25,151 research outputs found
Three-loop HTLpt thermodynamics at finite temperature and chemical potential
In this proceedings we present a state-of-the-art method of calculating
thermodynamic potential at finite temperature and finite chemical potential,
using Hard Thermal Loop perturbation theory (HTLpt) up to
next-to-next-leading-order (NNLO). The resulting thermodynamic potential
enables us to evaluate different thermodynamic quantities including pressure
and various quark number susceptibilities (QNS). Comparison between our
analytic results for those thermodynamic quantities with the available lattice
data shows a good agreement.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, conference proceedings of XXI DAE-BRNS HEP
Symposium, IIT Guwahati, December 2014; to appear in 'Springer Proceedings in
Physics Series
On the Inelastic Collapse of a Ball Bouncing on a Randomly Vibrating Platform
We study analytically the dynamics of a ball bouncing inelastically on a
randomly vibrating platform, as a simple toy model of inelastic collapse. Of
principal interest are the distributions of the number of flights n_f till the
collapse and the total time \tau_c elapsed before the collapse. In the strictly
elastic case, both distributions have power law tails characterised by
exponents which are universal, i.e., independent of the details of the platform
noise distribution. In the inelastic case, both distributions have exponential
tails: P(n_f) ~ exp[-\theta_1 n_f] and P(\tau_c) ~ exp[-\theta_2 \tau_c]. The
decay exponents \theta_1 and \theta_2 depend continuously on the coefficient of
restitution and are nonuniversal; however as one approches the elastic limit,
they vanish in a universal manner that we compute exactly. An explicit
expression for \theta_1 is provided for a particular case of the platform noise
distribution.Comment: 32 page
Detecting and Characterizing Small Dense Bipartite-like Subgraphs by the Bipartiteness Ratio Measure
We study the problem of finding and characterizing subgraphs with small
\textit{bipartiteness ratio}. We give a bicriteria approximation algorithm
\verb|SwpDB| such that if there exists a subset of volume at most and
bipartiteness ratio , then for any , it finds a set
of volume at most and bipartiteness ratio at most
. By combining a truncation operation, we give a local
algorithm \verb|LocDB|, which has asymptotically the same approximation
guarantee as the algorithm \verb|SwpDB| on both the volume and bipartiteness
ratio of the output set, and runs in time
, independent of the size of the
graph. Finally, we give a spectral characterization of the small dense
bipartite-like subgraphs by using the th \textit{largest} eigenvalue of the
Laplacian of the graph.Comment: 17 pages; ISAAC 201
Time lag between prompt optical emission and gamma-rays in GRBs
The prompt optical emission contemporaneous with the -rays from
-ray bursts (GRBs) carries important information on the central engine
and explosion mechanism. We study the time lag between prompt optical emission
and -rays in GRB 990123 and GRB 041219a, which are the only two GRBs
had been detected at optical wavelengths during the ascending burst phase.
Assuming profiles of prompt optical light curves are the same as the prompt
-rays, we simulate optical light curves with different time lags and
compare them with the observed optical flux. Then the best fit time lag and its
error are determined by chi-squared values. We find that time lags between
prompt optical emission and -rays in GRB host galaxy rest-frames are
consistent in the two GRBs, which is s for GRB 990123 and s
for GRB 041219a. This result is consistent with a common origin of prompt
optical and -ray emissions in the two GRBs. Based on synchrotron
cooling model, we also derive the parameters for the two GRBs.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; accepted for publication in A&
Perturbation Theory for Fractional Brownian Motion in Presence of Absorbing Boundaries
Fractional Brownian motion is a Gaussian process x(t) with zero mean and
two-time correlations ~ t^{2H} + s^{2H} - |t-s|^{2H}, where H, with
0<H<1 is called the Hurst exponent. For H = 1/2, x(t) is a Brownian motion,
while for H unequal 1/2, x(t) is a non-Markovian process. Here we study x(t) in
presence of an absorbing boundary at the origin and focus on the probability
density P(x,t) for the process to arrive at x at time t, starting near the
origin at time 0, given that it has never crossed the origin. It has a scaling
form P(x,t) ~ R(x/t^H)/t^H. Our objective is to compute the scaling function
R(y), which up to now was only known for the Markov case H=1/2. We develop a
systematic perturbation theory around this limit, setting H = 1/2 + epsilon, to
calculate the scaling function R(y) to first order in epsilon. We find that
R(y) behaves as R(y) ~ y^phi as y -> 0 (near the absorbing boundary), while
R(y) ~ y^gamma exp(-y^2/2) as y -> oo, with phi = 1 - 4 epsilon + O(epsilon^2)
and gamma = 1 - 2 epsilon + O(epsilon^2). Our epsilon-expansion result confirms
the scaling relation phi = (1-H)/H proposed in Ref. [28]. We verify our
findings via numerical simulations for H = 2/3. The tools developed here are
versatile, powerful, and adaptable to different situations.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures; revised version 2 adds discussion on spatial
small-distance cutof
Survival of a Diffusing Particle in a Transverse Shear Flow: A First-Passage Problem with Continuously Varying Persistence Exponent
We consider a particle diffusing in the y-direction, dy/dt=\eta(t), subject
to a transverse shear flow in the x-direction, dx/dt=f(y), where x \ge 0 and
x=0 is an absorbing boundary. We treat the class of models defined by f(y) =
\pm v_{\pm}(\pm y)^\alpha where the upper (lower) sign refers to y>0 (y<0). We
show that the particle survives with probability Q(t) \sim t^{-\theta} with
\theta = 1/4, independent of \alpha, if v_{+}=v_{-}. If v_{+} \ne v_{-},
however, we show that \theta depends on both \alpha and the ratio v_{+}/v_{-},
and we determine this dependence.Comment: 4 page
Efficient calculation of local dose distribution for response modelling in proton and ion beams
We present an algorithm for fast and accurate computation of the local dose
distribution in MeV beams of protons, carbon ions or other heavy-charged
particles. It uses compound Poisson-process modelling of track interaction and
succesive convolutions for fast computation. It can handle mixed particle
fields over a wide range of fluences. Since the local dose distribution is the
essential part of several approaches to model detector efficiency or cellular
response it has potential use in ion-beam dosimetry and radiotherapy.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
GRB Energetics and the GRB Hubble Diagram: Promises and Limitations
We present a complete sample of 29 GRBs for which it has been possible to
determine temporal breaks (or limits) from their afterglow light curves. We
interpret these breaks within the framework of the uniform conical jet model,
incorporating realistic estimates of the ambient density and propagating error
estimates on the measured quantities. In agreement with our previous analysis
of a smaller sample, the derived jet opening angles of those 16 bursts with
redshifts result in a narrow clustering of geometrically-corrected gamma-ray
energies about E_gamma = 1.33e51 erg; the burst-to-burst variance about this
value is a factor of 2.2. Despite this rather small scatter, we demonstrate in
a series of GRB Hubble diagrams, that the current sample cannot place
meaningful constraints upon the fundamental parameters of the Universe. Indeed
for GRBs to ever be useful in cosmographic measurements we argue the necessity
of two directions. First, GRB Hubble diagrams should be based upon fundamental
physical quantities such as energy, rather than empirically-derived and
physically ill-understood distance indicators. Second, a more homogeneous set
should be constructed by culling sub-classes from the larger sample. These
sub-classes, though now first recognizable by deviant energies, ultimately must
be identifiable by properties other than those directly related to energy. We
identify a new sub-class of GRBs (``f-GRBs'') which appear both underluminous
by factors of at least 10 and exhibit a rapid fading at early times. About
10-20% of observed long-duration bursts appear to be f-GRBs.Comment: Accepted to the Astrophysical Journal (20 May 2003). 19 pages, 3
Postscript figure
Lattice vibrations and structural instability in Cesium near the cubic to tetragonal transition
Under pressure cesium undergoes a transition from a high-pressure fcc phase
(Cs-II) to a collapsed fcc phase (Cs-III) near 4.2GPa. At 4.4GPa there follows
a transition to the tetragonal Cs-IV phase. In order to investigate the lattice
vibrations in the fcc phase and seek a possible dynamical instability of the
lattice, the phonon spectra of fcc-Cs at volumes near the III-IV transition are
calculated using Savrasov's density functional linear-response LMTO method.
Compared with quasiharmonic model calculations including non-central
interatomic forces up to second neighbours, at the volume (
is the experimental volume of bcc-Cs with =6.048{\AA}), the
linear-response calculations show soft intermediate wavelength
phonons. Similar softening is also observed for
short wavelength and phonons and intermediate
wavelength phonons. The Born-von K\'{a}rm\'{a}n analysis of
dispersion curves indicates that the interplanar force constants exhibit
oscillating behaviours against plane spacing and the large softening of
intermediate wavelength phonons results from a
negative (110)-interplanar force-constant . The frequencies of the
phonons with around 1/3 become imaginary
and the fcc structure becomes dynamically unstable for volumes below .
It is suggested that superstructures corresponding to the
soft mode should be present as a precursor of tetragonal Cs-IV structure.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
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