83 research outputs found
Photon mass and quantum effects of the Aharonov-Bohm type
The magnetic field due to the photon rest mass modifies the standard
results of the Aharonov-Bohm effect for electrons, and of other recent quantum
effects. For the effect involving a coherent superposition of beams of
particles with opposite electromagnetic properties, by means of a table-top
experiment, the limit is achievable, improving by 6 orders
of magnitude that derived by Boulware and Deser for the Aharonov-Bohm effect.Comment: 5 page
Relativistic Aharonov-Casher Phase in Spin One
The Aharonov-Casher (AC) phase is calculated in relativistic wave equations
of spin one. The AC phase has previously been calculated from the Dirac-Pauli
equation using a gauge-like technique \cite{MK1,MK2}. In the spin-one case, we
use Kemmer theory (a Dirac-like particle theory) to calculate the phase in a
similar manner. However the vector formalism, the Proca theory, is more widely
known and used. In the presence of an electromagnetic field, the two theories
are `equivalent' and may be transformed into one another. We adapt these
transformations to show that the Kemmer theory results apply to the Proca
theory. Then we calculate the Aharonov-Casher phase for spin-one particles
directly in the Proca formalism.Comment: 12 page
Bound states in the dynamics of a dipole in the presence of a conical defect
In this work we investigate the quantum dynamics of an electric dipole in a
-dimensional conical spacetime. For specific conditions, the
Schr\"odinger equation is solved and bound states are found with the energy
spectrum and eigenfunctions determined. We find that the bound states spectrum
extends from minus infinity to zero with a point of accumulation at zero. This
unphysical result is fixed when a finite radius for the defect is introduced.Comment: 4 page
Classical and Quantum Interaction of the Dipole
A unified and fully relativistic treatment of the interaction of the electric
and magnetic dipole moments of a particle with the electromagnetic field is
given. New forces on the particle due to the combined effect of electric and
magnetic dipoles are obtained. Four new experiments are proposed, three of
which would observe topological phase shifts.Comment: 10 pages, Latex/Revtex. Some minor errors have been correcte
Local/Non-Local Complementarity in Topological Effects
In certain topological effects the accumulation of a quantum phase shift is
accompanied by a local observable effect. We show that such effects manifest a
complementarity between non-local and local attributes of the topology, which
is reminiscent but yet different from the usual wave-particle complementarity.
This complementarity is not a consequence of non-commutativity, rather it is
due to the non-canonical nature of the observables. We suggest that a
local/non-local complementarity is a general feature of topological effects
that are ``dual'' to the AB effect.Comment: 4 page
Optics of Nonuniformly Moving Media
A moving dielectric appears to light as an effective gravitational field. At
low flow velocities the dielectric acts on light in the same way as a magnetic
field acts on a charged matter wave. We develop in detail the geometrical
optics of moving dispersionless media. We derive a Hamiltonian and a Lagrangian
to describe ray propagation. We elucidate how the gravitational and the
magnetic model of light propagation are related to each other. Finally, we
study light propagation around a vortex flow. The vortex shows an optical
Aharonov--Bohm effect at large distances from the core, and, at shorter ranges,
the vortex may resemble an optical black hole.Comment: Physical Review A (submitted
Radiation reaction for multipole moments
We propose a Poincare-invariant description for the effective dynamics of
systems of charged particles by means of intrinsic multipole moments. To
achieve this goal we study the effective dynamics of such systems within two
frameworks -- the particle itself and hydrodynamical one. We give a
relativistic-invariant definition for the intrinsic multipole moments both
pointlike and extended relativistic objects. Within the hydrodynamical
framework we suggest a covariant action functional for a perfect fluid with
pressure. In the case of a relativistic charged dust we prove the equivalence
of the particle approach to the hydrodynamical one to the problem of radiation
reaction for multipoles. As the particular example of a general procedure we
obtain the effective model for a neutral system of charged particles with
dipole moment.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, RevTeX 4; references updated, minor textual
correction
Maxwell Duality, Lorentz Invariance, and Topological Phase
We discuss the Maxwell electromagnetic duality relations between the
Aharonov-Bohm, Aharonov-Casher, and He-McKellar-Wilkens topological phases,
which allows a unified description of all three phenomena. We also elucidate
Lorentz transformations that allow these effects to be understood in an
intuitive fashion in the rest frame of the moving quantum particle. Finally, we
propose two experimental schemes for measuring the He-McKellar-Wilkens phase.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Relating Neuronal to Behavioral Performance: Variability of Optomotor Responses in the Blowfly
Behavioral responses of an animal vary even when they are elicited by the same stimulus. This variability is due to stochastic processes within the nervous system and to the changing internal states of the animal. To what extent does the variability of neuronal responses account for the overall variability at the behavioral level? To address this question we evaluate the neuronal variability at the output stage of the blowfly's (Calliphora vicina) visual system by recording from motion-sensitive interneurons mediating head optomotor responses. By means of a simple modelling approach representing the sensory-motor transformation, we predict head movements on the basis of the recorded responses of motion-sensitive neurons and compare the variability of the predicted head movements with that of the observed ones. Large gain changes of optomotor head movements have previously been shown to go along with changes in the animals' activity state. Our modelling approach substantiates that these gain changes are imposed downstream of the motion-sensitive neurons of the visual system. Moreover, since predicted head movements are clearly more reliable than those actually observed, we conclude that substantial variability is introduced downstream of the visual system
Coding Efficiency of Fly Motion Processing Is Set by Firing Rate, Not Firing Precision
To comprehend the principles underlying sensory information processing, it is important to understand how the nervous system deals with various sources of perturbation. Here, we analyze how the representation of motion information in the fly's nervous system changes with temperature and luminance. Although these two environmental variables have a considerable impact on the fly's nervous system, they do not impede the fly to behave suitably over a wide range of conditions. We recorded responses from a motion-sensitive neuron, the H1-cell, to a time-varying stimulus at many different combinations of temperature and luminance. We found that the mean firing rate, but not firing precision, changes with temperature, while both were affected by mean luminance. Because we also found that information rate and coding efficiency are mainly set by the mean firing rate, our results suggest that, in the face of environmental perturbations, the coding efficiency is improved by an increase in the mean firing rate, rather than by an increased firing precision
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