8,419 research outputs found
Self-Similar Anisotropic Texture Analysis: the Hyperbolic Wavelet Transform Contribution
Textures in images can often be well modeled using self-similar processes
while they may at the same time display anisotropy. The present contribution
thus aims at studying jointly selfsimilarity and anisotropy by focusing on a
specific classical class of Gaussian anisotropic selfsimilar processes. It will
first be shown that accurate joint estimates of the anisotropy and
selfsimilarity parameters are performed by replacing the standard 2D-discrete
wavelet transform by the hyperbolic wavelet transform, which permits the use of
different dilation factors along the horizontal and vertical axis. Defining
anisotropy requires a reference direction that needs not a priori match the
horizontal and vertical axes according to which the images are digitized, this
discrepancy defines a rotation angle. Second, we show that this rotation angle
can be jointly estimated. Third, a non parametric bootstrap based procedure is
described, that provides confidence interval in addition to the estimates
themselves and enables to construct an isotropy test procedure, that can be
applied to a single texture image. Fourth, the robustness and versatility of
the proposed analysis is illustrated by being applied to a large variety of
different isotropic and anisotropic self-similar fields. As an illustration, we
show that a true anisotropy built-in self-similarity can be disentangled from
an isotropic self-similarity to which an anisotropic trend has been
superimposed
Doped two-leg ladder with ring exchange
The effect of a ring exchange on doped two-leg ladders is investigated
combining exact diagonalization (ED) and density matrix renormalization group
(DMRG) computations. We focus on the nature and weights of the low energy
magnetic excitations and on superconducting pairing. The stability with respect
to this cyclic term of a remarkable resonant mode originating from a hole
pair-magnon bound state is examined. We also find that, near the zero-doping
critical point separating rung-singlet and dimerized phases, doping reopens a
spin gap.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures, to appear in PR
Haldane charge conjecture in one-dimensional multicomponent fermionic cold atoms
A Haldane conjecture is revealed for spin-singlet charge modes in
2N-component fermionic cold atoms loaded into a one-dimensional optical
lattice. By means of a low-energy approach and DMRG calculations, we show the
emergence of gapless and gapped phases depending on the parity of for
attractive interactions at half-filling. The analogue of the Haldane phase of
the spin-1 Heisenberg chain is stabilized for N=2 with non-local string charge
correlation, and pseudo-spin 1/2 edge states. At the heart of this even-odd
behavior is the existence of a spin-singlet pseudo-spin operator which
governs the low-energy properties of the model for attractive interactions and
gives rise to the Haldane physics.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Competing orders in one-dimensional half-filled multicomponent fermionic cold atoms: The Haldane-charge conjecture
We investigate the nature of the Mott-insulating phases of half-filled
2N-component fermionic cold atoms loaded into a one-dimensional optical
lattice. By means of conformal field theory techniques and large-scale DMRG
calculations, we show that the phase diagram strongly depends on the parity of
. First, we single out charged, spin-singlet, degrees of freedom, that carry
a pseudo-spin allowing to formulate a Haldane conjecture: for
attractive interactions, we establish the emergence of Haldane insulating
phases when is even, whereas a metallic behavior is found when is odd.
We point out that the cases do \emph{not} have the generic properties
of each family. The metallic phase for odd and larger than 1 has a
quasi-long range singlet pairing ordering with an interesting edge-state
structure. Moreover, the properties of the Haldane insulating phases with even
further depend on the parity of N/2. In this respect, within the low-energy
approach, we argue that the Haldane phases with N/2 even are not topologically
protected but equivalent to a topologically trivial insulating phase and thus
confirm the recent conjecture put forward by Pollmann {\it et al.} [Pollmann
{\it et al.}, arXiv:0909.4059 (2009)].Comment: 25 pages, 20 figure
Force distribution in a scalar model for non-cohesive granular material
We study a scalar lattice model for inter-grain forces in static,
non-cohesive, granular materials, obtaining two primary results. (i) The
applied stress as a function of overall strain shows a power law dependence
with a nontrivial exponent, which moreover varies with system geometry. (ii)
Probability distributions for forces on individual grains appear Gaussian at
all stages of compression, showing no evidence of exponential tails. With
regard to both results, we identify correlations responsible for deviations
from previously suggested theories.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, Submitted to PR
Trionic and quartetting phases in one-dimensional multicomponent ultracold fermions
We investigate the possible formation of a molecular condensate, which might
be, for instance, the analogue of the alpha condensate of nuclear physics, in
the context of multicomponent cold atoms fermionic systems. A simple
paradigmatic model of N-component fermions with contact interactions loaded
into a one-dimensional optical lattice is studied by means of low-energy and
numerical approaches. For attractive interaction, a quasi-long-range molecular
superfluid phase, formed from bound-states made of N fermions, emerges at low
density. We show that trionic and quartetting phases, respectively for N=3,4,
extend in a large domain of the phase diagram and are robust against small
symmetry-breaking perturbations.Comment: Contribution to the SOTANCP 2008 worksho
Discrepancy between sub-critical and fast rupture roughness: a cumulant analysis
We study the roughness of a crack interface in a sheet of paper. We
distinguish between slow (sub-critical) and fast crack growth regimes. We show
that the fracture roughness is different in the two regimes using a new method
based on a multifractal formalism recently developed in the turbulence
literature. Deviations from monofractality also appear to be different in both
regimes
Tolerance and Sensitivity in the Fuse Network
We show that depending on the disorder, a small noise added to the threshold
distribution of the fuse network may or may not completely change the
subsequent breakdown process. When the threshold distribution has a lower
cutoff at a finite value and a power law dependence towards large thresholds
with an exponent which is less than , the network is not sensitive
to the added noise, otherwise it is. The transition between sensitivity or not
appears to be second order, and is related to a localization-delocalization
transition earlier observed in such systems.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures available upon request, plain Te
Light transport in cold atoms and thermal decoherence
By using the coherent backscattering interference effect, we investigate
experimentally and theoretically how coherent transport of light inside a cold
atomic vapour is affected by the residual motion of atomic scatterers. As the
temperature of the atomic cloud increases, the interference contrast
dramatically decreases emphazising the role of motion-induced decoherence for
resonant scatterers even in the sub-Doppler regime of temperature. We derive
analytical expressions for the corresponding coherence time.Comment: 4 pages - submitted to Physical Review Letter
Zeeman effect in superconducting two-leg ladders: irrational magnetization plateaus and exceeding the Pauli limit
The effect of a parallel magnetic field on superconducting two-leg ladders is
investigated numerically. The magnetization curve displays an irrational
plateau at a magnetization equal to the hole density. Remarkably, its stability
is fundamentally connected to the existence of a well-known magnetic resonant
mode. Once the zero-field spin gap is suppressed by the field, pairs acquire a
finite momentum characteristic of a Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov phase. In
addition, S^z=0 triplet superconducting correlations coexist with singlet ones
above the irrational plateau. This provides a simple mechanism in which the
Pauli limit is exceeded as suggested by recent experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
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