17,014 research outputs found

    Interpretation of the northern boundary of Ishtar Terra from Magellan images and altimetry

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    Part of the controversy on the origin of western Ishtar Terra (IT) concerns the nature of Uorsar Rupes (UR), the northern boundary of IT. In the hypothesis of lithospheric convergence and underthrusting, UR is held to be the main boundary thrust fault at the toe of an accretionary wedge. A topographic rise parallel to the scarp was interpreted as a flexural bulge similar to those of terrestrial subduction zones, and quantitative models of this feature seemed broadly consistent with the expected lithospheric structure of Venus. In the alternative mantle upwelling hypothesis for western IT, the outer margins of the highland are thought to be collapsing, and UR has been interpreted as a normal fault. Herein, Magellan images and altimetry are interpreted for this region and the hypothesis that a flexural signature can be distinguished is reassessed. The Magellan images of IT show evidence of crustal shortening adjacent to UR, but extension and burial dominate northwards. Altimetric profiles display the same long wavelength trends visible in Venera data, but no clear evidence of the lithospheric flexure. A model of regional extension and burial is herein favored, but regional compression cannot be ruled out

    Solvable RSOS models based on the dilute BWM algebra

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    In this paper we present representations of the recently introduced dilute Birman-Wenzl-Murakami algebra. These representations, labelled by the level-ll Bn(1)^{(1)}_n, Cn(1)^{(1)}_n and Dn(1)^{(1)}_n affine Lie algebras, are Baxterized to yield solutions to the Yang-Baxter equation. The thus obtained critical solvable models are RSOS counterparts of the, respectively, Dn+1(2)^{(2)}_{n+1}, A2n(2)A^{(2)}_{2n} and Bn(1)^{(1)}_n RR-matrices of Bazhanov and Jimbo. For the Dn+1(2)^{(2)}_{n+1} and Bn(1)^{(1)}_n algebras the RSOS models are new. An elliptic extension which solves the Yang-Baxter equation is given for all three series of dilute RSOS models.Comment: 25 pages, uuencoded compressed PostScript file, Amsterdam preprint ITFA-94-2

    How Do Quasicrystals Grow?

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    Using molecular simulations, we show that the aperiodic growth of quasicrystals is controlled by the ability of the growing quasicrystal `nucleus' to incorporate kinetically trapped atoms into the solid phase with minimal rearrangement. In the system under investigation, which forms a dodecagonal quasicrystal, we show that this process occurs through the assimilation of stable icosahedral clusters by the growing quasicrystal. Our results demonstrate how local atomic interactions give rise to the long-range aperiodicity of quasicrystals.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Figures and text have been updated to the final version of the articl

    Observation of the Pairing Gap in a Strongly Interacting Fermi Gas

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    We study fermionic pairing in an ultracold two-component gas of 6^6Li atoms by observing an energy gap in the radio-frequency excitation spectra. With control of the two-body interactions via a Feshbach resonance we demonstrate the dependence of the pairing gap on coupling strength, temperature, and Fermi energy. The appearance of an energy gap with moderate evaporative cooling suggests that our full evaporation brings the strongly interacting system deep into a superfluid state.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figure

    Scale invariant thermodynamics of a toroidally trapped Bose gas

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    We consider a system of bosonic atoms in an axially symmetric harmonic trap augmented with a two dimensional repulsive Gaussian optical potential. We find an expression for the grand free energy of the system for configurations ranging from the harmonic trap to the toroidal regime. For large tori we identify an accessible regime where the ideal gas thermodynamics of the system are found to be independent of toroidal radius. This property is a consequence of an invariant extensive volume of the system that we identify analytically in the regime where the toroidal potential is radially harmonic. In considering corrections to the scale invariant transition temperature, we find that the first order interaction shift is the dominant effect in the thermodynamic limit, and is also scale invariant. We also consider adiabatic loading from the harmonic to toroidal trap configuration, which we show to have only a small effect on the condensate fraction of the ideal gas, indicating that loading into the scale invariant regime may be experimentally practical.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. A, typos corrected, references added, rewritten to emphasize generalized volume. Results unchange

    Dilute Birman--Wenzl--Murakami Algebra and Dn+1(2)D^{(2)}_{n+1} models

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    A ``dilute'' generalisation of the Birman--Wenzl--Murakami algebra is considered. It can be ``Baxterised'' to a solution of the Yang--Baxter algebra. The Dn+1(2)D^{(2)}_{n+1} vertex models are examples of corresponding solvable lattice models and can be regarded as the dilute version of the Bn(1)B^{(1)}_{n} vertex models.Comment: 11 page

    Exploring the BEC-BCS Crossover with an Ultracold Gas of 6^6Li Atoms

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    We present an overview of our recent measurements on the crossover from a Bose-Einstein condensate of molecules to a Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer superfluid. The experiments are performed on a two-component spin-mixture of 6^6Li atoms, where a Fesh\-bach resonance serves as the experimental key to tune the s-wave scattering length and thus to explore the various interaction regimes. In the BEC-BCS crossover, we have characterized the interaction energy by measuring the size of the trapped gas, we have studied collective excitation modes, and we have observed the pairing gap. Our observations provide strong evidence for superfluidity in the strongly interacting Fermi gas.Comment: Proceedings of ICAP-2004 (Rio de Janeiro). Review on Innsbruck BEC-BCS crossover experiments with updated Feshbach resonance positio

    Mixture of ultracold lithium and cesium atoms in an optical dipole trap

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    We present the first simultaneous trapping of two different ultracold atomic species in a conservative trap. Lithium and cesium atoms are stored in an optical dipole trap formed by the focus of a CO2_2 laser. Techniques for loading both species of atoms are discussed and observations of elastic and inelastic collisions between the two species are presented. A model for sympathetic cooling of two species with strongly different mass in the presence of slow evaporation is developed. From the observed Cs-induced evaporation of Li atoms we estimate a cross section for cold elastic Li-Cs collisions.Comment: 10 pages 9 figures, submitted to Appl. Phys. B; v2: Corrected evaporation formulas and some postscript problem
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