6,350 research outputs found
Constraints on Holographic Dark Energy from Latest Supernovae, Galaxy Clustering, and Cosmic Microwave Background Anisotropy Observations
The holographic dark energy model is proposed by Li as an attempt for probing
the nature of dark energy within the framework of quantum gravity. The main
characteristic of holographic dark energy is governed by a numerical parameter
in the model. The parameter can only be determined by observations.
Thus, in order to characterize the evolving feature of dark energy and to
predict the fate of the universe, it is of extraordinary importance to
constrain the parameter by using the currently available observational
data. In this paper, we derive constraints on the holographic dark energy model
from the latest observational data including the gold sample of 182 Type Ia
supernovae (SNIa), the shift parameter of the cosmic microwave background (CMB)
given by the three-year {\it Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe} ({\it WMAP})
observations, and the baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) measurement from the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The joint analysis gives the fit results in
1-: and . That
is to say, though the possibility of is more favored, the possibility of
can not be excluded in one-sigma error range, which is somewhat different
from the result derived from previous investigations using earlier data. So,
according to the new data, the evidence for the quintom feature in the
holographic dark energy model is not as strong as before.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figures; accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Landau-Zener transition of a two-level system driven by spin chains near their critical points
The Landau-Zener(LZ) transition of a two-level system coupling to spin chains
near their critical points is studied in this paper. Two kinds of spin chains,
the Ising spin chain and XY spin chain, are considered. We calculate and
analyze the effects of system-chain coupling on the LZ transition. A relation
between the LZ transition and the critical points of the spin chain is
established. These results suggest that LZ transitions may serve as the
witnesses of criticality of the spin chain. This may provide a new way to study
quantum phase transitions as well as LZ transitions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. European Physical Journals D accepte
Graphite Nanoeraser
We present here a method for cleaning intermediate-size (5~50nm)
contamination from highly oriented pyrolytic graphite. Electron beam deposition
causes a continuous increase of carbonaceous material on graphene and graphite
surfaces, which is difficult to remove by conventional techniques. Direct
mechanical wiping using a graphite nanoeraser is observed to drastically reduce
the amount of contamination. After the mechanical removal of contamination, the
graphite surfaces were able to self-retract after shearing, indicating that van
der Waals contact bonding is restored. Since contact bonding provides an
indication of a level of cleanliness normally only attainable in a high-quality
clean-room, we discuss potential applications in preparation of ultraclean
surfaces.Comment: 10 pages, two figure
Geometric phase and quantum phase transition in an inhomogeneous periodic XY spin-1/2 model
The notion of geometric phase has been recently introduced to analyze the
quantum phase transitions of many-body systems from the geometrical
perspective. In this work, we study the geometric phase of the ground state for
an inhomogeneous period-two anisotropic XY model in a transverse field. This
model encompasses a group of familiar spin models as its special cases and
shows a richer critical behavior. The exact solution is obtained by mapping on
a fermionic system through the Jordan-Wigner transformation and constructing
the relevant canonical transformation to realize the diagonalization of the
Hamiltonian coupled in the -space. The results show that there may exist
more than one quantum phase transition point at some parameter regions and
these transition points correspond to the divergence or extremum properties of
the Berry curvature.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. As a backup of a previous work and some typos in
the published version are fixe
Nonsequential Double Ionization with Polarization-gated Pulses
We investigate laser-induced nonsequential double ionization by a
polarization-gated laser pulse, constructed employing two counter-rotating
circularly polarized few cycle pulses with a time delay . We address the
problem within a classical framework, and mimic the behavior of the
quantum-mechanical electronic wave packet by means of an ensemble of classical
electron trajectories. These trajectories are initially weighted with the
quasi-static tunneling rate, and with suitably chosen distributions for the
momentum components parallel and perpendicular to the laser-field polarization,
in the temporal region for which it is nearly linearly polarized. We show that,
if the time delay is of the order of the pulse length, the
electron-momentum distributions, as functions of the parallel momentum
components, are highly asymmetric and dependent on the carrier-envelope (CE)
phase. As this delay is decreased, this asymmetry gradually vanishes. We
explain this behavior in terms of the available phase space, the quasi-static
tunneling rate and the recollision rate for the first electron, for different
sets of trajectories. Our results show that polarization-gating technique may
provide an efficient way to study the NSDI dynamics in the single-cycle limit,
without employing few-cycle pulses.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure
Hahn echo and criticality in spin-chain systems
We establish a relation between Hahn spin-echo of a spin-
particle and quantum phase transition in a spin-chain, which couples to the
particle. The Hahn echo is calculated and discussed at zero as well as at
finite temperatures. On the example of XY model, we show that the critical
points of the chain are marked by the extremal values in the Hahn echo, and
influence the Hahn echo in surprising high temperature. An explanation for the
relation between the echo and criticality is also presented.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Lightweight Face Relighting
In this paper we present a method to relight human faces in real time, using consumer-grade graphics cards even with limited 3D capabilities. We show how to render faces using a combination of a simple, hardware-accelerated parametric model simulating skin shading and a detail texture map, and provide robust procedures to estimate all the necessary parameters for a given face. Our model strikes a balance between the difficulty of realistic face rendering (given the very specific reflectance properties of skin) and the goal of real-time rendering with limited hardware capabilities. This is accomplished by automatically generating an optimal set of parameters for a simple rendering model. We offer a discussion of the issues in face rendering to discern the pros and cons of various rendering models and to generalize our approach to most of the current hardware constraints. We provide results demonstrating the usability of our approach and the improvements we introduce both in the performance and in the visual quality of the resulting faces
Near-threshold photoelectron holography beyond the strong-field approximation
We study photoelectron angular distributions (PADs) near the ionization threshold with a newly developed Coulomb quantum-orbit strong-field approximation (CQSFA) theory. The CQSFA simulations exhibit an excellent agreement with the result from the time-dependent Schrödinger equation. We show that the low-energy fan-shaped pattern in the PADs corresponds to a subcycle time-resolved holographic structure and stems from the significant influence of the Coulomb potential on the phase of the forward-scattered electron trajectories, which affects different momenta and scattering angles unequally. Our work provides a direct explanation of how the fan-shaped structure is formed, based on the quantum interference of direct and forward-scattered orbits. Moreover, our work shows that the fan-shaped pattern can be used to extract information on the target structure, as the number of fringes in the PADs depends strongly on the symmetry of the electronic bound state
Abelian and Non-Abelian Quantum Geometric Tensor
We propose a generalized quantum geometric tenor to understand topological
quantum phase transitions, which can be defined on the parameter space with the
adiabatic evolution of a quantum many-body system. The generalized quantum
geometric tenor contains two different local measurements, the non-Abelian
Riemannian metric and the non-Abelian Berry curvature, which are recognized as
two natural geometric characterizations for the change of the ground-state
properties when the parameter of the Hamiltonian varies. Our results show the
symmetry-breaking and topological quantum phase transitions can be understood
as the singular behavior of the local and topological properties of the quantum
geometric tenor in the thermodynamic limit.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Quantum Critical Dynamics of A Qubit Coupled to An Isotropic Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick Bath
We explore a dynamic signature of quantum phase transition (QPT) in an
isotropic Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick (LMG) model by studying the time evolution of a
central qubit coupled to it. We evaluate exactly the time-dependent purity,
which can be used to measure quantum coherence, of the central qubit. It is
found that distinctly different behaviors of the purity as a function of the
parameter reveal clearly the QPT point in the system. It is also clarified that
the present model is equivalent to an anti Jaynes-Cummings model under certain
conditions.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
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