32,002 research outputs found
Poisson sigma models and symplectic groupoids
We consider the Poisson sigma model associated to a Poisson manifold. The
perturbative quantization of this model yields the Kontsevich star product
formula. We study here the classical model in the Hamiltonian formalism. The
phase space is the space of leaves of a Hamiltonian foliation and has a natural
groupoid structure. If it is a manifold then it is a symplectic groupoid for
the given Poisson manifold. We study various families of examples. In
particular, a global symplectic groupoid for a general class of two-dimensional
Poisson domains is constructed.Comment: 34 page
Smart Materials as Intelligent Insulation
In order to provide a robust infrastructure for the transmission and distribution of electrical power, understanding and monitoring equipment ageing and failure is of paramount importance. Commonly, failure is associated with degradation of the dielectric material; therefore the introduction of a smart moiety into the material is a potentially attractive means of continual condition monitoring. It is important that any introduction of smart groups into the dielectric does not have any detrimental effect on the desirable electrical and mechanical properties of the bulk material. Initial work focussed on the introduction of fluorophores into a model dielectric system. Fluorescence is known to be a visible effect even at very low concentrations of active fluorophores and therefore was thought well suited to such an application. It was necessary both to optimise the active fluorophore itself and to determine the most appropriate manner in which to introduce the fluorophores into the insulating system. This presentation will describe the effect of introducing fluorophores into polymeric systems on the dielectric properties of the material and the findings thus far [1]. Alternative smart material systems will also be discussed along with the benefits and limitations of smart materials as electric field sensors
Superlight small bipolarons
Recent angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) has identified that
a finite-range Fr\"ohlich electron-phonon interaction (EPI) with c-axis
polarized optical phonons is important in cuprate superconductors, in agreement
with an earlier proposal by Alexandrov and Kornilovitch. The estimated
unscreened EPI is so strong that it could easily transform doped holes into
mobile lattice bipolarons in narrow-band Mott insulators such as cuprates.
Applying a continuous-time quantum Monte-Carlo algorithm (CTQMC) we compute the
total energy, effective mass, pair radius, number of phonons and isotope
exponent of lattice bipolarons in the region of parameters where any
approximation might fail taking into account the Coulomb repulsion and the
finite-range EPI. The effects of modifying the interaction range and different
lattice geometries are discussed with regards to analytical
strong-coupling/non-adiabatic results. We demonstrate that bipolarons can be
simultaneously small and light, provided suitable conditions on the
electron-phonon and electron-electron interaction are satisfied. Such light
small bipolarons are a necessary precursor to high-temperature Bose-Einstein
condensation in solids. The light bipolaron mass is shown to be universal in
systems made of triangular plaquettes, due to a novel crab-like motion. Another
surprising result is that the triplet-singlet exchange energy is of the first
order in the hopping integral and triplet bipolarons are heavier than singlets
in certain lattice structures at variance with intuitive expectations. Finally,
we identify a range of lattices where superlight small bipolarons may be
formed, and give estimates for their masses in the anti-adiabatic
approximation.Comment: 31 pages. To appear in J. Phys.: Condens. Matter, Special Issue
'Mott's Physics
Updates of PDFs in the MSTW framework
I present results on updates on PDFs which are obtained within the general
framework which led to the MSTW2008 PDF sets. There are some theory and
procedural improvements and a variety of new data sets, including many relevant
up-to-date LHC data. A new set of PDFs is very close to being finalised, with
no significant changes expected to the preliminary PDFs shown here.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures,Published in PoS DIS (2014
Bose Hubbard model in the presence of Ohmic dissipation
We study the zero temperature mean-field phase diagram of the Bose-Hubbard
model in the presence of local coupling between the bosons and an external
bath. We consider a coupling that conserves the on-site occupation number,
preserving the robustness of the Mott and superfluid phases. We show that the
coupling to the bath renormalizes the chemical potential and the interaction
between the bosons and reduces the size of the superfluid regions between the
insulating lobes. For strong enough coupling, a finite value of hopping is
required to obtain superfluidity around the degeneracy points where Mott phases
with different occupation numbers coexist. We discuss the role that such a bath
coupling may play in experiments that probe the formation of the
insulator-superfluid shell structure in systems of trapped atoms.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Error found in v1, now corrected, leads to
qualitative changes in result
The anomaly-free quantization of two-dimensional relativistic string. I
An anomaly-free quantum theory of a relativistic string is constructed in
two-dimensional space-time. The states of the string are found to be similar to
the states of a massless chiral quantum particle. This result is obtained by
generalizing the concept of an ``operator'' in quantum field theory.Comment: LaTeX, 19 pages, no figure
X-ray fluoresced high-Z (up to Z = 82) K-x-rays produced by LiNbO3 and LiTaO3 pyroelectric crystal electron accelerators
High-energy bremsstrahlung and K X-rays were used to produce nearly
background-free K X-ray spectra of up to 87 keV (Pb) via X-ray fluorescence.
The fluorescing radiation was produced by electron accelerators, consisting of
heated and cooled cylindrical LiTaO3 and LiNbO3 crystals at mTorr pressures.
The newly discovered process of gas amplification whereby the ambient gas
pressure is optimized to maximize the electron energy was used to produce
energetic electrons which when incident on a W/Bi target gave rise to a
radiation field consisting of high-energy bremsstrahlung as well as W and Bi K
X-rays. These photons were used to fluoresce Ta and Pb K X-rays.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, PD
Ferroelectric properties of charge-ordered alpha-(BEDT-TTF)2I3
A detailed investigation of the out-of-plane electrical properties of
charge-ordered alpha-(BEDT-TTF)2I3 provides clear evidence for
ferroelectricity. Similar to multiferroic alpha-(BEDT-TTF)2Cu[N(CN)2]Cl, the
polar order in this material is ascribed to the occurrence of bond- and
site-centered charge order. Dielectric response typical for relaxor
ferroelectricity is found deep in the charge-ordered state. We suggest an
explanation in terms of the existence of polar and nonpolar stacks of the
organic molecules in this material, preventing long-range ferroelectricity. The
results are discussed in relation to the formation or absence of electronic
polar order in related charge-transfer salts.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. Revised version as accepted for publication in
Phys. Rev.
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