5 research outputs found
Two-slit diffraction with highly charged particles: Niels Bohr's consistency argument that the electromagnetic field must be quantized
We analyze Niels Bohr's proposed two-slit interference experiment with highly
charged particles that argues that the consistency of elementary quantum
mechanics requires that the electromagnetic field must be quantized. In the
experiment a particle's path through the slits is determined by measuring the
Coulomb field that it produces at large distances; under these conditions the
interference pattern must be suppressed. The key is that as the particle's
trajectory is bent in diffraction by the slits it must radiate and the
radiation must carry away phase information. Thus the radiation field must be a
quantized dynamical degree of freedom. On the other hand, if one similarly
tries to determine the path of a massive particle through an inferometer by
measuring the Newtonian gravitational potential the particle produces, the
interference pattern would have to be finer than the Planck length and thus
undiscernable. Unlike for the electromagnetic field, Bohr's argument does not
imply that the gravitational field must be quantized.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. To appear in Proc. Natl. Acad. Sc
Magnetism and domain formation in SU(3)-symmetric multi-species Fermi mixtures
We study the phase diagram of an SU(3)-symmetric mixture of three-component
ultracold fermions with attractive interactions in an optical lattice,
including the additional effect on the mixture of an effective three-body
constraint induced by three-body losses. We address the properties of the
system in by using dynamical mean-field theory and variational Monte
Carlo techniques. The phase diagram of the model shows a strong interplay
between magnetism and superfluidity. In the absence of the three-body
constraint (no losses), the system undergoes a phase transition from a color
superfluid phase to a trionic phase, which shows additional particle density
modulations at half-filling. Away from the particle-hole symmetric point the
color superfluid phase is always spontaneously magnetized, leading to the
formation of different color superfluid domains in systems where the total
number of particles of each species is conserved. This can be seen as the SU(3)
symmetric realization of a more general tendency to phase-separation in
three-component Fermi mixtures. The three-body constraint strongly disfavors
the trionic phase, stabilizing a (fully magnetized) color superfluid also at
strong coupling. With increasing temperature we observe a transition to a
non-magnetized SU(3) Fermi liquid phase.Comment: 36 pages, 17 figures; Corrected typo
Formation of dense partonic matter in relativistic nucleus-nucleus collisions at RHIC: Experimental evaluation by the PHENIX collaboration
Extensive experimental data from high-energy nucleus-nucleus collisions were
recorded using the PHENIX detector at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider
(RHIC). The comprehensive set of measurements from the first three years of
RHIC operation includes charged particle multiplicities, transverse energy,
yield ratios and spectra of identified hadrons in a wide range of transverse
momenta (p_T), elliptic flow, two-particle correlations, non-statistical
fluctuations, and suppression of particle production at high p_T. The results
are examined with an emphasis on implications for the formation of a new state
of dense matter. We find that the state of matter created at RHIC cannot be
described in terms of ordinary color neutral hadrons.Comment: 510 authors, 127 pages text, 56 figures, 1 tables, LaTeX. Submitted
to Nuclear Physics A as a regular article; v3 has minor changes in response
to referee comments. Plain text data tables for the points plotted in figures
for this and previous PHENIX publications are (or will be) publicly available
at http://www.phenix.bnl.gov/papers.htm