21,543 research outputs found

    Classical and quantum interference in multiband optical Bloch oscillations

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    Classical and quantum interference of light propagating in arrays of coupled waveguides and undergoing multiband optical Bloch oscillations (BOs) with negligible Zener tunneling is theoretically investigated. In particular, it is shown that Mach-Zehnder-like interference effects spontaneously arise in multiband BOs owing to beam splitting and subsequent beam recombination occurring in one BO cycle. As a noteworthy example of quantum interference, we discuss the doubling of interference fringes in photon counting rates for a correlated photon pair undergoing two-band BOs, a phenomenon analogous to the manifestation of the de Broglie wavelength of an entangled biphoton state observed in quantum Mach-Zehnder interferometry.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure

    Structure, rotational dynamics, and superfluidity of small OCS-doped He clusters

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    The structural and dynamical properties of OCS molecules solvated in Helium clusters are studied using reptation quantum Monte Carlo, for cluster sizes n=3-20 He atoms. Computer simulations allow us to establish a relation between the rotational spectrum of the solvated molecule and the structure of the He solvent, and of both with the onset of superfluidity. Our results agree with a recent spectroscopic study of this system, and provide a more complex and detailed microscopic picture of this system than inferred from experiments.Comment: 4 pages. TeX (requires revtex4) + 3 ps figures (1 color

    An updated analysis of two classes of f(R) theories of gravity

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    The observed accelerated cosmic expansion can be a signature of fourth\,-\,order gravity theories, where the acceleration of the Universe is a consequence of departures from Einstein General Relativity, rather than the sign of the existence of a fluid with negative pressure. In the fourth\,-\,order gravity theories, the gravity Lagrangian is described by an analytic function f(R)f(R) of the scalar curvature RR subject to the demanding conditions that no detectable deviations from standard GR is observed on the Solar System scale. Here we consider two classes of f(R)f(R) theories able to pass Solar System tests and investigate their viability on cosmological scales. To this end, we fit the theories to a large dataset including the combined Hubble diagram of Type Ia Supernovae and Gamma Ray Bursts, the Hubble parameter H(z)H(z) data from passively evolving red galaxies, Baryon Acoustic Oscillations extracted from the seventh data release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and the distance priors from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe seven years (WMAP7) data. We find that both classes of f(R)f(R) fit very well this large dataset with the present\,-\,day values of the matter density, Hubble constant and deceleration parameter in agreement with previous estimates; however, the strong degeneracy among the f(R)f(R) parameters prevents us from strongly constraining their values. We also derive the growth factor g=dlnδ/dlnag = d\ln{\delta}/d\ln{a}, with δ=δρM/ρM\delta = \delta \rho_M/\rho_M the matter density perturbation, and show that it can still be well approximated by g(z)ΩM(z)γg(z) \propto \Omega_M(z)^{\gamma}. We finally constrain γ\gamma (on some representative scales) and investigate its redshift dependence to see whether future data can discriminate between these classes of f(R)f(R) theories and standard dark energy models.Comment: 27 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication on JCAP. Note that this paper updates and supersedes preprint arXiv:0907.468

    Predicting loss in magnetic steels under arbitrary induction waveform and with minor hysteresis loops

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    We have studied ways of predicting power losses in soft magnetic laminations for generic time dependence of the periodic magnetic polarization J(t). We found that, whatever the frequency and the induction waveform, the loss behavior can be quantitatively assessed within the theoretical framework of the statistical loss model. The prediction requires a limited set of preemptive experimental data, depending on whether or not the arbitrary J(t) waveform is endowed with local slope inversions (i.e., minor hysteresis loops) in its periodic time behavior. In the absence of minor loops, such data reduce, for any peak polarization value Jp, to the loss figures obtained under sinusoidal J(t) at two different frequency values. In the presence of minor loops of semiamplitude Jm, the two-frequency loss experiment should be carried out for both peak polarization values Jp and Jm. Additional knowledge of the quasi-static major loop, to be used for modeling hysteresis loss, does improve the accuracy of the prediction method. A more general approach to loss in soft magnetic laminations is obtained in this way, the only limitation apparently being the onset of skin effect at high frequencie

    Correlation energy in a spin polarized two dimensional electron liquid in the high density limit

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    We have obtained an analytic expression for the ring diagrams contribution to the correlation energy of a two dimensional electron liquid as a function of the uniform fractional spin polarization. Our results can be used to improve on the interpolation formulas which represent the basic ingredient for the constructions of modern spin-density functionals in two dimensions.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figur
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