8,317 research outputs found
Towards Axion Monodromy Inflation with Warped KK-Modes
We present a particularly simple model of axion monodromy: Our axion is the
lowest-lying KK-mode of the RR-2-form-potential in the standard
Klebanov-Strassler throat. One can think of this inflaton candidate as being
defined by the integral of over the cycle of the throat. It obtains
an exponentially small mass from the IR-region in which the shrinks to
zero size both with respect to the Planck scale and the mass scale of local
modes of the throat. Crucially, the cycle has to be shared between two
throats, such that the second locus where the shrinks is also in a warped
region. Well-known problems like the potentially dangerous back-reaction of
brane/antibrane pairs and explicit supersymmetry breaking are not present in
our scenario. However, the inflaton back-reaction starts to deform the geometry
strongly once the field excursion approaches the Planck scale. We derive the
system of differential equations required to treat this effect quantitatively.
Numerical work is required to decide whether back-reaction makes the model
suitable for realistic inflation. While we have to leave this crucial issue to
future studies, we find it interesting that such a simple and explicit stringy
monodromy model allows an originally sub-Planckian axion to go through many
periods with full quantitative control before back-reaction becomes strong.
Also, the mere existence of our ultra-light throat mode (with double
exponentially suppressed mass) is noteworthy.Comment: 28 pages, 3 figures; v2: references added; v3: Corrected an
underestimate of supergravity back-reaction in Eq. (36); results changed
accordingly; added section 6 which develops the methodology for the 10d
non-linear back-reaction; added reference
Ultrabroadband single-cycle terahertz pulses with peak fields of 300 kV cm from a metallic spintronic emitter
To explore the capabilities of metallic spintronic thin-film stacks as a
source of intense and broadband terahertz electromagnetic fields, we excite a
W/CoFeB/Pt trilayer on a large-area glass substrate (diameter of 7.5 cm) by a
femtosecond laser pulse (energy 5.5 mJ, duration 40 fs, wavelength 800 nm).
After focusing, the emitted terahertz pulse is measured to have a duration of
230 fs, a peak field of 300 kV cm and an energy of 5 nJ. In particular,
the waveform exhibits a gapless spectrum extending from 1 to 10 THz at 10% of
amplitude maximum, thereby facilitating nonlinear control over matter in this
difficult-to-reach frequency range and on the sub-picosecond time scale.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
On the Complexity of Rainbow Vertex Colouring Diametral Path Graphs
Given a graph and a colouring of its vertices, a rainbow vertex path is a path between two vertices such that all the internal nodes of the path are coloured distinctly. A graph is rainbow vertex-connected if between every pair of vertices in the graph there exists a rainbow vertex path. We study the problem of deciding whether a given graph can be coloured using k or less colours such that it is rainbow vertex-connected. Note that every graph G needs at least diam(G)-1 colours to be rainbow vertex connected.
Heggernes et al. [MFCS, 2018] conjectured that if G is a graph in which every induced subgraph has a dominating diametral path, then G can always be rainbow vertex coloured with diam(G)-1 many colours. In this work, we confirm their conjecture for chordal, bipartite and claw-free diametral path graphs. We complement these results by showing the conjecture does not hold if the condition on every induced subgraph is dropped. In fact we show that, in this case, even though diam(G) many colours are always enough, it is NP-complete to determine whether a graph with a dominating diametral path of length three can be rainbow vertex coloured with two colours
Pion form factor and QCD sum rules: case of pseudoscalar current
We present an analysis of QCD sum rules for pion form factor in
next-to-leading order of perturbation theory for the case of pseudoscalar pion
currents. The essential instanton contribution is reanalysed with account for
present more accurate values of parameters entering Single Instanton
Approximation (SIA). The theoretical curve obtained for Q^2 dependence of pion
form factor is in a good agreement with existing experimental data. To
calculate NLO corrections for double spectral densities we developed an
effective computational technic. The details of the method together with the
results for pion form factor in a more theoretically clean case of axial
interpolating currents will be presented elsewhere.Comment: LaTeX file, 12 pages, 5 figures, uses axodraw.st
Delta Self-Consistent Field as a method to obtain potential energy surfaces of excited molecules on surfaces
We present a modification of the SCF method of calculating energies
of excited states, in order to make it applicable to resonance calculations of
molecules adsorbed on metal surfaces, where the molecular orbitals are highly
hybridized. The SCF approximation is a density functional method
closely resembling standard density functional theory (DFT), the only
difference being that in SCF one or more electrons are placed in higher
lying Kohn-Sham orbitals, instead of placing all electrons in the lowest
possible orbitals as one does when calculating the ground state energy within
standard DFT. We extend the SCF method by allowing excited electrons to
occupy orbitals which are linear combinations of Kohn-Sham orbitals. With this
extra freedom it is possible to place charge locally on adsorbed molecules in
the calculations, such that resonance energies can be estimated. The method is
applied to N, CO and NO adsorbed on different metallic surfaces and
compared to ordinary SCF without our modification, spatially
constrained DFT and inverse-photoemission spectroscopy (IPES) measurements.
This comparison shows that the modified SCF method gives results in
close agreement with experiment, significantly closer than the comparable
methods. For N adsorbed on ruthenium (0001) we map out a 2-dimensional part
of the potential energy surfaces in the ground state and the 2-resonance.
Finally we compare the SCF approach on gas-phase N and CO, to
higher accuracy methods. Excitation energies are approximated with accuracy
close to that of time-dependent density functional theory, and we see very good
agreement in the minimum shift of the potential energy surfaces in the excited
state compared to the ground state.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
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