16 research outputs found
The scalar-isoscalar spectral function of strong matter in a large N approximation
The enhancement of the scalar-isoscalar spectral function near the two-pion
threshold is studied in the framework of an effective linear model,
using a large N approximation in the number of the Goldstone bosons. The effect
is rather insensitive to the detailed T=0 characteristics of the pole,
it is accounted by a pole moving with increasing along the real axis of the
second Riemann sheet towards the threshold location from below.Comment: 5 pages, poster presented at SEWM2002, Heidelberg, October 200
Finite temperature spectral function of the meson from large N expansion
The spectral function of the scalar-isoscalar channel of the O(N) symmetric
linear model is studied in the broken symmetry phase. The
investigation is based on the leading order evaluation of the self-energy in
the limit of large number of Goldstone bosons. We describe its temperature
dependent variation in the whole low temperature phase. This variation closely
reflects the trajectory of the scalar-isoscalar quasiparticle pole. In the
model with no explicit chiral symmetry breaking we have studied near the
critical point also the corresponding dynamical exponent.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures. To be published in Proc. of Budapest'02 Workshop
on Quark and Hadron Dynamics, Budapest, Hungary, March 3--7, 200
Analytic determination of the T-\mu phase diagram of the chiral quark model
Using a gap equation for the pion mass a nonperturbative method is given for
solving the chiral quark-meson model in the chiral limit at the lowest order in
the fermion contributions encountered in a large N_f approximation. The
location of the tricritical point is analytically determined. A mean field
potential is constructed from which critical exponents can be obtained.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures. To be published in Proc.of Budapest'04 Workshop
on Hot and Dense Matter in Relativistic Heavy Ion Physics, Budapest, Hungary,
March 24-27, 200
Energies And Damping Rates of Elementary Excitations in Spin-1 Bose-einstein-condensed Gases
The finite temperature Green's function technique is used to calculate the energies and damping rates of the elementary excitations of homogeneous, dilute, spin-1 Bose gases below the Bose-Einstein condensation temperature in both the density and spin channels. For this purpose a self-consistent dynamical Hartree-Fock model is formulated, which takes into account the direct and exchange processes on equal footing by summing up certain classes of Feynman diagrams. The model is shown to satisfy the Goldstone theorem and to exhibit the hybridization of one-particle and collective excitations correctly. The results are applied to gases of Na-23 and Rb-87 atoms
Bursts in the Chaotic Trajectory Lifetimes Preceding the Controlled Periodic Motion
The average lifetime () it takes for a randomly started trajectory
to land in a small region () on a chaotic attractor is studied. is
an important issue for controlling chaos. We point out that if the region
is visited by a short periodic orbit, the lifetime strongly deviates
from the inverse of the naturally invariant measure contained within that
region (). We introduce the formula that relates
to the expanding eigenvalue of the short periodic orbit
visiting .Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. E, 3 PS figure
Damping of low-energy excitations of a trapped Bose condensate at finite temperatures
We present the theory of damping of low-energy excitations of a trapped Bose
condensate at finite temperatures, where the damping is provided by the
interaction of these excitations with the thermal excitations. We emphasize the
key role of stochastization in the behavior of the thermal excitations for
damping in non-spherical traps. The damping rates of the lowest excitations,
following from our theory, are in fair agreement with the data of recent JILA
and MIT experiments. The damping of quasiclassical excitations is determined by
the condensate boundary region, and the result for the damping rate is
drastically different from that in a spatially homogeneous gas.Comment: 10 pages RevTeX, correction of the misprints and addition of the
sentence clarifying the result for quasiclassical excitationscorrection of
the misprints and addition of the sentence clarifying the result for
quasiclassical excitation
Finite Temperature Perturbation Theory for a Spatially Inhomogeneous Bose-condensed Gas
We develop a finite temperature perturbation theory (beyond the mean field)
for a Bose-condensed gas and calculate temperature-dependent damping rates and
energy shifts for Bogolyubov excitations of any energy. The theory is
generalized for the case of excitations in a spatially inhomogeneous (trapped)
Bose-condensed gas, where we emphasize the principal importance of
inhomogeneouty of the condensate density profile and develop the method of
calculating the self-energy functions. The use of the theory is demonstrated by
calculating the damping rates and energy shifts of low-energy quasiclassical
excitations, i.e. the quasiclassical excitations with energies much smaller
than the mean field interaction between particles. In this case the boundary
region of the condensate plays a crucial role, and the result for the damping
rates and energy shifts is completely different from that in spatially
homogeneous gases. We also analyze the frequency shifts and damping of sound
waves in cylindrical Bose condensates and discuss the role of damping in the
recent MIT experiment on the sound propagation.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, Revtex, uses epsfi
Complexity Characterization in a Probabilistic Approach to Dynamical Systems Through Information Geometry and Inductive Inference
Information geometric techniques and inductive inference methods hold great
promise for solving computational problems of interest in classical and quantum
physics, especially with regard to complexity characterization of dynamical
systems in terms of their probabilistic description on curved statistical
manifolds. In this article, we investigate the possibility of describing the
macroscopic behavior of complex systems in terms of the underlying statistical
structure of their microscopic degrees of freedom by use of statistical
inductive inference and information geometry. We review the Maximum Relative
Entropy (MrE) formalism and the theoretical structure of the information
geometrodynamical approach to chaos (IGAC) on statistical manifolds. Special
focus is devoted to the description of the roles played by the sectional
curvature, the Jacobi field intensity and the information geometrodynamical
entropy (IGE). These quantities serve as powerful information geometric
complexity measures of information-constrained dynamics associated with
arbitrary chaotic and regular systems defined on the statistical manifold.
Finally, the application of such information geometric techniques to several
theoretical models are presented.Comment: 29 page
Chaotic Scattering Theory, Thermodynamic Formalism, and Transport Coefficients
The foundations of the chaotic scattering theory for transport and
reaction-rate coefficients for classical many-body systems are considered here
in some detail. The thermodynamic formalism of Sinai, Bowen, and Ruelle is
employed to obtain an expression for the escape-rate for a phase space
trajectory to leave a finite open region of phase space for the first time.
This expression relates the escape rate to the difference between the sum of
the positive Lyapunov exponents and the K-S entropy for the fractal set of
trajectories which are trapped forever in the open region. This result is well
known for systems of a few degrees of freedom and is here extended to systems
of many degrees of freedom. The formalism is applied to smooth hyperbolic
systems, to cellular-automata lattice gases, and to hard sphere sytems. In the
latter case, the goemetric constructions of Sinai {\it et al} for billiard
systems are used to describe the relevant chaotic scattering phenomena. Some
applications of this formalism to non-hyperbolic systems are also discussed.Comment: 35 pages, compressed file, follow directions in header for ps file.
Figures are available on request from [email protected]