23,074 research outputs found
Optical squeezing of a mechanical oscillator by dispersive interaction
We consider a small partially reflecting vibrating mirror coupled
dispersively to a single optical mode of a high finesse cavity. We show this
arrangement can be used to implement quantum squeezing of the mechanically
oscillating mirror.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Contribution from unresolved discrete sources to the Extragalactic Gamma-Ray Background (EGRB)
The origin of the extragalactic gamma-ray background (EGRB) is still an open
question, even after nearly forty years of its discovery. The emission could
originate from either truly diffuse processes or from unresolved point sources.
Although the majority of the 271 point sources detected by EGRET (Energetic
Gamma Ray Experiment Telescope) are unidentified, of the identified sources,
blazars are the dominant candidates. Therefore, unresolved blazars may be
considered the main contributor to the EGRB, and many studies have been carried
out to understand their distribution, evolution and contribution to the EGRB.
Considering that gamma-ray emission comes mostly from jets of blazars and that
the jet emission decreases rapidly with increasing jet to line-of-sight angle,
it is not surprising that EGRET was not able to detect many large inclination
angle active galactic nuclei (AGNs). Though Fermi could only detect a few large
inclination angle AGNs in the first three months' survey, it is expected to
detect many such sources in the near future. Since non-blazar AGNs are expected
to have higher density as compared to blazars, these could also contribute
significantly to the EGRB. In this paper we discuss contributions from
unresolved discrete sources including normal galaxies, starburst galaxies,
blazars and off-axis AGNs to the EGRB.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in RA
Multicanonical Methods vs. Molecular Dynamics vs. Monte Carlo: Comparison for Lennard-Jones Glasses
We applied a multicanonical algorithm (entropic sampling) to a
two-dimensional and a three-dimensional Lennard-Jones system with
quasicrystalline and glassy ground states. Focusing on the ability of the
algorithm to locate low lying energy states, we compared the results of the
multicanonical simulations with standard Monte Carlo simulated annealing and
molecular dynamics methods. We find slight benefits to using entropic sampling
in small systems (less than 80 particles), which disappear with larger systems.
This is disappointing as the multicanonical methods are designed to surmount
energy barriers to relaxation. We analyze this failure theoretically, and show
(1) the multicanonical method is reduced in the thermodynamic limit (large
systems) to an effective Monte Carlo simulated annealing with a random
temperature vs. time, and (2) the multicanonical method gets trapped by
unphysical entropy barriers in the same metastable states whose energy barriers
trap the traditional quenches. The performance of Monte Carlo and molecular
dynamics quenches were remarkably similar.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, REVTEX, epsf.st
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