10,303 research outputs found
Corrected confidence intervals for secondary parameters following sequential tests
Corrected confidence intervals are developed for the mean of the second
component of a bivariate normal process when the first component is being
monitored sequentially. This is accomplished by constructing a first
approximation to a pivotal quantity, and then using very weak expansions to
determine the correction terms. The asymptotic sampling distribution of the
renormalised pivotal quantity is established in both the case where the
covariance matrix is known and when it is unknown. The resulting approximations
have a simple form and the results of a simulation study of two well-known
sequential tests show that they are very accurate. The practical usefulness of
the approach is illustrated by a real example of bivariate data. Detailed
proofs of the main results are provided.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/074921706000000617 in the IMS
Lecture Notes--Monograph Series
(http://www.imstat.org/publications/lecnotes.htm) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Spin-charge separation: From one hole to finite doping
In the presence of nonlocal phase shift effects, a quasiparticle can remain
topologically stable even in a spin-charge separation state due to the
confinement effect introduced by the phase shifts at finite doping. True
deconfinement only happens in the zero-doping limit where a bare hole can lose
its integrity and decay into holon and spinon elementary excitations. The Fermi
surface structure is completely different in these two cases, from a large
band-structure-like one to four Fermi points in one-hole case, and we argue
that the so-called underdoped regime actually corresponds to a situation in
between.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, presented in M2S-HTSC-VI conference (2000
Phase String Effect in the t-J Model: General Theory
We reexamine the problem of a hole moving in an antiferromagnetic spin
background and find that the injected hole will always pick up a sequence of
nontrivial phases from the spin degrees of freedom. Previously unnoticed, such
a string-like phase originates from the hidden Marshall signs which are
scrambled by the hopping of the hole. We can rigorously show that this phase
string is non-repairable at low energy and give a general proof that the
spectral weight Z must vanish at the ground-state energy due to the phase
string effect. Thus, the quasiparticle description fails here and the quantum
interference effect of the phase string dramatically affects the long-distance
behavior of the injected hole. We introduce a so-called phase-string
formulation of the t-J model for a general number of holes in which the phase
string effect can be explicitly tracked. As an example, by applying this new
mathematical formulation in one dimension, we reproduce the well-known
Luttinger-liquid behaviors of the asymptotic single-electron Green's function
and the spin-spin correlation function. We can also use the present phase
string theory to justify previously developed spin-charge separation theory in
two dimensions, which offers a systematic explanation for the transport and
magnetic anomalies in the high-T_c cuprates.Comment: Revtex, 36 pages, no figure, to appear in Phys. Rev. B
An integrated wind risk warning model for urban rail transport in Shanghai, China
The integrated wind risk warning model for rail transport presented has four elements:
Background wind data, a wind field model, a vulnerability model, and a risk model. Background
wind data uses observations in this study. Using the wind field model with effective surface
roughness lengths, the background wind data are interpolated to a 30-m resolution grid. In the
vulnerability model, the aerodynamic characteristics of railway vehicles are analyzed with CFD
(Computational Fluid Dynamics) modelling. In the risk model, the maximum value of three
aerodynamic forces is used as the criteria to evaluate rail safety and to quantify the risk level under
extremely windy weather. The full model is tested for the Shanghai Metro Line 16 using wind
conditions during Typhoon Chan-hom. The proposed approach enables quick quantification of real-
time safety risk levels during typhoon landfall, providing sophisticated warning information for
rail vehicle operation safety
Spin-charge separation in the single hole doped Mott antiferromagnet
The motion of a single hole in a Mott antiferromagnet is investigated based
on the t-J model. An exact expression of the energy spectrum is obtained, in
which the irreparable phase string effect [Phys. Rev. Lett. 77, 5102 (1996)] is
explicitly present. By identifying the phase string effect with spin backflow,
we point out that spin-charge separation must exist in such a system: the doped
hole has to decay into a neutral spinon and a spinless holon, together with the
phase string. We show that while the spinon remains coherent, the holon motion
is deterred by the phase string, resulting in its localization in space. We
calculate the electron spectral function which explains the line shape of the
spectral function as well as the ``quasiparticle'' spectrum observed in
angle-resolved photoemission experiments. Other analytic and numerical
approaches are discussed based on the present framework.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures; references updated; to appear in Phys. Rev.
Mean-Field Description of Phase String Effect in the Model
A mean-field treatment of the phase string effect in the model is
presented. Such a theory is able to unite the antiferromagnetic (AF) phase at
half-filling and metallic phase at finite doping within a single theoretical
framework. We find that the low-temperature occurrence of the AF long range
ordering (AFLRO) at half-filling and superconducting condensation in metallic
phase are all due to Bose condensations of spinons and holons, respectively, on
the top of a spin background described by bosonic resonating-valence-bond (RVB)
pairing. The fact that both spinon and holon here are bosonic objects, as the
result of the phase string effect, represents a crucial difference from the
conventional slave-boson and slave-fermion approaches. This theory also allows
an underdoped metallic regime where the Bose condensation of spinons can still
exist. Even though the AFLRO is gone here, such a regime corresponds to a
microscopic charge inhomogeneity with short-ranged spin ordering. We discuss
some characteristic experimental consequences for those different metallic
regimes. A perspective on broader issues based on the phase string theory is
also discussed.Comment: 18 pages, five figure
Mott physics, sign structure, ground state wavefunction, and high-Tc superconductivity
In this article I give a pedagogical illustration of why the essential
problem of high-Tc superconductivity in the cuprates is about how an
antiferromagnetically ordered state can be turned into a short-range state by
doping. I will start with half-filling where the antiferromagnetic ground state
is accurately described by the Liang-Doucot-Anderson (LDA) wavefunction. Here
the effect of the Fermi statistics becomes completely irrelevant due to the no
double occupancy constraint. Upon doping, the statistical signs reemerge,
albeit much reduced as compared to the original Fermi statistical signs. By
precisely incorporating this altered statistical sign structure at finite
doping, the LDA ground state can be recast into a short-range antiferromagnetic
state. Superconducting phase coherence arises after the spin correlations
become short-ranged, and the superconducting phase transition is controlled by
spin excitations. I will stress that the pseudogap phenomenon naturally emerges
as a crossover between the antiferromagnetic and superconducting phases. As a
characteristic of non Fermi liquid, the mutual statistical interaction between
the spin and charge degrees of freedom will reach a maximum in a
high-temperature "strange metal phase" of the doped Mott insulator.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure
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