37,115 research outputs found
From propagators to glueballs in the Gribov-Zwanziger framework
Over the last years, lattice calculations in pure Yang-Mills gauge theory
seem to have come more or less to a consensus. The ghost propagator is not
enhanced and the gluon propagator is positivity violating, infrared suppressed
and non-vanishing at zero momentum. From an analytical point of view, several
groups are agreeing with these results. Among them, the refined
Gribov-Zwanziger (RGZ) framework also accommodates for these results. The
question which rises next is, if our models hold the right form for the
propagators, how to extract information on the real physical observables, i.e.
the glueballs? How do the operators which represent glueballs look like? We
review the current status of this matter within the RGZ framework.Comment: 3 pages, Conference contribution for Confinement IX, Madrid 2010
(30/08-03/09), to appear in American Institute of Physics (AIP
Does Good Mutation Help You Live Longer?
We study the dynamics of an age-structured population in which the life
expectancy of an offspring may be mutated with respect to that of its parent.
When advantageous mutation is favored, the average fitness of the population
grows linearly with time , while in the opposite case the average fitness is
constant. For no mutational bias, the average fitness grows as t^{2/3}. The
average age of the population remains finite in all cases and paradoxically is
a decreasing function of the overall population fitness.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, RevTeX revised version, to appear in Phys. Rev.
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Off-axis retrieval of orbital angular momentum of light stored in cold atoms
We report on the storage of orbital angu- lar momentum (OAM) of light of a
Laguerre-Gaussian mode in an ensemble of cold cesium atoms and its re- trieval
along an axis different from the incident light beam. We employed a
time-delayed four-wave mixing configuration to demonstrate that at small angle
(2o), after storage, the retrieved beam carries the same OAM as the one encoded
in the input beam. A calculation based on mode decomposition of the retrieved
beam over the Laguerre-Gaussian basis is in agreement with the experimental
observations done at small angle values. However, the calculation shows that
the OAM retrieving would get lost at larger angles, reducing the fidelity of
such storing-retrieving process. In addition, we have also observed that by
applying an external magnetic field to the atomic ensemble the retrieved OAM
presents Larmor oscillations, demonstrating the possibility of its manipulation
and off-axis retrieval.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Driving-dependent damping of Rabi oscillations in two-level semiconductor systems
We propose a mechanism to explain the nature of the damping of Rabi
oscillations with increasing driving-pulse area in localized semiconductor
systems, and have suggested a general approach which describes a coherently
driven two-level system interacting with a dephasing reservoir. Present
calculations show that the non-Markovian character of the reservoir leads to
the dependence of the dephasing rate on the driving-field intensity, as
observed experimentally. Moreover, we have shown that the damping of Rabi
oscillations might occur as a result of different dephasing mechanisms for both
stationary and non-stationary effects due to coupling to the environment.
Present calculated results are found in quite good agreement with available
experimental measurements
Ising Ferromagnet: Zero-Temperature Dynamic Evolution
The dynamic evolution at zero temperature of a uniform Ising ferromagnet on a
square lattice is followed by Monte Carlo computer simulations. The system
always eventually reaches a final, absorbing state, which sometimes coincides
with a ground state (all spins parallel), and sometimes does not (parallel
stripes of spins up and down). We initiate here the numerical study of
``Chaotic Time Dependence'' (CTD) by seeing how much information about the
final state is predictable from the randomly generated quenched initial state.
CTD was originally proposed to explain how nonequilibrium spin glasses could
manifest equilibrium pure state structure, but in simpler systems such as
homogeneous ferromagnets it is closely related to long-term predictability and
our results suggest that CTD might indeed occur in the infinite volume limit.Comment: 14 pages, Latex with 8 EPS figure
Irreversible Opinion Spreading on Scale-Free Networks
We study the dynamical and critical behavior of a model for irreversible
opinion spreading on Barab\'asi-Albert (BA) scale-free networks by performing
extensive Monte Carlo simulations. The opinion spreading within an
inhomogeneous society is investigated by means of the magnetic Eden model, a
nonequilibrium kinetic model for the growth of binary mixtures in contact with
a thermal bath. The deposition dynamics, which is studied as a function of the
degree of the occupied sites, shows evidence for the leading role played by
hubs in the growth process. Systems of finite size grow either ordered or
disordered, depending on the temperature. By means of standard finite-size
scaling procedures, the effective order-disorder phase transitions are found to
persist in the thermodynamic limit. This critical behavior, however, is absent
in related equilibrium spin systems such as the Ising model on BA scale-free
networks, which in the thermodynamic limit only displays a ferromagnetic phase.
The dependence of these results on the degree exponent is also discussed for
the case of uncorrelated scale-free networks.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures; added results and discussion on uncorrelated
scale-free networks; added references. To appear in PR
Entanglement and Bell's inequality violation above room temperature in metal carboxylates
In the present work we show that a special family of materials, the metal
carboxylates, may have entangled states up to very high temperatures. From
magnetic susceptibility measurements, we have estimated the critical
temperature below which entanglement exists in the cooper carboxylate
\{Cu(OCH)\}\{Cu(OCH)(2-methylpyridine)\}, and we have
found this to be above room temperature ( K). Furthermore, the
results show that the system remains maximally entangled until close to K and the Bell's inequality is violated up to nearly room temperature
( K)
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