39,879 research outputs found
Influence of Dislocations in Thomson's Problem
We investigate Thomson's problem of charges on a sphere as an example of a
system with complex interactions. Assuming certain symmetries we can work with
a larger number of charges than before. We found that, when the number of
charges is large enough, the lowest energy states are not those with the
highest symmetry. As predicted previously by Dodgson and Moore, the complex
patterns in these states involve dislocation defects which screen the strains
of the twelve disclinations required to satisfy Euler's theorem.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures in gif format. Original PS files can be obtained
in http://fermi.fcu.um.es/thomso
A new spinfoam vertex for quantum gravity
We introduce a new spinfoam vertex to be used in models of 4d quantum gravity
based on SU(2) and SO(4) BF theory plus constraints. It can be seen as the
conventional vertex of SU(2) BF theory, the 15j symbol, in a particular basis
constructed using SU(2) coherent states. This basis makes the geometric
interpretation of the variables transparent: they are the vectors normal to the
triangles within each tetrahedron. We study the condition under which these
states can be considered semiclassical, and we show that the semiclassical ones
dominate the evaluation of quantum correlations. Finally, we describe how the
constraints reducing BF to gravity can be directly written in terms of the new
variables, and how the semiclassicality of the states might improve
understanding the correct way to implement the constraints.Comment: 17+8 pages, 6 figures. v2 updated reference
3+1 spinfoam model of quantum gravity with spacelike and timelike components
We present a spinfoam formulation of Lorentzian quantum General Relativity.
The theory is based on a simple generalization of an Euclidean model defined in
terms of a field theory over a group. The model is an extension of a recently
introduced Lorentzian model, in which both timelike and spacelike components
are included. The spinfoams in the model, corresponding to quantized
4-geometries, carry a natural non-perturbative local causal structure induced
by the geometry of the algebra of the internal gauge (sl(2,C)). Amplitudes can
be expressed as integrals over the spacelike unit-vectors hyperboloid in
Minkowski space, or the imaginary Lobachevskian space.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figur
Near-Field Radio Holography of Large Reflector Antennas
We summarise the mathematical foundation of the holographic method of
measuring the reflector profile of an antenna or radio telescope. In
particular, we treat the case, where the signal source is located at a finite
distance from the antenna under test, necessitating the inclusion of the
so-called Fresnel field terms in the radiation integrals. We assume a ``full
phase'' system with reference receiver to provide the reference phase. We
describe in some detail the hardware and software implementation of the system
used for the holographic measurement of the 12m ALMA prototype submillimeter
antennas. We include a description of the practicalities of a measurement and
surface setting. The results for both the VertexRSI and AEC
(Alcatel-EIE-Consortium) prototype ALMA antennas are presented.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures, to appear in IEEE Antennas and Propagation
Magazine, Vol. 49, No. 5, October 2007. Version 2 includes nice mug-shots of
the author
High-pressure x-ray diffraction study of bulk and nanocrystalline PbMoO4
We studied the effects of high-pressure on the crystalline structure of bulk
and nanocrystalline scheelite-type PbMoO4. We found that in both cases the
compressibility of the materials is highly non-isotropic, being the c-axis the
most compressible one. We also observed that the volume compressibility of
nanocrystals becomes higher that the bulk one at 5 GPa. In addition, at 10.7(8)
GPa we observed the onset of an structural phase transition in bulk PbMoO4. The
high-pressure phase has a monoclinic structure similar to M-fergusonite. The
transition is reversible and not volume change is detected between the low- and
high-pressure phases. No additional structural changes or evidence of
decomposition are found up to 21.1 GPa. In contrast nanocrystalline PbMoO4
remains in the scheelite structure at least up to 16.1 GPa. Finally, the
equation of state for bulk and nanocrystalline PbMoO4 are also determined.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure
FCNC and CP Violation Observables in a SU(3)-flavoured MSSM
A non-Abelian flavour symmetry in a minimal supersymmetric standard model can
explain the flavour structures in the Yukawa couplings and simultaneously solve
the SUSY flavour problem. Similarly the SUSY CP problem can be solved if CP is
spontaneously broken in the flavour sector. In this work, we present an
explicit example of these statements with a SU(3) flavour symmetry and
spontaneous CP violation. In addition, we show that it is still possible to
find some significant deviation from the SM expectations as far as FCNC and CP
violation are concerned. We find that large contributions can be expected in
lepton flavour violating decays, as and , electric dipole moments, and and kaon CP violating
processes as . Thus, these flavoured MSSM realizations are
phenomenologically sensitive to the experimental searches in the realm of
flavor and CP vioation physics.Comment: 56 pages, 12 figures; included new NLO contributions to nEDM from
charged Higgs, relevant figures updated, and analysis of O(1) coefficients;
added appendices and reference
Nonlinear interferometer for tailoring the frequency spectrum of bright squeezed vacuum
We propose a method for tailoring the frequency spectrum of bright squeezed
vacuum by generating it in a nonlinear interferometer, consisting of two
down-converting nonlinear crystals separated by a dispersive medium. Due to a
faster dispersive spreading of higher-order Schmidt modes, the spectral width
of the radiation at the output is reduced as the length of the dispersive
medium is increased. Preliminary results show 30\% spectral narrowing.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Finiteness and Dual Variables for Lorentzian Spin Foam Models
We describe here some new results concerning the Lorentzian Barrett-Crane
model, a well-known spin foam formulation of quantum gravity. Generalizing an
existing finiteness result, we provide a concise proof of finiteness of the
partition function associated to all non-degenerate triangulations of
4-manifolds and for a class of degenerate triangulations not previously shown.
This is accomplished by a suitable re-factoring and re-ordering of integration,
through which a large set of variables can be eliminated. The resulting
formulation can be interpreted as a ``dual variables'' model that uses
hyperboloid variables associated to spin foam edges in place of representation
variables associated to faces. We outline how this method may also be useful
for numerical computations, which have so far proven to be very challenging for
Lorentzian spin foam models.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figur
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