9,351 research outputs found

    The genus of the configuration spaces for Artin groups of affine type

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    Let (W,S)(W,S) be a Coxeter system, SS finite, and let GWG_{W} be the associated Artin group. One has configuration spaces Y, YW,Y,\ Y_{W}, where GW=π1(YW),G_{W}=\pi_1(Y_{W}), and a natural WW-covering fW: Y→YW.f_{W}:\ Y\to Y_{W}. The Schwarz genus g(fW)g(f_{W}) is a natural topological invariant to consider. In this paper we generalize this result by computing the Schwarz genus for a class of Artin groups, which includes the affine-type Artin groups. Let K=K(W,S)K=K(W,S) be the simplicial scheme of all subsets J⊂SJ\subset S such that the parabolic group WJ W_J is finite. We introduce the class of groups for which dim(K)dim(K) equals the homological dimension of K,K, and we show that g(fW)g(f_{W}) is always the maximum possible for such class of groups. For affine Artin groups, such maximum reduces to the rank of the group. In general, it is given by dim(XW)+1,dim(X_{W})+1, where XW⊂YW X_{ W}\subset Y_{ W} is a well-known CWCW-complex which has the same homotopy type as YW. Y_{ W}.Comment: To appear in Atti Accad. Naz. Lincei Rend. Lincei Mat. App

    Dust photophoretic transport around a T Tauri star: Implications for comets composition

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    There is a growing body of evidences for the presence of crystalline material in comets. These crystals are believed to have been annealed in the inner part of the proto-solar nebula, while comets should have been formed in the outer regions. Several transport processes have been proposed to reconcile these two facts; among them a migration driven by photophoresis. The primarily goal of this work is to assess whether disk irradiation by a Pre-Main Sequence star would influence the photophoretic transport. To do so, we have implemented an evolving 1+1D model of an accretion disk, including advanced numerical techniques, undergoing a time-dependent irradiation, consistent with the evolution of the proto-Sun along the Pre-Main Sequence. The photophoresis is described using a formalism introduced in several previous works. Adopting the opacity prescription used in these former studies, we find that the disk irradiation enhances the photophoretic transport: the assumption of a disk central hole of several astronomical units in radius is no longer strictly required, whereas the need for an ad hoc introduction of photoevaporation is reduced. However, we show that a residual trail of small particles could annihilate the photophoretic driven transport via their effect on the opacity. We have also confirmed that the thermal conductivity of transported aggregates is a crucial parameter which could limit or even suppress the photophoretic migration and generate several segregation effects

    Imaginary Time Correlations and the phaseless Auxiliary Field Quantum Monte Carlo

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    The phaseless Auxiliary Field Quantum Monte Carlo method provides a well established approximation scheme for accurate calculations of ground state energies of many-fermions systems. Here we apply the method to the calculation of imaginary time correlation functions. We give a detailed description of the technique and we test the quality of the results for static and dynamic properties against exact values for small systems.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures; submitted to J. Chem. Phy

    Dynamic structure factor for 3He in two-dimensions

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    Recent neutron scattering experiments on 3He films have observed a zero-sound mode, its dispersion relation and its merging with -and possibly emerging from- the particle-hole continuum. Here we address the study of the excitations in the system via quantum Monte Carlo methods: we suggest a practical scheme to calculate imaginary time correlation functions for moderate-size fermionic systems. Combined with an efficient method for analytic continuation, this scheme affords an extremely convincing description of the experimental findings.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure

    C/O white dwarfs of very low mass: 0.33-0.5 Mo

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    The standard lower limit for the mass of white dwarfs (WDs) with a C/O core is roughly 0.5 Mo. In the present work we investigated the possibility to form C/O WDs with mass as low as 0.33 Mo. Both the pre-WD and the cooling evolution of such nonstandard models will be described.Comment: Submitted to the "Proceedings of the 16th European White Dwarf Workshop" (to be published JPCS). 7 pages including 13 figure

    Canonical solution of a system of long-range interacting rotators on a lattice

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    The canonical partition function of a system of rotators (classical X-Y spins) on a lattice, coupled by terms decaying as the inverse of their distance to the power alpha, is analytically computed. It is also shown how to compute a rescaling function that allows to reduce the model, for any d-dimensional lattice and for any alpha<d, to the mean field (alpha=0) model.Comment: Initially submitted to Physical Review Letters: following referees' Comments it has been transferred to Phys. Rev. E, because of supposed no general interest. Divided into sections, corrections in (5) and (20), reference 5 updated. 8 pages 1 figur

    Indium segregation during III-V quantum wire and quantum dot formation on patterned substrates

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    We report a model for metalorganic vapor-phase epitaxy on non-planar substrates, specifically V-grooves and pyramidal recesses, which we apply to the growth of InGaAs nanostructures. This model, based on a set of coupled reaction-diffusion equations, one for each facet in the system, accounts for the facet-dependence of all kinetic processes (e.g., precursor decomposition, adatom diffusion, and adatom lifetimes) and has been previously applied to account for the temperature, concentration, and temporal-dependence of AlGaAs nanostructures on GaAs (111)B surfaces with V-grooves and pyramidal recesses. In the present study, the growth of In0.12_{0.12}Ga0.88_{0.88}As quantum wires at the bottom of V-grooves is used to determine a set of optimized kinetic parameters. Based on these parameters, we have modeled the growth of In0.25_{0.25}Ga0.75_{0.75}As nanostructures formed in pyramidal site-controlled quantum-dot systems, successfully producing a qualitative explanation for the temperature-dependence of their optical properties, which have been reported in previous studies. Finally, we present scanning electron and cross-sectional atomic force microscopy images which show previously unreported facetting at the bottom of the pyramidal recesses that allow quantum dot formation.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure

    Equation of state of two--dimensional 3^3He at zero temperature

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    We have performed a Quantum Monte Carlo study of a two-dimensional bulk sample of interacting 1/2-spin structureless fermions, a model of 3^3He adsorbed on a variety of preplated graphite substrates. We have computed the equation of state and the polarization energy using both the standard fixed-node approximate technique and a formally exact methodology, relying on bosonic imaginary-time correlation functions of operators suitably chosen in order to extract fermionic energies. As the density increases, the fixed-node approximation predicts a transition to an itinerant ferromagnetic fluid, whereas the unbiased methodology indicates that the paramagnetic fluid is the stable phase until crystallization takes place. We find that two-dimensional 3^3He at zero temperature crystallizes from the paramagnetic fluid at a density of 0.061 \AA−2^{-2} with a narrow coexistence region of about 0.002 \AA−2^{-2}. Remarkably, the spin susceptibility turns out in very good agreement with experiments.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
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