854 research outputs found

    Squeezing in the weakly interacting uniform Bose condensate

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    We investigate the presence of squeezing in the weakly repulsive uniform Bose gas, in both the condensate mode and in the nonzero opposite-momenta mode pairs, using two different variational formulations. We explore the U(1) symmetry breaking and Goldstone's theorem in the context of a squeezed coherent variational wavefunction, and present the associated Ward identity. We show that squeezing of the condensate mode is absent at the mean field Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov level and emerges as a result of fluctuations about mean field as a finite volume effect, which vanishes in the thermodynamic limit. On the other hand, the squeezing of the excitations about the condensate survives the thermodynamic limit and is interpreted in terms of density-phase variables using a number-conserving formulation of the interacting Bose gas.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Version 2 (Sept'06): expanded discussion

    Transition Temperature of Dilute, Weakly Repulsive Bose Gas

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    Within a quasiparticle framework, we reconsider the issue of computing the Bose-Einstein condensation temperature (TcT_c) in a weakly non-ideal Bose gas. The main result of this and previous investigations is that TcT_c increases with the scattering length aa, with the leading dependence being either linear or log-linear in aa. The calculation of TcT_c reduces to that of computing the excitation spectrum near the transition. We report two approaches to regularizing the infrared divergence at the transition point. One leads to a alnaa\sqrt{|\ln{a}|}-like shift in TcT_c, and the other allows numerical calculations for the shift.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, revtex

    Transverse Spin Diffusion in a Dilute Spin-Polarized Degenerate Fermi Gas

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    We re-examine the calculation of the transverse spin-diffusion coefficient in a dilute degenerate spin-polarized Fermi gas, for the case of s-wave scattering. The special feature of this limit is that the dependence of the spin diffusion coefficient on temperature and field can be calculated explicitly with no further approximations. This exact solution uncovers a novel intermediate behavior between the high field spin-rotation dominated regime in which DH2D_{\bot} \propto H^{-2}, DT2D_{\parallel} \propto T^{-2}, and the low-field isotropic, collision dominated regime with D=DT2D_{\bot} = D_{\parallel} \propto T^{-2}. In this intermediate regime, D,T2D_{\bot ,\parallel} \propto T^{-2} but DDD_{\bot} \neq D_{\parallel}. We also present an analytical calculation of the self-energy in the s-wave approximation for a dilute spin-polarized Fermi gas, at zero temperature. This emphasizes the failure of the conventional Fermi-liquid phase space arguments for processes involving spin flips. We close by reviewing the evidence for the existence of the intermediate regime in experiments on weakly spin-polarized 3He^3{\rm He} and 3He4He^3{\rm He} - ^4{\rm He} mixtures.Comment: 38 pages, Latex-Revtex, 9 PostScript figures. Minor revisions, misprints corrected, references adde

    Spin-Flavor Separation and Non-Fermi Liquid Behavior in the Multichannel Kondo Problem: A Large N Approach

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    We consider a SU(N)×SU(M)SU(N)\times SU(M) generalization of the multichannel single-impurity Kondo model which we solve analytically in the limit NN\rightarrow \infty, MM\rightarrow\infty, with γ=M/N\gamma=M/N fixed. Non-Fermi liquid behavior of the single electron Green function and of the local spin and flavor susceptibilities occurs in both regimes, NMN\le M and N>MN > M, with leading critical exponents {\em identical} to those found in the conformal field theory solution for {\em all} NN and MM (with M2M\ge 2). We explain this remarkable agreement and connect it to ``spin-flavor separation", the essential feature of the non-Fermi-liquid fixed point of the multichannel Kondo problem.Comment: 14 pages, 1 Figure (Poscript file attached), Revte

    Charge and Spin Gap Formation in Exactly Solvable Hubbard Chains with Long-Rang Hopping

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    We discuss the transition from a metal to charge or spin insulating phases characterized by the opening of a gap in the charge or spin excitation spectra, respectively. These transitions are addressed within the context of two exactly solvable Hubbard and tJ chains with long range, 1/r1/r hopping. We discuss the specific heat, compressibility, and magnetic susceptibility of these models as a function of temperature, band filling, and interaction strength. We then use conformal field theory techniques to extract ground state correlation functions. Finally, by employing the gg-ology analysis we show that the charge insulator transition is accompanied by an infinite discontinuity in the Drude weight of the electrical conductivity. While the magnetic properties of these models reflect the genuine features of strongly correlated electron systems, the charge transport properties, especially near the Mott-Hubbard transition, display a non-generic behavior.Comment: 47 pages, REVTEX 3.0, 14 postscript figures available form [email protected] (submitted using the figures-command

    Fast counting with tensor networks

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    We introduce tensor network contraction algorithms for counting satisfying assignments of constraint satisfaction problems (#CSPs). We represent each arbitrary #CSP formula as a tensor network, whose full contraction yields the number of satisfying assignments of that formula, and use graph theoretical methods to determine favorable orders of contraction. We employ our heuristics for the solution of #P-hard counting boolean satisfiability (#SAT) problems, namely monotone #1-in-3SAT and #Cubic-Vertex-Cover, and find that they outperform state-of-the-art solvers by a significant margin.Comment: v2: added results for monotone #1-in-3SAT; published versio

    Thermodynamics of heterogeneous crystal nucleation in contact and immersion modes

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    One of most intriguing problems of heterogeneous crystal nucleation in droplets is its strong enhancement in the contact mode (when the foreign particle is presumably in some kind of contact with the droplet surface) compared to the immersion mode (particle immersed in the droplet). Many heterogeneous centers have different nucleation thresholds when they act in contact or immersion modes, indicating that the mechanisms may be actually different for the different modes. Underlying physical reasons for this enhancement have remained largely unclear. In this paper we present a model for the thermodynamic enhancement of heterogeneous crystal nucleation in the contact mode compared to the immersion one. To determine if and how the surface of a liquid droplet can thermodynamically stimulate its heterogeneous crystallization, we examine crystal nucleation in the immersion and contact modes by deriving and comparing with each other the reversible works of formation of crystal nuclei in these cases. As a numerical illustration, the proposed model is applied to the heterogeneous nucleation of Ih crystals on generic macroscopic foreign particles in water droplets at T=253 K. Our results show that the droplet surface does thermodynamically favor the contact mode over the immersion one. Surprisingly, our numerical evaluations suggest that the line tension contribution to this enhancement from the contact of three water phases (vapor-liquid-crystal) may be of the same order of magnitude as or even larger than the surface tension contribution

    Tensor network method for reversible classical computation

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    We develop a tensor network technique that can solve universal reversible classical computational problems, formulated as vertex models on a square lattice [Nat. Commun. 8, 15303 (2017)]. By encoding the truth table of each vertex constraint in a tensor, the total number of solutions compatible with partial inputs and outputs at the boundary can be represented as the full contraction of a tensor network. We introduce an iterative compression-decimation (ICD) scheme that performs this contraction efficiently. The ICD algorithm first propagates local constraints to longer ranges via repeated contraction-decomposition sweeps over all lattice bonds, thus achieving compression on a given length scale. It then decimates the lattice via coarse-graining tensor contractions. Repeated iterations of these two steps gradually collapse the tensor network and ultimately yield the exact tensor trace for large systems, without the need for manual control of tensor dimensions. Our protocol allows us to obtain the exact number of solutions for computations where a naive enumeration would take astronomically long times.We thank Justin Reyes, Oskar Pfeffer, and Lei Zhang for many useful discussions. The computations were carried out at Boston University's Shared Computing Cluster. We acknowledge the Condensed Matter Theory Visitors Program at Boston University for support. Z.-C. Y. and C. C. are supported by DOE Grant No. DE-FG02-06ER46316. E.R.M. is supported by NSF Grant No. CCF-1525943. (Condensed Matter Theory Visitors Program at Boston University; DE-FG02-06ER46316 - DOE; CCF-1525943 - NSF)Accepted manuscrip

    Optimal Path to Epigenetic Switching

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    We use large deviation methods to calculate rates of noise-induced transitions between states in multistable genetic networks. We analyze a synthetic biochemical circuit, the toggle switch, and compare the results to those obtained from a numerical solution of the master equation.Comment: 5 pages. 2 figures, uses revtex 4. PR-E reviewed for publicatio
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