15,715 research outputs found
Majorana Fermions and Orthogonal Complex Structures
Ground states of quadratic Hamiltonians for fermionic systems can be
characterized in terms of orthogonal complex structures. The standard way in
which such Hamiltonians are diagonalized makes use of a certain "doubling" of
the Hilbert space. In this work we show that this redundancy in the Hilbert
space can be completely lifted if the relevant orthogonal structure is taken
into account. Such an approach allows for a treatment of Majorana fermions
which is both physically and mathematically transparent. Furthermore, an
explicit connection between orthogonal complex structures and the topological
-invariant is given.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, typos correcte
Thermal properties of composite materials with a complex fractal structure
In this work, we report the thermal characterization of platelike composite
samples made of polyester resin and magnetite inclusions. By means of
photoacoustic spectroscopy and thermal relaxation, the thermal diffusivity,
conductivity and volumetric heat capacity of the samples were experimentally
measured. The volume fraction of inclusions was systematically varied in order
to study the changes in the effective thermal conductivity of the composites.
In some samples, a static magnetic field was applied during the polymerization
process resulting in anisotropic inclusion distributions. Our results show a
decrease in the thermal conductivity of some of the anisotropic samples
compared to the isotropic randomly distributed ones. Our analysis indicates
that the development of elongated inclusion structures leads to the formation
of magnetite and resin domains causing this effect. We correlate the complexity
of the inclusion structure with the observed thermal response by a multifractal
and lacunarity analysis. All the experimental data are contrasted with the well
known Maxwell-Garnett's effective media approximation for composite materials.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:cond-mat/0209328 by other author
Quantization of the Myers-Pospelov model: the photon sector interacting with standard fermions as a perturbation of QED
We study the quantization of the electromagnetic sector of the Myers-Pospelov
model coupled to standard fermions. Our main objective, based upon experimental
and observational evidence, is to construct an effective theory which is a
genuine perturbation of QED, such that setting zero the Lorentz invariance
violation parameters will reproduce it. To this end we provide a physically
motivated prescription, based on the effective character of the model,
regarding the way in which the model should be constructed and how the QED
limit should be approached. This amounts to the introduction of an additional
coarse-graining physical energy scale , under which we can trust the
effective field theory formulation. The prescription is successfully tested in
the calculation of the Lorentz invariance violating contributions arising from
the electron self-energy. Such radiative corrections turn out to be properly
scaled by very small factors for any reasonable values of the parameters and no
fine-tuning problems are found. Microcausality violations are highly suppressed
and occur only in a space-like region extremely close to the light-cone. The
stability of the model is guaranteed by restricting to concordant frames
satisfying .Comment: 24 pages, revtex, no figure
Helical magnetic fields via baryon asymmetry
There is strong observational evidence for the presence of large-scale
magnetic fields MF in galaxies and clusters, with strength G and
coherence lenght on the order of Kpc. However its origin remains as an
outstanding problem. One of the possible explanations is that they have been
generated in the early universe. Recently, it has been proposed that helical
primordial magnetic fields PMFs, could be generated during the EW or QCD phase
transitions, parity-violating processes and predicted by GUT or string theory.
Here we concentrate on the study of two mechanisms to generate PMFs, the first
one is the MSM which triggers instability in the Maxwell's equations and
leads to the generation of helical PMFs. The second one is the usual
electroweak baryogenesis scenario. Finally, we calculate the exact power
spectra of these helical PMFs and we show its role in the production of
gravitational waves finding a scale-invariant on large scales and an
oscillatory motion (damping) for Comment: 7 pages, to appear in the proceedings of the First Astrostatistics
School: Bayesian Methods in Cosmology, June 9-13, 2014, Bogot\'a, Colombi
Principal Component Analysis of computed emission lines from proto-stellar jets
A very important issue concerning protostellar jets is the mechanism behind
their formation. Obtaining information on the region at the base of a jet can
shed light into the subject and some years ago this has been done through a
search for a rotational signature at the jet line spectrum. The existence of
such signatures, however, remains controversial. In order to contribute to the
clarification of this issue, in this paper we show that the Principal Component
Analysis (PCA) can potentially help to distinguish between rotation and
precession effects in protostellar jet images. We apply the PCA to synthetic
spectro-imaging datacubes generated as an output of numerical simulations of
protostellar jets. In this way we generate a benchmark to which a PCA
diagnostics of real observations can be confronted. Using the computed emission
line profiles for [O I]6300A and [S II]6716A, we recover and analyze the
effects of rotation and precession in tomograms generated by PCA. We show that
different combinations of the eigenvectors can be used to enhance and to
identify the rotation features present in the data. Our results indicate that
the PCA can be useful for disentangling rotation from precession in jets with
an inclination of the jet with respect to the plane of the sky as high as 45
degrees. We have been able to recover the initially imposed rotation jet
profile for models at moderate inclination angle (< 15 degrees) and without
precession (abridged).Comment: 19 pages, 19 figures, Accepted for publication in A
Maximum principles, extension problem and inversion for nonlocal one-sided equations
We study one-sided nonlocal equations of the form
on the
real line. Notice that to compute this nonlocal operator of order
at a point we need to know the values of to the right of ,
that is, for . We show that the operator above corresponds to a
fractional power of a one-sided first order derivative. Maximum principles and
a characterization with an extension problem in the spirit of
Caffarelli--Silvestre and Stinga--Torrea are proved. It is also shown that
these fractional equations can be solved in the general setting of weighted
one-sided spaces. In this regard we present suitable inversion results. Along
the way we are able to unify and clarify several notions of fractional
derivatives found in the literature.Comment: 20 pages. To appear in Journal of Differential Equation
Centered honeycomb NiSe2 nanoribbons, structure and electronic properties
Quasi one-dimensional nanoribbons are excellent candidates for
nanoelectronics, therefore here we investigate by means of density functional
theory the structure and electronic properties of a new kind of 1D ribbons,
namely: centered honeycomb NiSe2 nanoribbons. Depending on the crystallography
and atomic composition of the edges, these ribbons can belong to one of six
(two) zigzag (armchair) families. In the zigzag families, after edge
reconstruction, all the bare ribbons are metallic. The influence of edge
hydrogen passivation produces band gaps in two of the six families. For the
armchair nanoribbons, the geometrical reconstruction leads to semiconductors
with small band gap and the hydrogen passivation of the edges increases the
band gap up to ~0.6 eV.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
On Non-Abelian Holonomies
We provide a method and the results for the calculation of the holonomy of a
Yang-Mills connection in an arbitrary triangular path, in an expansion
(developed here to fifth order) in powers of the corresponding segments. The
results might have applications in generalizing to Yang-Mills fields previous
calculations of the corrections to particle dynamics induced by loop quantum
gravity, as well as in the field of random lattices.Comment: latex, 17 pages, 2 figures, shorter versio
Critical properties of weakly interacting Bose gases as modified by a harmonic confinement
The critical properties of the phase transition from a normal gas to a BEC
(superfluid) of a harmonically confined Bose gas are addressed with the
knowledge of an equation of state of the underlying homogeneous Bose fluid. It
is shown that while the presence of the confinement trap arrests the usual
divergences of the isothermal compressibility and heat capacities, the critical
behavior manifests itself now in the divergence of derivatives of the mentioned
susceptibilities. This result is illustrated with a mean-field like model of an
equation of state for the homogeneous particle density as a function of the
chemical potential and temperature of the gas. The model assumes the form of an
ideal Bose gas in the normal fluid while in the superfluid state a function is
proposed such that, both, asymptotically reaches the Thomas-Fermi solution of a
weakly interacting Bose gas at large densities and low temperatures and, at the
transition, matches the critical properties of the ideal Bose gas. With this
model we obtain the {\it global} thermodynamics of the harmonically confined
gas, from which we analyze its critical properties. We discuss how these
properties can be experimentally tested.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figure
The Trace of the CNO Cycle in the Ring Nebula NGC6888
We present new results on the chemical composition of the Galactic ring
nebula NGC6888 surrounding the WN6(h) star WR136. The data are based on deep
spectroscopical observations taken with the High Dispersion Spectrograph at the
8.2m Subaru Telescope. The spectra cover the optical range from 3700 to 7400 A.
The effect of the CNO cycle is well identified in the abundances of He, N, and
O, while elements not involved in the synthesis such as Ar, S, and Fe present
values consistent with the solar vicinity and the ambient gas. The major
achievement of this work is the first detection of the faint CII 4267
recombination line in a Wolf-Rayet nebula. This allows to estimate the C
abundance in NGC6888 and therefore investigate for the first time the trace of
the CNO cycle in a ring nebula around a Wolf-Rayet star. Although the detection
of the CII line has a low signal-to-noise ratio, the C abundance seems to be
higher than the predictions of recent stellar evolution models of massive
stars. The Ne abundance also show a puzzling pattern with an abundance of about
0.5 dex lower than the solar vicinity, which may be related to the action of
the NeNa cycle. Attending to the constraints imposed by the dynamical timescale
and the He/H and N/O ratios of the nebula, the comparison with stellar
evolution models indicates that the initial mass of the stellar progenitor of
NGC6888 is between 25 Msun and 40 Msun.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
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