2,710 research outputs found
Photo--assisted current and shot noise in the fractional quantum Hall effect
The effect of an AC perturbation on the shot noise of a fractional quantum
Hall fluid is studied both in the weak and the strong backscattering regimes.
It is known that the zero-frequency current is linear in the bias voltage,
while the noise derivative exhibits steps as a function of bias. In contrast,
at Laughlin fractions, the backscattering current and the backscattering noise
both exhibit evenly spaced singularities, which are reminiscent of the
tunneling density of states singularities for quasiparticles. The spacing is
determined by the quasiparticle charge and the ratio of the DC bias
with respect to the drive frequency. Photo--assisted transport can thus be
considered as a probe for effective charges at such filling factors, and could
be used in the study of more complicated fractions of the Hall effect. A
non-perturbative method for studying photo--assisted transport at is
developed, using a refermionization procedure.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
Second-order corrections to noncommutative spacetime inflation
We investigate how the uncertainty of noncommutative spacetime affects on
inflation. For this purpose, the noncommutative parameter is taken to
be a zeroth order slow-roll parameter. We calculate the noncommutative power
spectrum up to second order using the slow-roll expansion. We find corrections
arisen from a change of the pivot scale and the presence of a variable
noncommutative parameter, when comparing with the commutative power spectrum.
The power-law inflation is chosen to obtain explicit forms for the power
spectrum, spectral index, and running spectral index. In cases of the power
spectrum and spectral index, the noncommutative effect of higher-order
corrections compensates for a loss of higher-order corrections in the
commutative case. However, for the running spectral index, all higher-order
corrections to the commutative case always provide negative spectral indexes,
which could explain the recent WMAP data.Comment: 15 pages, no figure, version published in PR
Evaluative Conditioning: Arti-fact or -fiction?—A Reply to Baeyens, De Houwer, Vansteenwegen, and Eelen (1998)
Baeyens et al.(1998) claim that Field and Davey's (1997) controversial study of conceptual conditioning offers little threat to current conceptions of evaluative conditioning. This article addresses some of the questions posed by Baeyenset al.First, some criticisms of the conceptual conditioning study appear to be based on a misunderstanding of the procedure. Second, we address the issues surrounding the so-called Type-X procedure. Specifically, we begin by reviewing the status of studies that have used a procedure different from the Type-X procedure. It is then argued that, although the Type-X procedure has been used in only a portion of EC research, it has been used primarily in those studies whose outcome has been used to argue that evaluative conditioning (EC) is functionally distinct from autonomic conditioning. We then review the evidence from non-Type-X procedures that EC is a distinct form of learning. Finally, an attempt is made to explain why between-subject controls should be used as a matter of course in this field of research
The perseveration of checking thoughts and mood–as–input hypothesis
This paper describes two experiments designed to investigate how a current model of task perseveration, the mood-as-input hypothesis, might be applied to activities relevant to compulsive checking. The mood-as-input hypothesis predicts that perseveration at an open-ended task will be determined by a combination of the “stop rules” adopted for the task, and the valency of the mood state in which the task is conducted. Experiment 1 required participants to generate items that should be checked for safety/security if they were leaving their home unattended. Experiment 2 used an analogue recall task, in which participants were asked to recall items from a comprehensive list of items that should be checked if they were to leave their home safe/secure. Both experiments found that perseveration at the tasks was determined by particular configurations of mood and stop rules for the task. Of most relevance to compulsive checking was the fact that facilitated perseveration occurred when participants were asked to undertake the tasks in a negative mood using “as many as can” stop rules. Implications for the factors that develop and maintain compulsive checking are discussed
Study of the Hindrance Effect in Sub-barrier Fusion Reactions
We have measured the fusion cross sections of the 12C(13C, p)24Na reaction
through off-line measurement of the beta-decay of 24Na using the beta-gamma
coincidence method. Our new measurements in the energy range of Ec.m. = 2.6-3.0
MeV do not show an obvious S-factor maximum but a plateau. Comparison between
this work and various models is presented.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures, Talk at the "10th International Conference on
Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions", Beijing, 16-21 August 200
Quantum Dynamics in Non-equilibrium Strongly Correlated Environments
We consider a quantum point contact between two Luttinger liquids coupled to
a mechanical system (oscillator). For non-vanishing bias, we find an effective
oscillator temperature that depends on the Luttinger parameter. A generalized
fluctuation-dissipation relation connects the decoherence and dissipation of
the oscillator to the current-voltage characteristics of the device. Via a
spectral representation, this result is generalized to arbitrary leads in a
weak tunneling regime.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Confronting hybrid inflation in supergravity with CMB data
-term GUT inflation coupled to N=1 Supergravity is confronted with CMB
data. Corrections to the string mass-per-unit-length away from the Bogomolny
limit are taken into account. We find that a superpotential coupling
10^{-7}/\mcN \lesssim \kappa \lesssim 10^{-2}/\mcN, with \mcN the dimension
of the Higgs-representation, is still compatible with the data. The parameter
space is enlarged in warm inflation, as well as in the curvaton and
inhomogeneous reheat scenario. -strings formed at the end of -term
inflation are also considered. Because these strings satisfy the Bogomolny
bound the bounds are stronger: the gauge coupling is constrained to the range
.Comment: 36 pages, 15 figure
Close-Packing of Clusters: Application to Al_100
The lowest energy configurations of close-packed clusters up to N=110 atoms
with stacking faults are studied using the Monte Carlo method with Metropolis
algorithm. Two types of contact interactions, a pair-potential and a many-atom
interaction, are used. Enhanced stability is shown for N=12, 26, 38, 50, 59,
61, 68, 75, 79, 86, 100 and 102, of which only the sizes 38, 75, 79, 86, and
102 are pure FCC clusters, the others having stacking faults. A connection
between the model potential and density functional calculations is studied in
the case of Al_100. The density functional calculations are consistent with the
experimental fact that there exist epitaxially grown FCC clusters starting from
relatively small cluster sizes. Calculations also show that several other
close-packed motifs existwith comparable total energies.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Staggered flux and stripes in doped antiferromagnets
We have numerically investigated whether or not a mean-field theory of spin
textures generate fictitious flux in the doped two dimensional -model.
First we consider the properties of uniform systems and then we extend the
investigation to include models of striped phases where a fictitious flux is
generated in the domain wall providing a possible source for lowering the
kinetic energy of the holes. We have compared the energetics of uniform systems
with stripes directed along the (10)- and (11)-directions of the lattice,
finding that phase-separation generically turns out to be energetically
favorable. In addition to the numerical calculations, we present topological
arguments relating flux and staggered flux to geometric properties of the spin
texture. The calculation is based on a projection of the electron operators of
the model into a spin texture with spinless fermions.Comment: RevTex, 19 pages including 20 figure
Solar Intranetwork Magnetic Elements: bipolar flux appearance
The current study aims to quantify characteristic features of bipolar flux
appearance of solar intranetwork (IN) magnetic elements. To attack such a
problem, we use the Narrow-band Filter Imager (NFI) magnetograms from the Solar
Optical Telescope (SOT) on board \emph{Hinode}; these data are from quiet and
an enhanced network areas. Cluster emergence of mixed polarities and IN
ephemeral regions (ERs) are the most conspicuous forms of bipolar flux
appearance within the network. Each of the clusters is characterized by a few
well-developed ERs that are partially or fully co-aligned in magnetic axis
orientation. On average, the sampled IN ERs have total maximum unsigned flux of
several 10^{17} Mx, separation of 3-4 arcsec, and a lifetime of 10-15 minutes.
The smallest IN ERs have a maximum unsigned flux of several 10^{16} Mx,
separations less than 1 arcsec, and lifetimes as short as 5 minutes. Most IN
ERs exhibit a rotation of their magnetic axis of more than 10 degrees during
flux emergence. Peculiar flux appearance, e.g., bipole shrinkage followed by
growth or the reverse, is not unusual. A few examples show repeated
shrinkage-growth or growth-shrinkage, like magnetic floats in the dynamic
photosphere. The observed bipolar behavior seems to carry rich information on
magneto-convection in the sub-photospheric layer.Comment: 26 pages, 14 figure
- …
