2,413 research outputs found
Molecular-orbital structure in neutron-rich C isotopes
The molecule-like structure of the C isotopes (A=12, 14, 16) is investigated using a microscopic model. The valence neutrons are classified based on the molecular-orbit (MO) model, and both -orbit and -orbit are introduced around three -clusters. The valence neutrons which occupy the -orbit increase the binding energy and stabilize the linear-chain of 3 against the breathing-like break-up. However, C with the -orbit does not show clear energy minimum against the bending-like path. The combination of the valence neutrons in the - and the -orbit is promising to stabilize the linear-chain state against the breathing- and bending- modes, and it is found that the excited states of C with the configuration for the four valence neutrons is one of the most promising candidates for such structure
Important role of the spin-orbit interaction in forming the 1/2^+ orbital structure in Be isotopes
The structure of the second 0^+ state of ^{10}Be is investigated using a
microscopic model based on the molecular-orbit (MO) model.
The second 0^+ state, which has dominantly the (1/2^+)^2 configuration, is
shown to have a particularly enlarged structure. The kinetic
energy of the two valence neutrons occupying along the axis is
reduced remarkably due to the strong clustering and, simultaneously,
the spin-orbit interaction unexpectedly plays important role to make the energy
of this state much lower. The mixing of states with different spin structure is
shown to be important in negative-parity states. The experimentally observed
small-level spacing between 1^- and 2^- (~ 300 keV) is found to be an evidence
of this spin-mixing effect. ^{12}{Be} is also investigated using
model, in which four valence neutrons are considered to
occupy the (3/2^-)^2(1/2^+)^2 configuration. The energy surface of ^{12}Be is
shown to exhibit similar characteristics, that the remarkable
clustering and the contribution of the spin-orbit interaction make the binding
of the state with (3/2^-)^2(1/2^+)^2 configuration properly stronger in
comparison with the closed p-shell (3/2^-)^2(1/2^-)^2 configuration.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Can we use Weak Lensing to Measure Total Mass Profiles of Galaxies on 20 kiloparsec Scales?
Current constraints on dark matter density profiles from weak lensing are
typically limited to radial scales greater than 50-100 kpc. In this paper, we
explore the possibility of probing the very inner regions of galaxy/halo
density profiles by measuring stacked weak lensing on scales of only a few tens
of kpc. Our forecasts focus on scales smaller than the equality radius (Req)
where the stellar component and the dark matter component contribute equally to
the lensing signal. We compute the evolution of Req as a function of lens
stellar mass and redshift and show that Req=7-34 kpc for galaxies with the
stellar mass of 10^{9.5}-10^{11.5} solar masses. Unbiased shear measurements
will be challenging on these scales. We introduce a simple metric to quantify
how many source galaxies overlap with their neighbours and for which shear
measurements will be challenging. Rejecting source galaxies with close-by
companions results in about a 20 per cent decrease in the overall source
density. Despite this decrease, we show that Euclid and WFIRST will be able to
constrain galaxy/halo density profiles at Req with signal-to-noise ratio >20
for the stellar mass of >10^{10} solar masses. Weak lensing measurements at
Req, in combination with stellar kinematics on smaller scales, will be a
powerful means by which to constrain both the inner slope of the dark matter
density profile as well as the mass and redshift dependence of the stellar
initial mass function.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, 3 tables, submitted to MNRAS, included the
referee comment
ON THE LOW-TEMPERATURE ORDERING OF THE 3D ATIFERROMAGNETIC THREE-STATE POTTS MODEL
The antiferromagnetic three-state Potts model on the simple-cubic lattice is
studied using Monte Carlo simulations. The ordering in a medium temperature
range below the critical point is investigated in detail. Two different regimes
have been observed: The so-called broken sublattice-symmetry phase dominates at
sufficiently low temperatures, while the phase just below the critical point is
characterized by an effectively continuous order parameter and by a fully
restored rotational symmetry. However, the later phase is not the
permutationally sublattice symmetric phase recently predicted by the cluster
variation method.Comment: 20 pages with 9 figures in a single postscript file (compressed and
uuencoded by uufiles -gz -9) plus two big figures in postscript file
Spin Wave Instability of Itinerant Ferromagnet
We show variationally that instability of the ferromagnetic state in the
Hubbard model is largely controlled by softening of a long-wavelength spin-wave
excitation, except in the over-doped strong-coupling region where the
individual-particle excitation becomes unstable first. A similar conclusion is
drawn also for the double exchange ferromagnet. Generally the spin-wave
instability may be regarded as a precursor of the metal-insulator transition.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
Scale-free network topology and multifractality in weighted planar stochastic lattice
We propose a weighted planar stochastic lattice (WPSL) formed by the random
sequential partition of a plane into contiguous and non-overlapping blocks and
find that it evolves following several non-trivial conservation laws, namely
is independent of time , where
and are the length and width of the th block. Its dual on the
other hand, obtained by replacing each block with a node at its center and
common border between blocks with an edge joining the two vertices, emerges as
a network with a power-law degree distribution where
revealing scale-free coordination number disorder since
also describes the fraction of blocks having neighbours. To quantify the
size disorder, we show that if the th block is populated with then its distribution in the WPSL exhibits multifractality.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, To appear in New Journal of Physics (NJP
Three-dimensional antiferromagnetic q-state Potts models: application of the Wang-Landau algorithm
We apply a newly proposed Monte Carlo method, the Wang-Landau algorithm, to
the study of the three-dimensional antiferromagnetic q-state Potts models on a
simple cubic lattice. We systematically study the phase transition of the
models with q=3, 4, 5 and 6. We obtain the finite-temperature phase transition
for q= 3 and 4, whereas the transition temperature is down to zero for q=5. For
q=6 there exists no order for all the temperatures. We also study the
ground-state properties. The size-dependence of the ground-state entropy is
investigated. We find that the ground-state entropy is larger than the
contribution from the typical configurations of the broken-sublattice-symmetry
state for q=3. The same situations are found for q = 4, 5 and 6.Comment: 9 pages including 9 eps figures, RevTeX, to appear in J. Phys.
Spontaneous Collapse of Unstable Quantum Superposition State: A Single-Particle Model of Modified Quantum Dynamics
We propose a modified dynamics of quantum mechanics, in which classical
mechanics of a point mass derives intrinsically in a massive limit of a
single-particle model. On the premise that a position basis plays a special
role in wavefunction collapse, we deduce to formalize spontaneous localization
of wavefunction on the analogy drawn from thermodynamics, in which a
characteristic energy scale and a time scale are introduced to separate quantum
and classical regimes.Comment: 2figs., contribution to Xth ICQO 200
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