales. Moreover, comparable
fluctuations are associated with different gauge choices. We also demonstrate
that the often used homogeneous approximation is unrealistic, and that the
so-called dark energy mutation is a trivial artifact of an effective, single
fluid description. Finally, we discuss the particular case where the dark
energy fluid is coupled to dark matter.Comment: 5 page
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