13,124 research outputs found
Glauber dynamics for the quantum Ising model in a transverse field on a regular tree
Motivated by a recent use of Glauber dynamics for Monte-Carlo simulations of
path integral representation of quantum spin models [Krzakala, Rosso,
Semerjian, and Zamponi, Phys. Rev. B (2008)], we analyse a natural Glauber
dynamics for the quantum Ising model with a transverse field on a finite graph
. We establish strict monotonicity properties of the equilibrium
distribution and we extend (and improve) the censoring inequality of Peres and
Winkler to the quantum setting. Then we consider the case when is a regular
-ary tree and prove the same fast mixing results established in [Martinelli,
Sinclair, and Weitz, Comm. Math. Phys. (2004)] for the classical Ising model.
Our main tool is an inductive relation between conditional marginals (known as
the "cavity equation") together with sharp bounds on the operator norm of the
derivative at the stable fixed point. It is here that the main difference
between the quantum and the classical case appear, as the cavity equation is
formulated here in an infinite dimensional vector space, whereas in the
classical case marginals belong to a one-dimensional space
Relaxation time of -reversal chains and other chromosome shuffles
We prove tight bounds on the relaxation time of the so-called -reversal
chain, which was introduced by R. Durrett as a stochastic model for the
evolution of chromosome chains. The process is described as follows. We have
distinct letters on the vertices of the -cycle ( mod
); at each step, a connected subset of the graph is chosen uniformly at
random among all those of length at most , and the current permutation is
shuffled by reversing the order of the letters over that subset. We show that
the relaxation time , defined as the inverse of the spectral gap of
the associated Markov generator, satisfies . Our results can be interpreted as strong evidence for a
conjecture of R. Durrett predicting a similar behavior for the mixing time of
the chain.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/105051606000000295 in the
Annals of Applied Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aap/) by the Institute
of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Lattice computation of structure functions
Recent lattice calculations of hadron structure functions are described.Comment: Plenary talk presented at LATTICE96, LaTeX, 7 pages, 5 figures,
espcrc2.sty and epsfig.sty include
Mixing length scales of low temperature spin plaquettes models
Plaquette models are short range ferromagnetic spin models that play a key
role in the dynamic facilitation approach to the liquid glass transition. In
this paper we perform a rigorous study of the thermodynamic properties of two
dimensional plaquette models, the square and triangular plaquette models. We
prove that for any positive temperature both models have a unique infinite
volume Gibbs measure with exponentially decaying correlations. We analyse the
scaling of three a priori different static correlation lengths in the small
temperature regime, the mixing, cavity and multispin correlation lengths.
Finally, using the symmetries of the model we determine an exact self
similarity property for the infinite volume Gibbs measure.Comment: 33 pages, 9 figure
Where do perturbative and non-perturbative QCD meet?
We computed the static potential and Wilson loops to in
perturbation theory for different lattice quark and gluon actions. In general,
we find short distance lattice data to be well described by ``boosted
perturbation theory''. For Wilson-type fermions at present-day quark masses and
lattice spacings agreement within 10% between measured ``-shifts'' and
those predicted by perturbation theory is found. We comment on prospects for a
determination of the real world QCD running coupling.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, Talk at Lattice 2001 in renormalisation and
improvement sessio
E-ELT constraints on runaway dilaton scenarios
We use a combination of simulated cosmological probes and astrophysical tests
of the stability of the fine-structure constant , as expected from the
forthcoming European Extremely Large Telescope (E-ELT), to constrain the class
of string-inspired runaway dilaton models of Damour, Piazza and Veneziano. We
consider three different scenarios for the dark sector couplings in the model
and discuss the observational differences between them. We improve previously
existing analyses investigating in detail the degeneracies between the
parameters ruling the coupling of the dilaton field to the other components of
the universe, and studying how the constraints on these parameters change for
different fiducial cosmologies. We find that if the couplings are small (e.g.,
) these degeneracies strongly affect the constraining
power of future data, while if they are sufficiently large (e.g.,
, as in agreement with current
constraints) the degeneracies can be partially broken. We show that E-ELT will
be able to probe some of this additional parameter space.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures. Updated version matching the one accepted by
JCA
The quest for three-color entanglement: experimental investigation of new multipartite quantum correlations
We experimentally investigate quadrature correlations between pump, signal,
and idler fields in an above-threshold optical parametric oscillator. We
observe new quantum correlations among the pump and signal or idler beams, as
well as among the pump and a combined quadrature of signal and idler beams. A
further investigation of unforeseen classical noise observed in this system is
presented, which hinders the observation of the recently predicted tripartite
entanglement. In spite of this noise, current results approach the limit
required to demonstrate three-color entanglement.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Opt. Expres
Cutoff for the Ising model on the lattice
Introduced in 1963, Glauber dynamics is one of the most practiced and
extensively studied methods for sampling the Ising model on lattices. It is
well known that at high temperatures, the time it takes this chain to mix in
on a system of size is . Whether in this regime there is
cutoff, i.e. a sharp transition in the -convergence to equilibrium, is a
fundamental open problem: If so, as conjectured by Peres, it would imply that
mixing occurs abruptly at for some fixed , thus providing
a rigorous stopping rule for this MCMC sampler. However, obtaining the precise
asymptotics of the mixing and proving cutoff can be extremely challenging even
for fairly simple Markov chains. Already for the one-dimensional Ising model,
showing cutoff is a longstanding open problem.
We settle the above by establishing cutoff and its location at the high
temperature regime of the Ising model on the lattice with periodic boundary
conditions. Our results hold for any dimension and at any temperature where
there is strong spatial mixing: For this carries all the way to the
critical temperature. Specifically, for fixed , the continuous-time
Glauber dynamics for the Ising model on with periodic boundary
conditions has cutoff at , where is
the spectral gap of the dynamics on the infinite-volume lattice. To our
knowledge, this is the first time where cutoff is shown for a Markov chain
where even understanding its stationary distribution is limited.
The proof hinges on a new technique for translating to mixing
which enables the application of log-Sobolev inequalities. The technique is
general and carries to other monotone and anti-monotone spin-systems.Comment: 34 pages, 3 figure
Direct Production of Tripartite Pump-Signal-Idler Entanglement in the Above-Threshold Optical Parametric Oscillator
We calculate the quantum correlations existing among the three output fields
(pump, signal, and idler) of a triply resonant non-degenerate Optical
Parametric Oscillator operating above threshold. By applying the standard
criteria [P. van Loock and A. Furusawa, Phys. Rev. A 67, 052315 (2003)], we
show that strong tripartite continuous-variable entanglement is present in this
well-known and simple system. Furthermore, since the entanglement is generated
directly from a nonlinear process, the three entangled fields can have very
different frequencies, opening the way for multicolored quantum information
networks.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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