20,715 research outputs found
Different Approaches to Proof Systems
The classical approach to proof complexity perceives proof systems as deterministic, uniform, surjective, polynomial-time computable functions that map strings to (propositional) tautologies. This approach has been intensively studied since the late 70’s and a lot of progress has been made. During the last years research was started investigating alternative notions of proof systems. There are interesting results stemming from dropping the uniformity requirement, allowing oracle access, using quantum computations, or employing probabilism. These lead to different notions of proof systems for which we survey recent results in this paper
Fractional Quantum Hall states in the vicinity of Mott plateaus
We perform variational Monte-Carlo calculations to show that bosons in a
rotating optical lattice will form analogs of fractional quantum Hall states
when the tunneling is sufficiently weak compared to the interactions and the
deviation of density from an integer is commensurate with the effective
magnetic field. We compare the energies of superfluid and correlated states to
one-another and to the energies found in full configuration-interaction
calculations on small systems. We look at overlaps between our variational
states and the exact ground-state, characterizing the ways in which fractional
quantum Hall effect correlations manifest themselves near the Mott insulating
state. We explore the experimental signatures of these states.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Performance results of a 300-degree linear phase modulator for spaceborne communications applications
A phase modulator capable of large linear phase deviation, low loss, and wide band operation with good thermal stability was developed for deep space spacecraft transponder (DST) applications at X-band (8.415 GHz) and Ka-band (32 GHz) downlinks. The design uses a two-stage circulator-coupled reflection phase shifter with constant gamma hyperabrupt varactors and an efficient modulator driver circuit to obtain a phase deviation of +/-2.5 rad with better than 8 percent linearity. The measured insertion loss is 6.6 dB +/- 0.35 dB at 8415 MHz. Measured carrier and relative sideband amplitudes resulting from phase modulation by sine wave and square modulating functions agree well with the predicted results
Combined QCD analysis of e^+ e^- data at sqrt(s) = 14 to 172 GeV
A study of the energy dependence of event shape observables is presented. The
strong coupling constant \alpha_s has been determined from the mean values of
six event shape observables. Power corrections, employed for the measurement of
\alpha_s, have been found to approximately account for hadronisation effects.Comment: 6 pages, uses espcrc2.sty (included) and epsfig.sty, LaTeX, 8
.eps-file
The Diffraction Model and its Applicability for Wakefield Calculations
The operation of a Free Electron Laser (FEL) in the ultraviolet or in the
X-ray regime requires the acceleration of electron bunches with an rms length
of 25 to 50 micro meters. The wakefields generated by these sub picosecond
bunches extend into the frequency range well beyond the threshold for Cooper
pair breakup (about 750 GHz) in superconducting niobium at 2 K. It is shown,
that the superconducting cavities can indeed be operated with 25 micro meter
bunches without suffering a breakdown of superconductivity (quench), however at
the price of a reduced quality factor and an increased heat transfer to the
superfluid helium bath. This was first shown by wakefield calculations based on
the diffraction model. In the meantime a more conventional method of computing
wake fields in the time domain by numerical methods was developed and used for
the wakefield calculations. Both methods lead to comparable results: the
operation of TESLA with 25 micro meter bunches is possible but leads to an
additional heat load due to the higher order modes (HOMs). Therefore HOM
dampers for these high frequencies are under construction. These dampers are
located in the beam pipes between the 9-cell cavities. So it is of interest, if
there are trapped modes in the cavity due to closed photon orbits. In this
paper we investigate the existence of trapped modes and the distribution of
heat load over the surface of the TESLA cavity by numerical photon tracking.Comment: Linac2000 conference paper ID No. MOE0
Notes from the 3rd Axion Strategy Meeting
In this note we briefly summarize the main future targets and strategies for
axion and general low energy particle physics identified in the "3rd axion
strategy meeting" held during the AXIONS 2010 workshop. This summary follows a
wide discussion with contributions from many of the workshop attendees.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Predictions of the pseudo-complex theory of Gravity for EHT observations- II. Theory and predictions
We present a resum\'e on the modified theory of gravity, called
pseudo-complex General Relativity (pc-GR). It is the second in a series of
papers, where the first one (Boller et al. 2019, referred to as paper I)
discussed the observational consequences of pc-GR. In this paper, we
concentrate on the underlying theory. PC-GR involves an algebraic extension of
the standard theory of GR and it depends on two phenomenological parameters. An
element included in pc-GR that is not present in standard GR is the
energy-momentum tensor corresponding to an anisotropic ideal fluid, which we
call dark energy. The two parameters are related to the coupling of mass to the
dark energy and its fall-off as a function of r. The consequences and
predictions of this theory will be discussed in the context of the
observational results of the Even Horizon Telescope, expected soon. Our main
result is that due to the accumulation of dark energy near a large mass, the
modified theory predicts a dark ring followed by a bright ring in the emission
profile of the accretion disc. We also discuss the light ring in the equatorial
plane.Comment: 2 figure
- …