334 research outputs found
Dynamical fluctuations in an exactly solvable model of spin glasses
In this work we calculate the dynamical fluctuations at O(1/N) in the low
temperature phase of the spherical spin glass model. We study the
large-times asymptotic regimes and we find, in a short time-differences regime,
a fluctuation dissipation relation for the four-point correlation functions.
This relation can be extended to the out of equilibrium regimes introducing a
function which, for large time , we find scales as as in
the case of the two-point functions.Comment: Latex, 8 page
Entanglement dynamics of electron-electron scattering in low-dimensional semiconductor systems
We perform the quantitative evaluation of the entanglement dynamics in
scattering events between two insistinguishable electrons interacting via
Coulomb potential in 1D and 2D semiconductor nanostructures. We apply a
criterion based on the von Neumann entropy and the Schmidt decomposition of the
global state vector suitable for systems of identical particles. From the
timedependent numerical solution of the two-particle wavefunction of the
scattering carriers we compute their entanglement evolution for different spin
configurations: two electrons with the same spin, with different spin, singlet,
and triplet spin state. The procedure allows to evaluate the mechanisms that
govern entanglement creation and their connection with the characteristic
physical parameters and initial conditions of the system. The cases in which
the evolution of entanglement is similar to the one obtained for
distinguishable particles are discussed.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Physical Review
Quantum chaos in the mesoscopic device for the Josephson flux qubit
We show that the three-junction SQUID device designed for the Josephson flux
qubit can be used to study quantum chaos when operated at high energies. In the
parameter region where the system is classically chaotic we analyze the
spectral statistics. The nearest neighbor distributions are well fitted
by the Berry Robnik theory employing as free parameters the pure classical
measures of the chaotic and regular regions of phase space in the different
energy regions. The phase space representation of the wave functions is
obtained via the Husimi distributions and the localization of the states on
classical structures is analyzed.Comment: Final version, to be published in Phys. Rev. B. References added,
introduction and conclusions improve
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
Topographic plasticity in primary visual cortex is mediated by local corticocortical connections
The placement of monocular laser lesions in the adult cat retina produces a lesion projection zone (LPZ) in primary visual cortex (V1) in which the majority of neurons have a normally located receptive field (RF) for stimulation of the intact eye and an ectopically located RF ( displaced to intact retina at the edge of the lesion) for stimulation of the lesioned eye. Animals that had such lesions for 14 - 85 d were studied under halothane and nitrous oxide anesthesia with conventional neurophysiological recording techniques and stimulation of moving light bars. Previous work suggested that a candidate source of input, which could account for the development of the ectopic RFs, was long-range horizontal connections within V1. The critical contribution of such input was examined by placing a pipette containing the neurotoxin kainic acid at a site in the normal V1 visual representation that overlapped with the ectopic RF recorded at a site within the LPZ. Continuation of well defined responses to stimulation of the intact eye served as a control against direct effects of the kainic acid at the LPZ recording site. In six of seven cases examined, kainic acid deactivation of neurons at the injection site blocked responsiveness to lesioned-eye stimulation at the ectopic RF for the LPZ recording site. We therefore conclude that long-range horizontal projections contribute to the dominant input underlying the capacity for retinal lesion-induced plasticity in V1
Magneto-polarisability of mesoscopic rings
We calculate the average polarisability of two dimensional mesoscopic rings
in the presence of an Aharonov-Bohm flux. The screening is taken into account
self-consistently within a mean-field approximation. We investigate the effects
of statistical ensemble, finite frequency and disorder. We emphasize
geometrical effects which make the observation of field dependent
polarisability much more favourable on rings than on disks or spheres of
comparable radius. The ratio of the flux dependent to the flux independent part
is estimated for typical GaAs rings.Comment: pages, Revtex, 1 eps figur
Modelling gravity on a hyper-cubic lattice
We present an elegant and simple dynamical model of symmetric, non-degenerate
(n x n) matrices of fixed signature defined on a n-dimensional hyper-cubic
lattice with nearest-neighbor interactions. We show how this model is related
to General Relativity, and discuss multiple ways in which it can be useful for
studying gravity, both classical and quantum. In particular, we show that the
dynamics of the model when all matrices are close to the identity corresponds
exactly to a finite-difference discretization of weak-field gravity in harmonic
gauge. We also show that the action which defines the full dynamics of the
model corresponds to the Einstein-Hilbert action to leading order in the
lattice spacing, and use this observation to define a lattice analogue of the
Ricci scalar and Einstein tensor. Finally, we perform a mean-field analysis of
the statistical mechanics of this model.Comment: 5 page
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.
Hidden Breit-Wigner distribution and other properties of random matrices with preferential basis
We study statistical properties of a class of band random matrices which
naturally appears in systems of interacting particles. The local spectral
density is shown to follow the Breit-Wigner distribution in both localized and
delocalized regimes with width independent on the band/system size. We analyse
the implications of this distribution to the inverse participation ratio, level
spacing statistics and the problem of two interacting particles in a random
potential.Comment: 4 pages, 4 postscript figures appended, new version with minor
change
Composite fermion wave functions as conformal field theory correlators
It is known that a subset of fractional quantum Hall wave functions has been
expressed as conformal field theory (CFT) correlators, notably the Laughlin
wave function at filling factor ( odd) and its quasiholes, and the
Pfaffian wave function at and its quasiholes. We develop a general
scheme for constructing composite-fermion (CF) wave functions from conformal
field theory. Quasiparticles at are created by inserting anyonic
vertex operators, , that replace a subset of the electron
operators in the correlator. The one-quasiparticle wave function is identical
to the corresponding CF wave function, and the two-quasiparticle wave function
has correct fractional charge and statistics and is numerically almost
identical to the corresponding CF wave function. We further show how to exactly
represent the CF wavefunctions in the Jain series as the CFT
correlators of a new type of fermionic vertex operators, ,
constructed from free compactified bosons; these operators provide the CFT
representation of composite fermions carrying flux quanta in the CF Landau level. We also construct the corresponding quasiparticle- and
quasihole operators and argue that they have the expected fractional charge and
statistics. For filling fractions 2/5 and 3/7 we show that the chiral CFTs that
describe the bulk wave functions are identical to those given by Wen's general
classification of quantum Hall states in terms of -matrices and - and
-vectors, and we propose that to be generally true. Our results suggest a
general procedure for constructing quasiparticle wave functions for other
fractional Hall states, as well as for constructing ground states at filling
fractions not contained in the principal Jain series.Comment: 26 pages, 3 figure
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