165,274 research outputs found
Quantum sensing of rotation velocity based on transverse field Ising model
We study a transverse-field Ising model (TFIM) in a rotational reference
frame. We find that the effective Hamiltonian of the TFIM of this system
depends on the system's rotation velocity. Since the rotation contributes an
additional transverse field, the dynamics of TFIM sensitively responses to the
rotation velocity at the critical point of quantum phase transition. This
observation means that the TFIM can be used for quantum sensing of rotation
velocity that can sensitively detect rotation velocity of the total system at
the critical point. It is found that the resolution of the quantum sensing
scheme we proposed is characterized by the half-width of Loschmidt echo of the
dynamics of TFIM when it couples to a quantum system S. And the resolution of
this quantum sensing scheme is proportional to the coupling strength \delta
between the quantum system S and the TFIM, and to the square root of the number
of spins N belonging the TFIM.Comment: 6 pages,6 figure
Scaling of Anisotropic Flows and Nuclear Equation of State in Intermediate Energy Heavy Ion Collisions
Elliptic flow () and hexadecupole flow () of light clusters have
been studied in details for 25 MeV/nucleon Kr + Sn at large
impact parameters by Quantum Molecular Dynamics model with different potential
parameters. Four parameter sets which include soft or hard equation of state
(EOS) with/without symmetry energy term are used. Both number-of-nucleon ()
scaling of the elliptic flow versus transverse momentum () and the scaling
of versus have been demonstrated for the light clusters
in all above calculation conditions. It was also found that the ratio of
keeps a constant of 1/2 which is independent of for all the
light fragments. By comparisons among different combinations of EOS and
symmetry potential term, the results show that the above scaling behaviors are
solid which do not depend the details of potential, while the strength of flows
is sensitive to EOS and symmetry potential term.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Isovector Giant Dipole Resonance of Stable Nuclei in a Consistent Relativistic Random Phase Approximation
A fully consistent relativistic random phase approximation is applied to
study the systematic behavior of the isovector giant dipole resonance of nuclei
along the -stability line in order to test the effective Lagrangians
recently developed. The centroid energies of response functions of the
isovector giant dipole resonance for stable nuclei are compared with the
corresponding experimental data and the good agreement is obtained. It is found
that the effective Lagrangian with an appropriate nuclear symmetry energy,
which can well describe the ground state properties of nuclei, could also
reproduce the isovector giant dipole resonance of nuclei along the
-stability line.Comment: 4 pages, 1 Postscript figure, to be submitted to Chin.Phys.Let
A multiple exp-function method for nonlinear differential equations and its application
A multiple exp-function method to exact multiple wave solutions of nonlinear
partial differential equations is proposed. The method is oriented towards ease
of use and capability of computer algebra systems, and provides a direct and
systematical solution procedure which generalizes Hirota's perturbation scheme.
With help of Maple, an application of the approach to the dimensional
potential-Yu-Toda-Sasa-Fukuyama equation yields exact explicit 1-wave and
2-wave and 3-wave solutions, which include 1-soliton, 2-soliton and 3-soliton
type solutions. Two cases with specific values of the involved parameters are
plotted for each of 2-wave and 3-wave solutions.Comment: 12 pages, 16 figure
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