366 research outputs found
Interaction Quench in the Hubbard model
Motivated by recent experiments in ultracold atomic gases that explore the
nonequilibrium dynamics of interacting quantum many-body systems, we
investigate the opposite limit of Landau's Fermi liquid paradigm: We study a
Hubbard model with a sudden interaction quench, that is the interaction is
switched on at time t=0. Using the flow equation method, we are able to study
the real time dynamics for weak interaction U in a systematic expansion and
find three clearly separated time regimes: i) An initial buildup of
correlations where the quasiparticles are formed. ii) An intermediate
quasi-steady regime resembling a zero temperature Fermi liquid with a
nonequilibrium quasiparticle distribution function. iii) The long time limit
described by a quantum Boltzmann equation leading to thermalization with a
temperature T proportional to U.Comment: Final version as publishe
Saari's homographic conjecture for planar equal-mass three-body problem under a strong force potential
Donald Saari conjectured that the -body motion with constant
configurational measure is a motion with fixed shape. Here, the configurational
measure is a scale invariant product of the moment of inertia and the potential function , . Namely, . We will show
that this conjecture is true for planar equal-mass three-body problem under the
strong force potential
Saari's homographic conjecture for planar equal-mass three-body problem in Newton gravity
Saari's homographic conjecture in N-body problem under the Newton gravity is
the following; configurational measure \mu=\sqrt{I}U, which is the product of
square root of the moment of inertia I=(\sum m_k)^{-1}\sum m_i m_j r_{ij}^2 and
the potential function U=\sum m_i m_j/r_{ij}, is constant if and only if the
motion is homographic. Where m_k represents mass of body k and r_{ij}
represents distance between bodies i and j. We prove this conjecture for planar
equal-mass three-body problem.
In this work, we use three sets of shape variables. In the first step, we use
\zeta=3q_3/(2(q_2-q_1)) where q_k \in \mathbb{C} represents position of body k.
Using r_1=r_{23}/r_{12} and r_2=r_{31}/r_{12} in intermediate step, we finally
use \mu itself and \rho=I^{3/2}/(r_{12}r_{23}r_{31}). The shape variables \mu
and \rho make our proof simple
Symmetry, bifurcation and stacking of the central configurations of the planar 1+4 body problem
In this work we are interested in the central configurations of the planar
1+4 body problem where the satellites have different infinitesimal masses and
two of them are diametrically opposite in a circle. We can think this problem
as a stacked central configuration too. We show that the configuration are
necessarily symmetric and the other sattelites has the same mass. Moreover we
proved that the number of central configuration in this case is in general one,
two or three and in the special case where the satellites diametrically
opposite have the same mass we proved that the number of central configuration
is one or two saying the exact value of the ratio of the masses that provides
this bifurcation.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1103.627
Large normally hyperbolic cylinders in a priori stable Hamiltonian systems
We prove the existence of normally hyperbolic invariant cylinders in nearly
integrable hamiltonian systems
Chaos around a H\'enon-Heiles-inspired exact perturbation of a black hole
A solution of the Einstein's equations that represents the superposition of a
Schwarszchild black hole with both quadrupolar and octopolar terms describing a
halo is exhibited. We show that this solution, in the Newtonian limit, is an
analog to the well known H\'enon-Heiles potential. The integrability of orbits
of test particles moving around a black hole representing the galactic center
is studied and bounded zones of chaotic behavior are found.Comment: 7 pages Revte
Multiple-Planet Scattering and the Origin of Hot Jupiters
Exoplanets show a pile-up of Jupiter-size planets in orbits with a 3-day
period. A fraction of these hot Jupiters have retrograde orbits with respect to
the parent star's rotation. To explain these observations we performed a series
of numerical integrations of planet scattering followed by the tidal
circularization. We considered planetary systems having 3 and 4 planets
initially. We found that the standard Kozai migration is an inefficient
mechanism for the formation of hot Jupiters.
Our results show the formation of two distinct populations of hot Jupiters.
The inner population of hot Jupiters with semimajor axis a < 0.03 AU formed in
the systems where no planetary ejections occurred. This group contained a
significant fraction of highly inclined and retrograde orbits, with
distributions largely independent of the initial setup. However, our follow-up
integrations showed that this populations was transient with most planets
falling inside the Roche radius of the star in <1 Gyr. The outer population of
hot Jupiters formed in systems where at least one planet was ejected. This
population survived the effects of tides over >1 Gyr. The semimajor axis
distribution of Population II fits nicely the observed 3-day pile-up.
The inclination distribution of the outer hot planets depends on the number
of planets in the initial systems and the 4-planet case showed a larger
proportion (up to 10%), and a wider spread in inclination values. As the later
results roughly agrees with observations, this may suggest that the planetary
systems with observed hot Jupiters were originally rich in the number of
planets, some of which were ejected. In a broad perspective, our work therefore
hints on an unexpected link between the hot Jupiters and recently discovered
free floating planets.Comment: submitted to Ap
Crossover from adiabatic to sudden interaction quenches in the Hubbard model: Prethermalization and nonequilibrium dynamics
The recent experimental implementation of condensed matter models in optical
lattices has motivated research on their nonequilibrium behavior. Predictions
on the dynamics of superconductors following a sudden quench of the pairing
interaction have been made based on the effective BCS Hamiltonian; however,
their experimental verification requires the preparation of a suitable excited
state of the Hubbard model along a twofold constraint: (i) a sufficiently
nonadiabatic ramping scheme is essential to excite the nonequilibrium dynamics,
and (ii) overheating beyond the critical temperature of superconductivity must
be avoided. For commonly discussed interaction ramps there is no clear
separation of the corresponding energy scales. Here we show that the matching
of both conditions is simplified by the intrinsic relaxation behavior of
ultracold fermionic systems: For the particular example of a linear ramp we
examine the transient regime of prethermalization [M. Moeckel and S. Kehrein,
Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 175702 (2008)] under the crossover from sudden to
adiabatic switching using Keldysh perturbation theory. A real-time analysis of
the momentum distribution exhibits a temporal separation of an early energy
relaxation and its later thermalization by scattering events. For long but
finite ramping times this separation can be large. In the prethermalization
regime the momentum distribution resembles a zero temperature Fermi liquid as
the energy inserted by the ramp remains located in high energy modes. Thus
ultracold fermions prove robust to heating which simplifies the observation of
nonequilibrium BCS dynamics in optical lattices.Comment: 27 pages, 8 figures Second version with small modifications in
section
A Multi-Epoch Study of the Radio Continuum Emission of Orion Source I: Constraints on the Disk Evolution of a Massive YSO and the Dynamical History of Orion BN/KL
We present new 7mm continuum observations of Orion BN/KL with the VLA. We
resolve the emission from the protostar radio Source I and BN at several
epochs. Source I is highly elongated NW-SE, and remarkably stable in flux
density, position angle, and overall morphology over nearly a decade. This
favors the extended emission component arising from an ionized disk rather than
a jet. We have measured the proper motions of Source I and BN for the first
time at 43 GHz. We confirm that both sources are moving at high speed (12 and
26 km/s, respectively) approximately in opposite directions, as previously
inferred from measurements at lower frequencies. We discuss dynamical scenarios
that can explain the large motions of both BN and Source I and the presence of
disks around both. Our new measurements support the hypothesis that a close
(~50 AU) dynamical interaction occurred around 500 years ago between Source I
and BN as proposed by Gomez et al. From the dynamics of encounter we argue that
Source I today is likely to be a binary with a total mass on the order of 20
Msun, and that it probably existed as a softer binary before the close
encounter. This enables preservation of the original accretion disk, though
truncated to its present radius of ~50 AU. N-body numerical simulations show
that the dynamical interaction between a binary of 20 Msun total mass (I) and a
single star of 10 Msun mass (BN) may lead to the ejection of both and binary
hardening. The gravitational energy released in the process would be large
enough to power the wide-angle flow traced by H2 and CO emission in the BN/KL
nebula. Assuming the proposed dynamical history is correct, the smaller mass
for Source I recently estimated from SiO maser dynamics (>7 Msun) by Matthews
et al., suggests that non-gravitational forces (e.g. magnetic) must play an
important role in the circumstellar gas dynamics.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, 4 tables, accepted by Ap
Straight Line Orbits in Hamiltonian Flows
We investigate periodic straight-line orbits (SLO) in Hamiltonian force
fields using both direct and inverse methods. A general theorem is proven for
natural Hamiltonians quadratic in the momenta in arbitrary dimension and
specialized to two and three dimension. Next we specialize to homogeneous
potentials and their superpositions, including the familiar H\'enon-Heiles
problem. It is shown that SLO's can exist for arbitrary finite superpositions
of -forms. The results are applied to a family of generalized H\'enon-Heiles
potentials having discrete rotational symmetry. SLO's are also found for
superpositions of these potentials.Comment: laTeX with 6 figure
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