1,543 research outputs found
Quadratic Maps in Two Variables on Arbitrary Fields
Let be a field of characteristic different from and , and
let be a vector space of dimension over . The generic
classification of homogeneous quadratic maps under the action
of the linear group of , is given and efficient computational criteria to
recognize equivalence are provided.Comment: 12 pages, no figure
Spontaneous Symmetry Breakdown in non-relativistic Quantum Mechanics
The advantages and disadvantages of some pedagogical non-relativistic
quantum-mechanical models, used to illustrate spontaneous symmetry breakdown,
are discussed. A simple quantum-mechanical toy model (a spinor on the line,
subject to a magnetostatic interaction) is presented, that exhibits the
spontaneous breakdown of an internal symmetry.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1111.1213. Equations (30) and (31) have been corrected. Other minor
correction
Crystallization and melting of bacteria colonies and Brownian Bugs
Motivated by the existence of remarkably ordered cluster arrays of bacteria
colonies growing in Petri dishes and related problems, we study the spontaneous
emergence of clustering and patterns in a simple nonequilibrium system: the
individual-based interacting Brownian bug model. We map this discrete model
into a continuous Langevin equation which is the starting point for our
extensive numerical analyses. For the two-dimensional case we report on the
spontaneous generation of localized clusters of activity as well as a
melting/freezing transition from a disordered or isotropic phase to an ordered
one characterized by hexagonal patterns. We study in detail the analogies and
differences with the well-established Kosterlitz-Thouless-Halperin-Nelson-Young
theory of equilibrium melting, as well as with another competing theory. For
that, we study translational and orientational correlations and perform a
careful defect analysis. We find a non standard one-stage, defect-mediated,
transition whose nature is only partially elucidated.Comment: 13 Figures. 14 pages. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
- …