33,004 research outputs found
A Laplace Transform Method for Molecular Mass Distribution Calculation from Rheometric Data
Polydisperse linear polymer melts can be microscopically described by the
tube model and fractal reptation dynamics, while on the macroscopic side the
generalized Maxwell model is capable of correctly displaying most of the
rheological behavior. In this paper, a Laplace transform method is derived and
different macroscopic starting points for molecular mass distribution
calculation are compared to a classical light scattering evaluation. The
underlying assumptions comprise the modern understanding on polymer dynamics in
entangled systems but can be stated in a mathematically generalized way. The
resulting method is very easy to use due to its mathematical structure and it
is capable of calculating multimodal molecular mass distributions of linear
polymer melts
Operators for scattering of particles with spin
Operators for simulating the scattering of two particles with spin are
constructed. Three methods are shown to give the consistent lattice operators
for PN, PV, VN and NN scattering, where P, V and N denote pseudoscalar meson,
vector meson and nucleon. The projection method leads to one or several
operators that transform according to a given irreducible
representation and row r. However, it gives little guidance on which
continuum quantum numbers of total J, spin S, orbital momentum L or
single-particle helicities will be related with a given
operator. This is remedied with the helicity and partial-wave methods. There
first the operators with good continuum quantum numbers
or are constructed and then subduced to the irreps of the
discrete lattice group. The results indicate which linear combinations
of various n have to be employed in the simulations in order
to enhance couplings to the states with desired continuum quantum numbers. The
total momentum of two hadrons is restricted to zero since parity P is a good
quantum number in this case.Comment: 7 pages, talk presented at the 34th International Symposium on
Lattice Field Theory, 24-30 July 2016, Southampton, U
A lattice calculation of the pion form factor with Ginsparg-Wilson-type fermions
Results for Monte Carlo calculations of the electromagnetic vector and scalar
form factors of the pion in a quenched simulation are presented. We work with
two different lattice volumes up to a spatial size of 2.4 fm at a lattice
spacing of 0.148 fm. The pion form factors in the space-like region are
determined for pion masses down to 340 MeV.Comment: REVTeX 4, 8 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables; final versio
Green's and spectral functions of the small Frolich polaron
According to recent Quantum Monte Carlo simulations the small polaron theory
is practically exact in a wide range of the long-range (Frohlich)
electron-phonon coupling and adiabatic ratio. We apply the Lang-Firsov
transformation to convert the strong-coupling term in the Hamiltonian into the
form of an effective hopping integral and derive the single-particle Green's
function describing propagation of the small Frohlich polaron. One and two
dimensional spectral functions are studied by expanding the Green's function
perturbatively. Numerical calculations of the spectral functions are produced.
Remarkably, the coherent spectral weight (Z) and effective mass (Z')
renormalisation exponents are found to be different with Z'>>Z, which can
explain a small coherent spectral weight and a relatively moderate mass
enhancement in oxides.Comment: RevTeX, 5 pages, 2 postscript figures, LaTeX processing problems
correcte
Observation of Entanglement Between Itinerant Microwave Photons and a Superconducting Qubit
A localized qubit entangled with a propagating quantum field is well suited
to study non-local aspects of quantum mechanics and may also provide a channel
to communicate between spatially separated nodes in a quantum network. Here, we
report the on demand generation and characterization of Bell-type entangled
states between a superconducting qubit and propagating microwave fields
composed of zero, one and two-photon Fock states. Using low noise linear
amplification and efficient data acquisition we extract all relevant
correlations between the qubit and the photon states and demonstrate
entanglement with high fidelity.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Semiparametric Bayesian models for human brain mapping
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has led to enormous progress in human brain mapping. Adequate analysis of the massive spatiotemporal data sets generated by this imaging technique, combining parametric and non-parametric components, imposes challenging problems in statistical modelling. Complex hierarchical Bayesian models in combination with computer-intensive Markov chain Monte Carlo inference are promising tools.The purpose of this paper is twofold. First, it provides a review of general semiparametric Bayesian models for the analysis of fMRI data. Most approaches focus on important but separate temporal or spatial aspects of the overall problem, or they proceed by stepwise procedures. Therefore, as a second aim, we suggest a complete spatiotemporal model for analysing fMRI data within a unified semiparametric Bayesian framework. An application to data from a visual stimulation experiment illustrates our approach and demonstrates its computational feasibility
Spontaneous particle-hole symmetry breaking of correlated fermions on the Lieb lattice
We study spinless fermions with nearest-neighbor repulsive interactions
(- model) on the two-dimensional three-band Lieb lattice. At
half-filling, the free electronic band structure consists of a flat band at
zero energy and a single cone with linear dispersion. The flat band is expected
to be unstable upon inclusion of electronic correlations, and a natural channel
is charge order. However, due to the three-orbital unit cell, commensurate
charge order implies an imbalance of electron and hole densities and therefore
doping away from half-filling. Our numerical results show that below a
finite-temperature Ising transition a charge density wave with one electron and
two holes per unit cell and its partner under particle-hole transformation are
spontaneously generated. Our calculations are based on recent advances in
auxiliary-field and continuous-time quantum Monte Carlo simulations that allow
sign-free simulations of spinless fermions at half-filling. It is argued that
particle-hole symmetry breaking provides a route to access levels of finite
doping, without introducing a sign problem.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, added data for strong Coulomb repulsion and
classical Ising-limi
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