6,446 research outputs found
Wave Scattering through Classically Chaotic Cavities in the Presence of Absorption: An Information-Theoretic Model
We propose an information-theoretic model for the transport of waves through
a chaotic cavity in the presence of absorption. The entropy of the S-matrix
statistical distribution is maximized, with the constraint : n is the dimensionality of S, and meaning complete (no) absorption. For strong absorption our result
agrees with a number of analytical calculations already given in the
literature. In that limit, the distribution of the individual (angular)
transmission and reflection coefficients becomes exponential -Rayleigh
statistics- even for n=1. For Rayleigh statistics is attained even
with no absorption; here we extend the study to . The model is
compared with random-matrix-theory numerical simulations: it describes the
problem very well for strong absorption, but fails for moderate and weak
absorptions. Thus, in the latter regime, some important physical constraint is
missing in the construction of the model.Comment: 4 pages, latex, 3 ps figure
Statistical fluctuations of the parametric derivative of the transmission and reflection coefficients in absorbing chaotic cavities
Motivated by recent theoretical and experimental works, we study the
statistical fluctuations of the parametric derivative of the transmission T and
reflection R coefficients in ballistic chaotic cavities in the presence of
absorption. Analytical results for the variance of the parametric derivative of
T and R, with and without time-reversal symmetry, are obtained for both
asymmetric and left-right symmetric cavities. These results are valid for
arbitrary number of channels, in completely agreement with the one channel case
in the absence of absorption studied in the literature.Comment: Modified version as accepted in PR
Vacuum polarization by topological defects in de Sitter spacetime
In this paper we investigate the vacuum polarization effects associated with
a massive quantum scalar field in de Sitter spacetime in the presence of
gravitational topological defects. Specifically we calculate the vacuum
expectation value of the field square, . Because this investigation
has been developed in a pure de Sitter space, here we are mainly interested on
the effects induced by the presence of the defects.Comment: Talk presented at the 1st. Mediterranean Conference on Classical and
Quantum Gravity (MCCQG
Basic Course Strength through Clear Learning Outcomes and Assessment
Former NCA President Richard West, writing in Spectra during his presidential year, lamented that the basic course in communication lacked national cohesion, especially compared to other disciplines like psychology, political science, or sociology (West, 2012). Some, including myself, may quibble with the comparison to other disciplines, arguing that History 101, Political Science 101 or Sociology 101 do not necessarily look the same at all institutions around the nation.
However, West’s call for examination of the basic course was a welcome one: I believe it is time for our organization to undertake a thoughtful examination of the basic course and ascertain its value for a generation of students whose career opportunities, now more than ever, will necessitate some sort of understanding of the power of communication. An examination of the BCC and all its vectors is long overdue (West, 2012, p. 1).
Various groups took up that call, and a national conversation about the basic course and the communication major as a whole began. The results of that conversation produced the strength that I will argue for in this essay
Dynamics of Enceladus and Dione inside the 2:1 Mean-Motion Resonance under Tidal Dissipation
In a previous work (Callegari and Yokoyama 2007, Celest. Mech. Dyn. Astr.
vol. 98), the main features of the motion of the pair Enceladus-Dione were
analyzed in the frozen regime, i.e., without considering the tidal evolution.
Here, the results of a great deal of numerical simulations of a pair of
satellites similar to Enceladus and Dione crossing the 2:1 mean-motion
resonance are shown. The resonance crossing is modeled with a linear tidal
theory, considering a two-degrees-of-freedom model written in the framework of
the general three-body planar problem. The main regimes of motion of the system
during the passage through resonance are studied in detail. We discuss our
results comparing them with classical scenarios of tidal evolution of the
system. We show new scenarios of evolution of the Enceladus-Dione system
through resonance not shown in previous approaches of the problem.Comment: 36 pages, 12 figures. Accepted in Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical
Astronom
Statistical wave scattering through classically chaotic cavities in the presence of surface absorption
We propose a model to describe the statistical properties of wave scattering
through a classically chaotic cavity in the presence of surface absorption.
Experimentally, surface absorption could be realized by attaching an "absorbing
patch" to the inner wall of the cavity. In our model, the cavity is connected
to the outside by a waveguide with N open modes (or channels), while an
experimental patch is simulated by an "absorbing mirror" attached to the inside
wall of the cavity; the mirror, consisting of a waveguide that supports Na
channels, with absorption inside and a perfectly reflecting wall at its end, is
described by a subunitary scattering matrix Sa. The number of channels Na, as a
measure of the geometric cross section of the mirror, and the lack of unitarity
of Sa as a measure of absorption, are under our control: these parameters have
an important physical significance for real experiments. The absorption
strength in the cavity is quantified by the trace of the lack of unitarity. The
statistical distribution of the resulting S matrix for N=1 open channel and
only one absorbing channel, Na =1, is solved analytically for the orthogonal
and unitary universality classes, and the results are compared with those
arising from numerical simulations. The relation with other models existing in
the literature, in some of which absorption has a volumetric character, is also
studied.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Mesoscopic Transport Through Ballistic Cavities: A Random S-Matrix Theory Approach
We deduce the effects of quantum interference on the conductance of chaotic
cavities by using a statistical ansatz for the S matrix. Assuming that the
circular ensembles describe the S matrix of a chaotic cavity, we find that the
conductance fluctuation and weak-localization magnitudes are universal: they
are independent of the size and shape of the cavity if the number of incoming
modes, N, is large. The limit of small N is more relevant experimentally; here
we calculate the full distribution of the conductance and find striking
differences as N changes or a magnetic field is applied.Comment: 4 pages revtex 3.0 (2-column) plus 2 postscript figures (appended),
hub.pam.94.
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