21,090 research outputs found
An alternative theoretical approach to describe planetary systems through a Schrodinger-type diffusion equation
In the present work we show that planetary mean distances can be calculated
with the help of a Schrodinger-type diffusion equation. The obtained results
are shown to agree with the observed orbits of all the planets and of the
asteroid belt in the solar system, with only three empty states. Furthermore,
the equation solutions predict a fundamental orbit at 0.05 AU from solar-type
stars, a result confirmed by recent discoveries. In contrast to other similar
approaches previously presented in the literature, we take into account the
flatness of the solar system, by considering the flat solutions of the
Schrodinger-type equation. The model has just one input parameter, given by the
mean distance of Mercury.Comment: 6 pages. Version accepted for publication in Chaos, Solitons &
Fractal
Generation of Superposition States and Charge-Qubit Relaxation Probing in a Circuit
We demonstrate how a superposition of coherent states can be generated for a
microwave field inside a coplanar transmission line coupled to a single
superconducting charge qubit, with the addition of a single classical magnetic
pulse for chirping of the qubit transition frequency. We show how the qubit
dephasing induces decoherence on the field superposition state, and how it can
be probed by the qubit charge detection. The character of the charge qubit
relaxation process itself is imprinted in the field state decoherence profile.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Field dependence of the magnetic spectrum in anisotropic and Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya antiferromagnets: I. Theory
We consider theoretically the effects of an applied uniform magnetic field on
the magnetic spectrum of anisotropic two-dimensional and Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya
layered quantum Heisenberg antiferromagnets. The first case is relevant for
systems such as the two-dimensional square lattice antiferromagnet
Sr(2)CuO(2)Cl(2), while the later is known to be relevant to the physics of the
layered orthorhombic antiferromagnet La(2)CuO(4). We first establish the
correspondence betwenn the low-energy spectrum obtained within the anisotropic
non-linear sigma model and by means of the spin-wave approximation for a
standard easy-axis antiferromagent. Then, we focus on the field-theory approach
to calculate the magnetic field dependence of the magnon gaps and spectral
intensities for magnetic fields applied along the three possible
crystallographic directions. We discuss the various possible ground states and
their evolution with temperature for the different field orientations, and the
occurrence of spin-flop transitions for fields perpendicular to the layers
(transverse fields) as well as for fields along the easy axis (longitudinal
fields). Measurements of the one-magnon Raman spectrum in Sr(2)CuO(2)Cl(2) and
La(2)CuO(4) and a comparison between the experimental results and the
predictions of the present theory will be reported in part II of this research
work [L. Benfatto et al., cond-mat/0602664].Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures, final version. Part II of the present work is
presented in cond-mat/060266
Particle Creation by a Moving Boundary with Robin Boundary Condition
We consider a massless scalar field in 1+1 dimensions satisfying a Robin
boundary condition (BC) at a non-relativistic moving boundary. We derive a
Bogoliubov transformation between input and output bosonic field operators,
which allows us to calculate the spectral distribution of created particles.
The cases of Dirichlet and Neumann BC may be obtained from our result as
limiting cases. These two limits yield the same spectrum, which turns out to be
an upper bound for the spectra derived for Robin BC. We show that the particle
emission effect can be considerably reduced (with respect to the
Dirichlet/Neumann case) by selecting a particular value for the oscillation
frequency of the boundary position
Theory of Spin Fluctuations in Striped Phases of Doped Antiferromagnetic Cuprates
We study the properties of generalized striped phases of doped cuprate planar
quantum antiferromagnets. We invoke an effective, spatially anisotropic,
non-linear sigma model in two space dimensions. Our theoretical predictions are
in quantitative agreement with recent experiments in La_{2-x}Sr_xCuO_4 with . We focus on (i) the magnetic correlation length, (ii) the
staggered magnetization at and (iii) the N\'eel temperature, as functions
of doping, using parameters determined previously and independently for this
system. These results support the proposal that the low doping
(antiferromagnetic) phase of the cuprates has a striped configuration.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex. To appear in the Proceedings of the International
Conference "Stripes, Lattice Instabilities and High Tc Superconductivity",
(Rome, Dec. 1996
Interplay between disorder, quantum and thermal fluctuations in ferromagnetic alloys: The case of UCu2Si(2-x)Ge(x)
We consider, theoretically and experimentally, the effects of structural
disorder, quantum and thermal fluctuations in the magnetic and transport
properties of certain ferromagnetic alloys.We study the particular case of
UCu2Si(2-x)Ge(x). The low temperature resistivity, rho(T,x), exhibits Fermi
liquid (FL) behavior as a function of temperature T for all values of x, which
can be interpreted as a result of the magnetic scattering of the conduction
electrons from the localized U spins. The residual resistivity, rho(0,x),
follows the behavior of a disordered binary alloy. The observed non-monotonic
dependence of the Curie temperature, Tc(x), with x can be explained within a
model of localized spins interacting with an electronic bath whose transport
properties cross-over from ballistic to diffusive regimes. Our results clearly
show that the Curie temperature of certain alloys can be enhanced due to the
interplay between quantum and thermal fluctuations with disorder.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
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