78,806 research outputs found

    Quantum Groups

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    These notes correspond rather accurately to the translation of the lectures given at the Fifth Mexican School of Particles and Fields, held in Guanajuato, Gto., in December~1992. They constitute a brief and elementary introduction to quantum symmetries from a physical point of view, along the lines of the forthcoming book by C. G\'omez, G. Sierra and myself.Comment: 37 pages, plain.te

    New Solutions to the Yang--Baxter Equation from Two--Dimensional Representations of Uq(sl(2))U_q(sl(2)) at Roots of Unit

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    We present particularly simple new solutions to the Yang--Baxter equation arising from two--dimensional cyclic representations of quantum SU(2)SU(2). They are readily interpreted as scattering matrices of relativistic objects, and the quantum group becomes a dynamical symmetry.Comment: 11 page

    Sustainable business models: integrating employees, customers and technology

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    This Special Issue of the Journal of Business & Industrial Marketing has the same title as the 23rd International Conference CBIM 2018 (June 18-20, 2018, Madrid, Spain) “Sustainable Business Models: Integrating Employees, Customers and Technology”. In this edition of International Conference, following a competitive blind review process, papers from 126 authors and 25 countries were ultimately accepted. The best papers of the Conference were invited to submit to this Special Issue and we were also open to direct submissions from other authors. We present here the 17 accepted papers for publication in this Special Issue

    The Kovacs effect in the one-dimensional Ising model: a linear response analysis

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    We analyze the so-called Kovacs effect in the one-dimensional Ising model with Glauber dynamics. We consider small enough temperature jumps, for which a linear response theory has been recently derived. Within this theory, the Kovacs hump is directly related to the monotonic relaxation function of the energy. The analytical results are compared with extensive Monte Carlo simulations, and an excellent agreement is found. Remarkably, the position of the maximum in the Kovacs hump depends on the fact that the true asymptotic behavior of the relaxation function is different from the stretched exponential describing the relevant part of the relaxation at low temperatures.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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