25,165 research outputs found
Dynamical properties of a trapped dipolar Fermi gas at finite temperature
We investigate the dynamical properties of a trapped finite-temperature
normal Fermi gas with dipole-dipole interaction. For the free expansion
dynamics, we show that the expanded gas always becomes stretched along the
direction of the dipole moment. In addition, we present the temperature and
interaction dependences of the asymptotical aspect ratio. We further study the
collapse dynamics of the system by suddenly increasing the dipolar interaction
strength. We show that, in contrast to the anisotropic collapse of a dipolar
Bose-Einstein condensate, a dipolar Fermi gas always collapses isotropically
when the system becomes globally unstable. We also explore the interaction and
temperature dependences for the frequencies of the low-lying collective
excitations.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
A Deep Relevance Matching Model for Ad-hoc Retrieval
In recent years, deep neural networks have led to exciting breakthroughs in
speech recognition, computer vision, and natural language processing (NLP)
tasks. However, there have been few positive results of deep models on ad-hoc
retrieval tasks. This is partially due to the fact that many important
characteristics of the ad-hoc retrieval task have not been well addressed in
deep models yet. Typically, the ad-hoc retrieval task is formalized as a
matching problem between two pieces of text in existing work using deep models,
and treated equivalent to many NLP tasks such as paraphrase identification,
question answering and automatic conversation. However, we argue that the
ad-hoc retrieval task is mainly about relevance matching while most NLP
matching tasks concern semantic matching, and there are some fundamental
differences between these two matching tasks. Successful relevance matching
requires proper handling of the exact matching signals, query term importance,
and diverse matching requirements. In this paper, we propose a novel deep
relevance matching model (DRMM) for ad-hoc retrieval. Specifically, our model
employs a joint deep architecture at the query term level for relevance
matching. By using matching histogram mapping, a feed forward matching network,
and a term gating network, we can effectively deal with the three relevance
matching factors mentioned above. Experimental results on two representative
benchmark collections show that our model can significantly outperform some
well-known retrieval models as well as state-of-the-art deep matching models.Comment: CIKM 2016, long pape
Event-by-event shape and flow fluctuations of relativistic heavy-ion collision fireballs
Heavy-ion collisions create deformed quark-gluon plasma (QGP) fireballs which
explode anisotropically. The viscosity of the fireball matter determines its
ability to convert the initial spatial deformation into momentum anisotropies
that can be measured in the final hadron spectra. A quantitatively precise
empirical extraction of the QGP viscosity thus requires a good understanding of
the initial fireball deformation. This deformation fluctuates from event to
event, and so does the finally observed momentum anisotropy. We present a
harmonic decomposition of the initial fluctuations in shape and orientation of
the fireball and perform event-by-event ideal fluid dynamical simulations to
extract the resulting fluctuations in the magnitude and direction of the
corresponding harmonic components of the final anisotropic flow at midrapidity.
The final harmonic flow coefficients are found to depend non-linearly on the
initial harmonic eccentricity coefficients. We show that, on average, initial
density fluctuations suppress the buildup of elliptic flow relative to what one
obtains from a smooth initial profile of the same eccentricity, and discuss
implications for the phenomenological extraction of the QGP shear viscosity
from experimental elliptic flow data.Comment: 22 pages, 17 figures. Relative to [v2], minor changes in text. Fig. 9
redrawn. This version accepted by Phys. Rev.
Density oscillations in trapped dipolar condensates
We investigated the ground state wave function and free expansion of a
trapped dipolar condensate. We find that dipolar interaction may induce both
biconcave and dumbbell density profiles in, respectively, the pancake- and
cigar-shaped traps. On the parameter plane of the interaction strengths, the
density oscillation occurs only when the interaction parameters fall into
certain isolated areas. The relation between the positions of these areas and
the trap geometry is explored. By studying the free expansion of the condensate
with density oscillation, we show that the density oscillation is detectable
from the time-of-flight image.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figure
On several families of elliptic curves with arbitrary large Selmer groups
In this paper, we calculate the Selmer groups
S^{(\phi)} (E / \Q) and S^{(\hat{\varphi})} (E^{\prime} / \Q) of elliptic
curves via descent theory
(see [S, Chapter X]), in particular, we obtain that the Selmer groups of
several families of such elliptic curves can be arbitrary large.Comment: 22 page
Persistent global power fluctuations near a dynamic transition in electroconvection
This is a study of the global fluctuations in power dissipation and light
transmission through a liquid crystal just above the onset of
electroconvection.
The source of the fluctuations is found to be the creation and annihilation
of defects. They are spatially uncorrelated and yet temporally correlated. The
temporal correlation is seen to persist for extremely long times. There seems
to be an especially close relation between defect creation/annihilat ion in
electroconvection and thermal plumes in Rayleigh-B\'enard convection
The structures of Hausdorff metric in non-Archimedean spaces
For non-Archimedean spaces and let and be the
ballean of (the family of the balls in ), the space of mappings from
to and the space of mappings from the ballen of to
respectively. By studying explicitly the Hausdorff metric structures related to
these spaces, we construct several families of new metric structures (e.g., ) on the corresponding spaces, and study their convergence,
structural relation, law of variation in the variable including
some normed algebra structure. To some extent, the class is a counterpart of the usual Levy-Prohorov metric in the
probability measure spaces, but it behaves very differently, and is interesting
in itself. Moreover, when is compact and is a complete
non-Archimedean field, we construct and study a Dudly type metric of the space
of valued measures on Comment: 43 pages; this is the final version. Thanks to the anonymous
referee's helpful comments, the original Theorem 2.10 is removed, Proposition
2.10 is stated now in a stronger form, the abstact is rewritten, the
Monna-Springer is used in Section 5, and Theorem 5.2 is written in a more
general for
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