11,599 research outputs found
Observation of a 2D Bose-gas: from thermal to quasi-condensate to superfluid
We present experimental results on a Bose gas in a quasi-2D geometry near the
Berezinskii, Kosterlitz and Thouless (BKT) transition temperature. By measuring
the density profile, \textit{in situ} and after time of flight, and the
coherence length, we identify different states of the gas. In particular, we
observe that the gas develops a bimodal distribution without long range order.
In this state, the gas presents a longer coherence length than the thermal
cloud; it is quasi-condensed but is not superfluid. Experimental evidence
indicates that we observe the superfluid transition (BKT transition).Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Diffusive propagation of UHECR and the propagation theorem
We present a detailed analytical study of the propagation of ultra high
energy (UHE) particles in extragalactic magnetic fields. The crucial parameter
which affects the diffuse spectrum is the separation between sources. In the
case of a uniform distribution of sources with a separation between them much
smaller than all characteristic propagation lengths, the diffuse spectrum of
UHE particles has a {\em universal} form, independent of the mode of
propagation. This statement has a status of theorem. The proof is obtained
using the particle number conservation during propagation, and also using the
kinetic equation for the propagation of UHE particles. This theorem can be also
proved with the help of the diffusion equation. In particular, it is shown
numerically, how the diffuse fluxes converge to this universal spectrum, when
the separation between sources diminishes. We study also the analytic solution
of the diffusion equation in weak and strong magnetic fields with energy losses
taken into account. In the case of strong magnetic fields and for a separation
between sources large enough, the GZK cutoff can practically disappear, as it
has been found early in numerical simulations. In practice, however, the source
luminosities required are too large for this possibility.Comment: 16 pages, 13 eps figures, discussion of the absence of the GZK
cut-off in strong magnetic field added, a misprint in figure 6 corrected,
version accepted for publication in Ap
Algebraic vortex liquid theory of a quantum antiferromagnet on the kagome lattice
There is growing evidence from both experiment and numerical studies that low
half-odd integer quantum spins on a kagome lattice with predominant
antiferromagnetic near neighbor interactions do not order magnetically or break
lattice symmetries even at temperatures much lower than the exchange
interaction strength. Moreover, there appear to be a plethora of low energy
excitations, predominantly singlets but also spin carrying, which suggest that
the putative underlying quantum spin liquid is a gapless ``critical spin
liquid'' rather than a gapped spin liquid with topological order. Here, we
develop an effective field theory approach for the spin-1/2 Heisenberg model
with easy-plane anisotropy on the kagome lattice. By employing a vortex duality
transformation, followed by a fermionization and flux-smearing, we obtain
access to a gapless yet stable critical spin liquid phase, which is described
by (2+1)-dimensional quantum electrodynamics (QED) with an emergent
flavor symmetry. The specific heat, thermal conductivity, and
dynamical structure factor are extracted from the effective field theory, and
contrasted with other theoretical approaches to the kagome antiferromagnet.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figure
Minimax optimization of entanglement witness operator for the quantification of three-qubit mixed-state entanglement
We develop a numerical approach for quantifying entanglement in mixed quantum
states by convex-roof entanglement measures, based on the optimal entanglement
witness operator and the minimax optimization method. Our approach is
applicable to general entanglement measures and states and is an efficient
alternative to the conventional approach based on the optimal pure-state
decomposition. Compared with the conventional one, it has two important merits:
(i) that the global optimality of the solution is quantitatively verifiable,
and (ii) that the optimization is considerably simplified by exploiting the
common symmetry of the target state and measure. To demonstrate the merits, we
quantify Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) entanglement in a class of
three-qubit full-rank mixed states composed of the GHZ state, the W state, and
the white noise, the simplest mixtures of states with different genuine
multipartite entanglement, which have not been quantified before this work. We
discuss some general properties of the form of the optimal witness operator and
of the convex structure of mixed states, which are related to the symmetry and
the rank of states
Strong subadditivity and the covariant holographic entanglement entropy formula
Headrick and Takayanagi showed that the Ryu-Takayanagi holographic
entanglement entropy formula generally obeys the strong subadditivity (SSA)
inequality, a fundamental property of entropy. However, the Ryu-Takayanagi
formula only applies when the bulk spacetime is static. It is not known whether
the covariant generalization proposed by Hubeny, Rangamani, and Takayanagi
(HRT) also obeys SSA. We investigate this question in three-dimensional
AdS-Vaidya spacetimes, finding that SSA is obeyed as long as the bulk spacetime
satisfies the null energy condition. This provides strong support for the
validity of the HRT formula.Comment: 38 page
GALEX Observations of Diffuse UV Radiation at High Spatial Resolution from the Sandage Nebulosity
Using the GALEX ultraviolet imagers we have observed a region of nebulosity
first identified as starlight scattered by interstellar dust by Sandage (1976).
Apart from airglow and zodiacal emission, we have found a diffuse UV background
of between 500 and 800 \phunit in both the \galex FUV (1350 -- 1750 \AA) and
NUV (1750 -- 2850 \AA). Of this emission, up to 250 \phunit is due to \htwo
fluorescent emission in the FUV band; the remainder is consistent with
scattering from interstellar dust. We have estimated the optical constants to
be in the FUV and in the NUV, implying
highly forward scattering grains, plus an extragalactic contribution of as much
as 150 \phunit. These are the highest spatial resolution observations of the
diffuse UV background to date and show an intrinsic scatter beyond that
expected from instrumental noise alone. Further modeling is required to
understand the nature of this scatter and its implications for the ISM.Comment: Total 20 pages, Figures 9, Accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journa
Entanglement entropy and the Berry phase in solid states
The entanglement entropy (von Neumann entropy) has been used to characterize
the complexity of many-body ground states in strongly correlated systems. In
this paper, we try to establish a connection between the lower bound of the von
Neumann entropy and the Berry phase defined for quantum ground states. As an
example, a family of translational invariant lattice free fermion systems with
two bands separated by a finite gap is investigated. We argue that, for one
dimensional (1D) cases, when the Berry phase (Zak's phase) of the occupied band
is equal to and when the ground state respects a
discrete unitary particle-hole symmetry (chiral symmetry), the entanglement
entropy in the thermodynamic limit is at least larger than (per
boundary), i.e., the entanglement entropy that corresponds to a maximally
entangled pair of two qubits. We also discuss this lower bound is related to
vanishing of the expectation value of a certain non-local operator which
creates a kink in 1D systems.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, new references adde
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