5,780 research outputs found

    Panel Discussion

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    Panel Discussion

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    Fundamental Plane Distances to Early-type Field Galaxies in the South Equatorial Strip. I. The Spectroscopic Data

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    Radial velocities and central velocity dispersions are derived for 238 E/S0 galaxies from medium-resolution spectroscopy. New spectroscopic data have been obtained as part of a study of the Fundamental Plane distances and peculiar motions of early-type galaxies in three selected directions of the South Equatorial Strip, undertaken in order to investigate the reality of large-scale streaming motion; results of this study have been reported in M\"uller etet al.al. (1998). The new APM South Equatorial Strip Catalog (17.5<δ<+2.5-17^{\circ}.5 < \delta < +2^{\circ}.5) was used to select the sample of field galaxies in three directions: (1) 15h10 - 16h10; (2) 20h30 - 21h50; (3) 00h10 - 01h30. The spectra obtained have a median S/N per A˚{\AA} of 23, an instrumental resolution (FWHM) of \sim 4 A˚{\AA}, and the spectrograph resolution (dispersion) is \sim 100 km~s1^{-1}. The Fourier cross-correlation method was used to derive the radial velocities and velocity dispersions. The velocity dispersions have been corrected for the size of the aperture and for the galaxy effective radius. Comparisons of the derived radial velocities with data from the literature show that our values are accurate to 40 km~s1^{-1}. A comparison with results from J\orgensen et al. (1995) shows that the derived central velocity dispersion have an rms scatter of 0.036 in logσ\log \sigma. There is no offset relative to the velocity dispersions of Davies et al. (1987).Comment: accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics Supplement Serie

    Real Time Evolution in Quantum Many-Body Systems With Unitary Perturbation Theory

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    We develop a new analytical method for solving real time evolution problems of quantum many-body systems. Our approach is a direct generalization of the well-known canonical perturbation theory for classical systems. Similar to canonical perturbation theory, secular terms are avoided in a systematic expansion and one obtains stable long-time behavior. These general ideas are illustrated by applying them to the spin-boson model and studying its non-equilibrium spin dynamics.Comment: Final version as accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. B (4 pages, 3 figures

    Localized low-frequency Neumann modes in 2d-systems with rough boundaries

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    We compute the relative localization volumes of the vibrational eigenmodes in two-dimensional systems with a regular body but irregular boundaries under Dirichlet and under Neumann boundary conditions. We find that localized states are rare under Dirichlet boundary conditions but very common in the Neumann case. In order to explain this difference, we utilize the fact that under Neumann conditions the integral of the amplitudes, carried out over the whole system area is zero. We discuss, how this condition leads to many localized states in the low-frequency regime and show by numerical simulations, how the number of the localized states and their localization volumes vary with the boundary roughness.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure

    Similarity Renormalization Group for Nucleon-Nucleon Interactions

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    The similarity renormalization group (SRG) is based on unitary transformations that suppress off-diagonal matrix elements, forcing the hamiltonian towards a band-diagonal form. A simple SRG transformation applied to nucleon-nucleon interactions leads to greatly improved convergence properties while preserving observables, and provides a method to consistently evolve many-body potentials and other operators.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures (8 figure files); references updated and acknowledgment adde

    Dynamical scaling analysis of the optical Hall conductivity in the quantum Hall regime

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    Dynamical scaling analysis is theoretically performed for the ac (optical) Hall conductivity σxy(εF,ω)\sigma_{xy}(\varepsilon_F,\omega) as a function of Fermi energy εF\varepsilon_F and frequency ω\omega for the two-dimensional electron gas and for graphene. In both systems, results based on exact diagonalization show that σxy(εF,ω)\sigma_{xy}(\varepsilon_F,\omega) displays a well-defined dynamical scaling, for which the dynamical critical exponent as well as the localization exponent are fitted and plugged in. A crossover from the dc-like bahavior to the ac regime is identified. The dynamical scaling analysis has enabled us to quantify the plateau in the ac Hall conductivity previously obtained, and to predict that the plateaux structure in ac is robust enough to be observed in the THz regime.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    First Order Superfluid to Bose Metal Transition in Systems with Resonant Pairing

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    Systems showing resonant superfluidity, driven by an exchange coupling of strength gg between uncorrelated pairs of itinerant fermions and tightly bound ones, undergo a first order phase transition as gg increases beyond some critical value gcg_c. The superfluid phase for ggcg \leq g_c is characterized by a gap in the fermionic single particle spectrum and an acoustic sound-wave like collective mode of the bosonic resonating fermion pairs inside this gap. For g>gcg>g_c this state gives way to a phase uncorrelated bosonic liquid with a q2q^2 spectrum.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Educating Lawyers: Preparation for the Profession of Law

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    Examines the unique aspects and limitations of legal education, as part of a series of reports from the foundation's Preparation for the Professions Program
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