11,748 research outputs found
Spinors Fields in Co-dimension One Braneworlds
In this work we analyze the zero mode localization and resonances of
spin fermions in co-dimension one Randall-Sundrum braneworld scenarios.
We consider delta-like, domain walls and deformed domain walls membranes.
Beyond the influence of the spacetime dimension we also consider three
types of couplings: (i) the standard Yukawa coupling with the scalar field and
parameter , (ii) a Yukawa-dilaton coupling with two parameters
and and (iii) a dilaton derivative coupling with parameter .
Together with the deformation parameter , we end up with five free parameter
to be considered. For the zero mode we find that the localization is dependent
of , because the spinorial representation changes when the bulk
dimensionality is odd or even and must be treated separately. For case (i) we
find that in odd dimensions only one chirality can be localized and for even
dimension a massless Dirac spinor is trapped over the brane. In the cases (ii)
and (iii) we find that for some values of the parameters, both chiralities can
be localized in odd dimensions and for even dimensions we obtain that the
massless Dirac spinor is trapped over the brane. We also calculated numerically
resonances for cases (ii) and (iii) by using the transfer matrix method. We
find that, for deformed defects, the increasing of induces a shift in the
peaks of resonances. For a given with domain walls, we find that the
resonances can show up by changing the spacetime dimensionality. For example,
the same case in do not induces resonances but when we consider
one peak of resonance is found. Therefore the introduction of more dimensions,
diversely from the bosonic case, can change drastically the zero mode and
resonances in fermion fields.Comment: 28 pages, 7 figure
Symbolic Sequences and Tsallis Entropy
We address this work to investigate symbolic sequences with long-range
correlations by using computational simulation. We analyze sequences with two,
three and four symbols that could be repeated times, with the probability
distribution . For these sequences, we verified that
the usual entropy increases more slowly when the symbols are correlated and the
Tsallis entropy exhibits, for a suitable choice of , a linear behavior. We
also study the chain as a random walk-like process and observe a nonusual
diffusive behavior depending on the values of the parameter .Comment: Published in the Brazilian Journal of Physic
Measuring von Neumann entanglement entropies without wave functions
We present a method to measure the von Neumann entanglement entropy of ground
states of quantum many-body systems which does not require access to the system
wave function. The technique is based on a direct thermodynamic study of
entanglement Hamiltonians, whose functional form is available from field
theoretical insights. The method is applicable to classical simulations such as
quantum Monte Carlo methods, and to experiments that allow for thermodynamic
measurements such as the density of states, accessible via quantum quenches. We
benchmark our technique on critical quantum spin chains, and apply it to
several two-dimensional quantum magnets, where we are able to unambiguously
determine the onset of area law in the entanglement entropy, the number of
Goldstone bosons, and to check a recent conjecture on geometric entanglement
contribution at critical points described by strongly coupled field theories
Laser pulse analysis
Methods are presented for locating threshold points by using laser pulse analysis. It was found that there are errors involved in the determination of each of these quantities, and an attempt was made to separate their effects on the overall range correction. Several series of corrected range measurements for fixed reflectors and satellites were obtained. Residuals were computed by fitting the range measurements to either fixed-reflector distances or short arcs of satellite orbits. Root mean square values of these residuals are presented
Impurities near an Antiferromagnetic-Singlet Quantum Critical Point
Heavy fermion systems, and other strongly correlated electron materials,
often exhibit a competition between antiferromagnetic (AF) and singlet ground
states. Using exact Quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) simulations, we examine the
effect of impurities in the vicinity of such AF- singlet quantum critical
points, through an appropriately defined impurity susceptibility, .
Our key finding is a connection, within a single calculational framework,
between AF domains induced on the singlet side of the transition, and the
behavior of the nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) relaxation rate . We
show that local NMR measurements provide a diagnostic for the location of the
QCP which agrees remarkably well with the vanishing of the AF order parameter
and large values of . We connect our results with experiments on
Cd-doped CeCoIn
Geometry, stochastic calculus and quantum fields in a non-commutative space-time
The algebras of non-relativistic and of classical mechanics are unstable
algebraic structures. Their deformation towards stable structures leads,
respectively, to relativity and to quantum mechanics. Likewise, the combined
relativistic quantum mechanics algebra is also unstable. Its stabilization
requires the non-commutativity of the space-time coordinates and the existence
of a fundamental length constant. The new relativistic quantum mechanics
algebra has important consequences on the geometry of space-time, on quantum
stochastic calculus and on the construction of quantum fields. Some of these
effects are studied in this paper.Comment: 36 pages Latex, 1 eps figur
The Mass Function of Field Galaxies at 0.4 < z < 1.2 Derived From the MUNICS K-Selected Sample
We derive the number density evolution of massive field galaxies in the
redshift range 0.4 < z < 1.2 using the K-band selected field galaxy sample from
the Munich Near-IR Cluster Survey (MUNICS). We rely on spectroscopically
calibrated photometric redshifts to determine distances and absolute magnitudes
in the rest-frame K-band. To assign mass-to-light ratios, we use two different
approaches. First, we use an approach which maximizes the stellar mass for any
K-band luminosity at any redshift. We take the mass-to-light ratio of a Simple
Stellar Population (SSP) which is as old as the universe at the galaxy's
redshift as a likely upper limit. Second, we assign each galaxy a mass-to-light
ratio by fitting the galaxy's colours against a grid of composite stellar
population models and taking their M/L. We compute the number density of
galaxies more massive than 2 x 10^10 h^-2 Msun, 5 x 10^10 h^-2 Msun, and 1 x
10^11 h^-2 Msun, finding that the integrated stellar mass function is roughly
constant for the lowest mass limit and that it decreases with redshift by a
factor of ~ 3 and by a factor of ~ 6 for the two higher mass limits,
respectively. This finding is in qualitative agreement with models of
hierarchical galaxy formation, which predict that the number density of ~ M*
objects is fairly constant while it decreases faster for more massive systems
over the redshift range our data probe.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the ESO/USM
Workshop "The Mass of Galaxies at Low and High Redshift", Venice (Italy),
October 24-26, 200
- …