172 research outputs found
Citizenship:Contrasting Dynamics at the Interface of Integration and Constitutionalism
EUDO Citizenship ObservatoryThis paper explores the different ways in which citizenship has played a role in polity formation in the
context of the European Union. It focuses on both the ‘integration’ and the ‘constitution’ dimensions.
The paper thus has two substantive sections. The first addresses the role of citizenship of the Union,
examining the dynamic relationship between this concept, the role of the Court of Justice, and the free
movement dynamic of EU law. The second turns to citizenship in the Union, looking at some recent
political developments under which concepts of citizenship, and democratic membership as a key
dimension of citizenship, have been given greater prominence. One key finding of the paper is that
there is a tension between citizenship of the Union, as part of the EU's ‘old’ incremental
constitutionalism based on the constitutionalisation of the existing Treaties, and citizenship in the
Union, where the possibilities of a ‘new’ constitutionalism based on renewed constitutional documents
have yet to be fully realise
Physical interpretation of stochastic Schroedinger equations in cavity QED
We propose physical interpretations for stochastic methods which have been
developed recently to describe the evolution of a quantum system interacting
with a reservoir. As opposed to the usual reduced density operator approach,
which refers to ensemble averages, these methods deal with the dynamics of
single realizations, and involve the solution of stochastic Schr\"odinger
equations. These procedures have been shown to be completely equivalent to the
master equation approach when ensemble averages are taken over many
realizations. We show that these techniques are not only convenient
mathematical tools for dissipative systems, but may actually correspond to
concrete physical processes, for any temperature of the reservoir. We consider
a mode of the electromagnetic field in a cavity interacting with a beam of two-
or three-level atoms, the field mode playing the role of a small system and the
atomic beam standing for a reservoir at finite temperature, the interaction
between them being given by the Jaynes-Cummings model. We show that the
evolution of the field states, under continuous monitoring of the state of the
atoms which leave the cavity, can be described in terms of either the Monte
Carlo Wave-Function (quantum jump) method or a stochastic Schr\"odinger
equation, depending on the system configuration. We also show that the Monte
Carlo Wave-Function approach leads, for finite temperatures, to localization
into jumping Fock states, while the diffusion equation method leads to
localization into states with a diffusing average photon number, which for
sufficiently small temperatures are close approximations to mildly squeezed
states.Comment: 12 pages RevTeX 3.0 + 6 figures (GIF format; for higher-resolution
postscript images or hardcopies contact the authors.) Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Remarks on 't Hooft's Brick Wall Model
A semi-classical reasoning leads to the non-commutativity of the space and
time coordinates near the horizon of Schwarzschild black hole. This
non-commutativity in turn provides a mechanism to interpret the brick wall
thickness hypothesis in 't Hooft's brick wall model as well as the boundary
condition imposed for the field considered. For concreteness, we consider a
noncommutative scalar field model near the horizon and derive the effective
metric via the equation of motion of noncommutative scalar field. This metric
displays a new horizon in addition to the original one associated with the
Schwarzschild black hole. The infinite red-shifting of the scalar field on the
new horizon determines the range of the noncommutativ space and explains the
relevant boundary condition for the field. This range enables us to calculate
the entropy of black hole as proportional to the area of its original horizon
along the same line as in 't Hooft's model, and the thickness of the brick wall
is found to be proportional to the thermal average of the noncommutative
space-time range. The Hawking temperature has been derived in this formalism.
The study here represents an attempt to reveal some physics beyond the brick
wall model.Comment: RevTeX, 5 pages, no figure
Dark Matter Signals from Cascade Annihilations
A leading interpretation of the electron/positron excesses seen by PAMELA and
ATIC is dark matter annihilation in the galactic halo. Depending on the
annihilation channel, the electron/positron signal could be accompanied by a
galactic gamma ray or neutrino flux, and the non-detection of such fluxes
constrains the couplings and halo properties of dark matter. In this paper, we
study the interplay of electron data with gamma ray and neutrino constraints in
the context of cascade annihilation models, where dark matter annihilates into
light degrees of freedom which in turn decay into leptons in one or more steps.
Electron and muon cascades give a reasonable fit to the PAMELA and ATIC data.
Compared to direct annihilation, cascade annihilations can soften gamma ray
constraints from final state radiation by an order of magnitude. However, if
dark matter annihilates primarily into muons, the neutrino constraints are
robust regardless of the number of cascade decay steps. We also examine the
electron data and gamma ray/neutrino constraints on the recently proposed
"axion portal" scenario.Comment: 36 pages, 11 figures, 7 tables; references adde
Reduced density matrices and entanglement entropy in free lattice models
We review the properties of reduced density matrices for free fermionic or
bosonic many-particle systems in their ground state. Their basic feature is
that they have a thermal form and thus lead to a quasi-thermodynamic problem
with a certain free-particle Hamiltonian. We discuss the derivation of this
result, the character of the Hamiltonian and its eigenstates, the
single-particle spectra and the full spectra, the resulting entanglement and in
particular the entanglement entropy. This is done for various one- and
two-dimensional situations, including also the evolution after global or local
quenches.Comment: 33 pages, 18 figures, minor changes, references added. Review article
for the special issue "Entanglement entropy in extended systems" in J. Phys.
Prospects for e+e- physics at Frascati between the phi and the psi
We present a detailed study, done in the framework of the INFN 2006 Roadmap,
of the prospects for e+e- physics at the Frascati National Laboratories. The
physics case for an e+e- collider running at high luminosity at the phi
resonance energy and also reaching a maximum center of mass energy of 2.5 GeV
is discussed, together with the specific aspects of a very high luminosity
tau-charm factory. Subjects connected to Kaon decay physics are not discussed
here, being part of another INFN Roadmap working group. The significance of the
project and the impact on INFN are also discussed. All the documentation
related to the activities of the working group can be found in
http://www.roma1.infn.it/people/bini/roadmap.html.Comment: INFN Roadmap Report: 86 pages, 25 figures, 9 table
- …