63,761 research outputs found

    Hamilton's theory of turns revisited

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    We present a new approach to Hamilton's theory of turns for the groups SO(3) and SU(2) which renders their properties, in particular their composition law, nearly trivial and immediately evident upon inspection. We show that the entire construction can be based on binary rotations rather than mirror reflections.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure

    Hamilton's Turns for the Lorentz Group

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    Hamilton in the course of his studies on quaternions came up with an elegant geometric picture for the group SU(2). In this picture the group elements are represented by ``turns'', which are equivalence classes of directed great circle arcs on the unit sphere S2S^2, in such a manner that the rule for composition of group elements takes the form of the familiar parallelogram law for the Euclidean translation group. It is only recently that this construction has been generalized to the simplest noncompact group SU(1,1)=Sp(2,R)=SL(2,R)SU(1,1) = Sp(2, R) = SL(2,R), the double cover of SO(2,1). The present work develops a theory of turns for SL(2,C)SL(2,C), the double and universal cover of SO(3,1) and SO(3,C)SO(3,C), rendering a geometric representation in the spirit of Hamilton available for all low dimensional semisimple Lie groups of interest in physics. The geometric construction is illustrated through application to polar decomposition, and to the composition of Lorentz boosts and the resulting Wigner or Thomas rotation.Comment: 13 pages, Late

    Wigner distributions for finite state systems without redundant phase point operators

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    We set up Wigner distributions for NN state quantum systems following a Dirac inspired approach. In contrast to much of the work on this case, requiring a 2N×2N2N\times 2N phase space, particularly when NN is even, our approach is uniformly based on an N×NN\times N phase space grid and thereby avoids the necessity of having to invoke a `quadrupled' phase space and hence the attendant redundance. Both NN odd and even cases are analysed in detail and it is found that there are striking differences between the two. While the NN odd case permits full implementation of the marginals property, the even case does so only in a restricted sense. This has the consequence that in the even case one is led to several equally good definitions of the Wigner distributions as opposed to the odd case where the choice turns out to be unique.Comment: Latex, 14 page

    Congruences and Canonical Forms for a Positive Matrix: Application to the Schweinler-Wigner Extremum Principle

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    It is shown that a N×NN\times N real symmetric [complex hermitian] positive definite matrix VV is congruent to a diagonal matrix modulo a pseudo-orthogonal [pseudo-unitary] matrix in SO(m,n)SO(m,n) [ SU(m,n)SU(m,n)], for any choice of partition N=m+nN=m+n. It is further shown that the method of proof in this context can easily be adapted to obtain a rather simple proof of Williamson's theorem which states that if NN is even then VV is congruent also to a diagonal matrix modulo a symplectic matrix in Sp(N,R)Sp(N,{\cal R}) [Sp(N,C)Sp(N,{\cal C})]. Applications of these results considered include a generalization of the Schweinler-Wigner method of `orthogonalization based on an extremum principle' to construct pseudo-orthogonal and symplectic bases from a given set of linearly independent vectors.Comment: 7 pages, latex, no figure

    Classical Light Beams and Geometric Phases

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    We present a study of geometric phases in classical wave and polarisation optics using the basic mathematical framework of quantum mechanics. Important physical situations taken from scalar wave optics, pure polarisation optics, and the behaviour of polarisation in the eikonal or ray limit of Maxwell's equations in a transparent medium are considered. The case of a beam of light whose propagation direction and polarisation state are both subject to change is dealt with, attention being paid to the validity of Maxwell's equations at all stages. Global topological aspects of the space of all propagation directions are discussed using elementary group theoretical ideas, and the effects on geometric phases are elucidated.Comment: 23 pages, 1 figur

    Peres-Horodecki separability criterion for continuous variable systems

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    The Peres-Horodecki criterion of positivity under partial transpose is studied in the context of separability of bipartite continuous variable states. The partial transpose operation admits, in the continuous case, a geometric interpretation as mirror reflection in phase space. This recognition leads to uncertainty principles, stronger than the traditional ones, to be obeyed by all separable states. For all bipartite Gaussian states, the Peres-Horodecki criterion turns out to be necessary and sufficient condition for separability.Comment: 6 pages, no figure

    The Sampling Theorem and Coherent State Systems in Quantum Mechanics

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    The well known Poisson Summation Formula is analysed from the perspective of the coherent state systems associated with the Heisenberg--Weyl group. In particular, it is shown that the Poisson summation formula may be viewed abstractly as a relation between two sets of bases (Zak bases) arising as simultaneous eigenvectors of two commuting unitary operators in which geometric phase plays a key role. The Zak bases are shown to be interpretable as generalised coherent state systems of the Heisenberg--Weyl group and this, in turn, prompts analysis of the sampling theorem (an important and useful consequence of the Poisson Summation Formula) and its extension from a coherent state point of view leading to interesting results on properties of von Neumann and finer lattices based on standard and generalised coherent state systems.Comment: 20 pages, Late

    Gradient-based quantitative image reconstruction in ultrasound-modulated optical tomography: first harmonic measurement type in a linearised diffusion formulation

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    Ultrasound-modulated optical tomography is an emerging biomedical imaging modality which uses the spatially localised acoustically-driven modulation of coherent light as a probe of the structure and optical properties of biological tissues. In this work we begin by providing an overview of forward modelling methods, before deriving a linearised diffusion-style model which calculates the first-harmonic modulated flux measured on the boundary of a given domain. We derive and examine the correlation measurement density functions of the model which describe the sensitivity of the modality to perturbations in the optical parameters of interest. Finally, we employ said functions in the development of an adjoint-assisted gradient based image reconstruction method, which ameliorates the computational burden and memory requirements of a traditional Newton-based optimisation approach. We validate our work by performing reconstructions of optical absorption and scattering in two- and three-dimensions using simulated measurements with 1% proportional Gaussian noise, and demonstrate the successful recovery of the parameters to within +/-5% of their true values when the resolution of the ultrasound raster probing the domain is sufficient to delineate perturbing inclusions.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure

    Positive Lyapunov Exponents for Quasiperiodic Szego cocycles

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    In this paper we first obtain a formula of averaged Lyapunov exponents for ergodic Szego cocycles via the Herman-Avila-Bochi formula. Then using acceleration, we construct a class of analytic quasi-periodic Szego cocycles with uniformly positive Lyapunov exponents. Finally, a simple application of the main theorem in [Y] allows us to estimate the Lebesgue measure of support of the measure associated to certain class of C1 quasiperiodic 2- sided Verblunsky coefficients. Using the same method, we also recover the [S-S] results for Schrodinger cocycles with nonconstant real analytic potentials and obtain some nonuniform hyperbolicity results for arbitrarily fixed Brjuno frequency and for certain C1 potentials.Comment: 27 papge

    Extragalactic H3O+: Some Consequences

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    We discuss some implications of our recent detection of extragalactic H3O+: the location of the gas in M82, the origin of energetic radiation in M82, and the possible feedback effects of star formation on the cosmic ray flux in galaxies.Comment: Five pages, one figure; contribution to proceedings of conference "Far-infrared observations of the interstellar medium", December 2007, Bad Honne
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