1,652 research outputs found
Density-Dependent Synthetic Gauge Fields Using Periodically Modulated Interactions
We show that density-dependent synthetic gauge fields may be engineered by
combining periodically modu- lated interactions and Raman-assisted hopping in
spin-dependent optical lattices. These fields lead to a density- dependent
shift of the momentum distribution, may induce superfluid-to-Mott insulator
transitions, and strongly modify correlations in the superfluid regime. We show
that the interplay between the created gauge field and the broken sublattice
symmetry results, as well, in an intriguing behavior at vanishing interactions,
characterized by the appearance of a fractional Mott insulator.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Comment on "Coherent Ratchets in Driven Bose-Einstein Condensates"
C. E. Creffield and F. Sols (Phys. Rev. Lett. 103, 200601 (2009)) recently
reported finite, directed time-averaged ratchet current, for a noninteracting
quantum particle in a periodic potential even when time-reversal symmetry
holds. As we explain in this Comment, this result is incorrect, that is,
time-reversal symmetry implies a vanishing current.Comment: revised versio
Operator-based derivation of phonon modes and characterization of correlations for trapped ions at zero and finite temperature
We present a self-contained operator-based approach to derive the spectrum of trapped ions. This approach provides the complete normal form of the low-energy quadratic Hamiltonian in terms of bosonic phonons, as well as an effective free-particle degree of freedom for each spontaneously broken spatial symmetry. We demonstrate how this formalism can directly be used to characterize an ion chain both in the linear and the zigzag regimes. In particular, we compute, both for the ground state and finite temperature states, spatial correlations, heat capacity, and dynamical susceptibility. Last, for the ground state, which has quantum correlations, we analyze the amount of energy reduction compared to an uncorrelated state with minimum energy, thus highlighting how the system can lower its energy by correlations.Singapore. Ministry of Education (MOE2014-T2-2-119)Singapore. Ministry of Education (R-144-000-350-112
Charged Dilaton Black Holes with a Cosmological Constant
The properties of static spherically symmetric black holes, which are either
electrically or magnetically charged, and which are coupled to the dilaton in
the presence of a cosmological constant, are considered. It is shown that such
solutions do not exist if the cosmological constant is positive (in arbitrary
spacetime dimension >= 4). However, asymptotically anti-de Sitter black hole
solutions with a single horizon do exist if the cosmological constant is
negative. These solutions are studied numerically in four dimensions and the
thermodynamic properties of the solutions are derived. The extreme solutions
are found to have zero entropy and infinite temperature for all non-zero values
of the dilaton coupling constant.Comment: 12 pages, epsf, phyzzx, 4 in-text figures incl. (minor typos fixed, 1
reference added
Spatio-temporal self-focusing in femtosecond pulse transmission through multimode optical fibers
We numerically investigate ultra-short pulse propagation in multimode optical fibers with launch peak powers approaching the critical power for self-focusing using a generalized multimode nonlinear Schrödinger equation approach. Nonlinear spatial and temporal effects combined with fiber dispersion govern pulse compression in space and time which can result in damage inducing intensity levels. Here we identify pulse parameters for which damage is avoided and high-power delivery through optical fiber is possible near the fiber zero-dispersion wavelength
Extremal dyonic black holes in D=4 Gauss-Bonnet gravity
We investigate extremal dyon black holes in the Einstein-Maxwell-dilaton
(EMD) theory with higher curvature corrections in the form of the Gauss-Bonnet
density coupled to the dilaton. In the same theory without the Gauss-Bonnet
term the extremal dyon solutions exist only for discrete values of the dilaton
coupling constant . We show that the Gauss-Bonnet term acts as a dyon hair
tonic enlarging the allowed values of to continuous domains in the plane
the second parameter being the magnetic charge. In the limit of the
vanishing curvature coupling (a large magnetic charge) the dyon solutions
obtained tend to the Reissner-Nordstr\"om solution but not to the extremal
dyons of the EMD theory. Both solutions have the same values of the horizon
radius as a function of charges. The entropy of new dyonic black holes
interpolates between the Bekenstein-Hawking value in the limit of the large
magnetic charge (equivalent to the vanishing Gauss-Bonnet coupling) and twice
this value for the vanishing magnetic charge. Although an expression for the
entropy can be obtained analytically using purely local near-horizon solutions,
its interpretation as the black hole entropy is legitimate only once the global
black hole solution is known to exist, and we obtain numerically the
corresponding conditions on the parameters. Thus, a purely local analysis is
insufficient to fully understand the entropy of the curvature corrected black
holes. We also find dyon solutions which are not asymptotically flat, but
approach the linear dilaton background at infinity. They describe magnetic
black holes on the electric linear dilaton background.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures, revtex
Rotating Solution of Einstein-Maxwell Dilaton Gravity with Unusual Asymptotics
We study electrically charged, dilaton black holes, which possess
infinitesimal angular momentum in the presence of one or two Liouville type
potentials. These solutions are neither asymptotically flat nor (anti)-de
Sitter. Some properties of the solutions are discussed.Comment: 11 pages, Accepted (Int. J. Theor. Phys.
Bleeding Meckel's diverticulum diagnosis: an unusual indication for computed tomography
Despite the wide use of modern investigation techniques, the diagnosis of complications related to Meckel's diverticulum (MD) remains difficult. Arteriography is commonly indicated for acute bleeding, and radionuclide scans may help in identifying the site of intestinal hemorrhage. In contrast, computed tomography (CT) is usually considered little use in the diagnosis of bleeding MD. We present the case of a young patient with massive gastrointestinal hemorrhage, in whom the diagnosis of MD bleeding was preoperatively made with contrast-enhanced CT after two negatives arteriographie
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