8,403 research outputs found
Noncommutative Field Theory and the Dynamics of Quantum Hall Fluids
We study the spectrum of density fluctuations of Fractional Hall Fluids in
the context of the noncommutative hidrodynamical model of Susskind. We show
that, within the weak-field expansion, the leading correction to the
noncommutative Chern--Simons Lagrangian (a Maxwell term in the effective
action,) destroys the incompressibility of the Hall fluid due to strong UV/IR
effects at one loop. We speculate on possible relations of this instability
with the transition to the Wigner crystal, and conclude that calculations
within the weak-field expansion must be carried out with an explicit
ultraviolet cutoff at the noncommutativity scale. We point out that the
noncommutative dipoles exactly match the spatial structure of the
Halperin--Kallin quasiexcitons. Therefore, we propose that the noncommutative
formalism must describe accurately the spectrum at very large momenta, provided
no weak-field approximations are made. We further conjecture that the
noncommutative open Wilson lines are `vertex operators' for the quasiexcitons.Comment: 20 pages, harvma
Exploiting quantum parallelism to simulate quantum random many-body systems
We present an algorithm that exploits quantum parallelism to simulate randomness in a quantum system. In our scheme, all possible realizations of the random parameters are encoded quantum mechanically in a superposition state of an auxiliary system. We show how our algorithm allows for the efficient simulation of dynamics of quantum random spin chains with known numerical methods. We propose an experimental realization based on atoms in optical lattices in which disorder could be simulated in parallel and in a controlled way through the interaction with another atomic species
Electromagnetic radiation initiated by hadronic jets from microquasars in the ISM
Microquasars are potential candidates to produce a non-negligible fraction of
the observed galactic cosmic rays. The protons accelerated at the jet
termination shock interact with the interstellar medium and may produce
detectable fluxes of extended emission at different energy bands: high-energy
and very high-energy gamma-rays produced by neutral pion-decay, synchrotron and
bremsstrahlung emission in a wide energy range generated by the secondary
electrons produced by charged pion-decay. We discuss the association between
this scenario and some of the unidentified EGRET sources in the galactic plane.Comment: (1)Universitat de Barcelona (2)Max Planck institute fur kernphysik,
11 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Phase diagram of Landau-Zener phenomena in coupled one-dimensional Bose quantum fluids
We study stationary and dynamical properties of the many-body Landau-Zener
dynamics of a Bose quantum fluid confined in two coupled one-dimensional
chains, using a many-body generalization recently reported [Y.-A. Chen et al.],
within the decoupling approximation and the one-level band scheme. The energy
spectrum evidences the structure of the avoided level crossings as a function
of the on-site inter particle interaction strength. On the dynamical side, a
phase diagram of the transfer efficiency across ground-state and inverse sweeps
is presented. A totally different scenario with respect to the original
single-particle Landau-Zener scheme is found for ground-state sweeps, in which
a breakdown of the adiabatic region emerges as the sweep rate decreases. On the
contrary, the transfer efficiency across inverse sweeps reveals consistent
results with the single-particle Landau-Zener predictions. In the strong
coupling regime, we find that there is a critical value of the on-site
interaction for which the transfer of particles starts to vanish independently
of the sweep rate. Our results are in qualitative agreement with those of the
experimental counterpart.Comment: 15 pages, submitted to Phys. Rev. A (new version
Broad-band electromagnetic radiation from microquasars interacting with ISM
Microquasars (MQs) are galactic objects with relativistic jets that
constitute a source population which can be responsible for production of a
non-negligible fraction of the observed galactic cosmic rays. These
relativistic protons, associated with the termination of the jet, interact with
the interstellar medium and, at certain surrounding conditions, may lead to
production of detectable fluxes of high-energy and very high-energy gamma-rays.
This radiation is accompanied by the broad-band emission of secondary electrons
from decays of -mesons produced through synchrotron, bremstrahlung and
inverse Compton process. The features of broad-band emission initiated by
proton-proton (pp) interactions in such a scenario is discussed in the context
of the strategy of search for counterparts of high-energy and very high-energy
gamma-ray sources in the galactic plane.Comment: High Energy Gamma-Ray Astronomy: 2nd International Symposium,
Proceedings of the conference held 26-30 July 2004 in Heidelberg (Germany).
Edited by Felix A. Aharonian, Heinz J. Volk, and Dieter Horns. AIP Conference
Proceedings, Volume 745. New York: American Institute of Physics, 2005.,
p.317-32
Constraining supersymmetry from the satellite experiments
In this paper we study the detectability of -rays from dark matter
annihilation in the subhalos of the Milky Way by the satellite-based
experiments, EGRET and GLAST. We work in the frame of supersymmetric extension
of the standard model and assume the lightest neutralino being the dark matter
particles. Based on the N-body simulation of the evolution of dark matter
subhalos we first calculate the average intensity distribution of this new
class of -ray sources by neutralino annihilation. It is possible to
detect these -ray sources by EGRET and GLAST. Conversely, if these
sources are not detected the nature of the dark matter particls will be
constrained by these experiments, which, however, depending on the
uncertainties of the subhalo profile.Comment: 19 pages, 5 gigures; references added, more discussions adde
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