15,709 research outputs found

    Signatures of a Noise-Induced Quantum Phase Transition in a Mesoscopic Metal Ring

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    We study a mesoscopic ring with an in-line quantum dot threaded by an Aharonov-Bohm flux. Zero-point fluctuations of the electromagnetic environment capacitively coupled to the ring, with ωs\omega^s spectral density, can suppress tunneling through the dot, resulting in a quantum phase transition from an unpolarized to a polarized phase. We show that robust signatures of such a transition can be found in the response of the persistent current in the ring to the external flux as well as to the bias between the dot and the arm. Particular attention is paid to the experimentally relevant cases of ohmic (s=1s=1) and subohmic (s=1/2s=1/2) noise.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, realistic parameters estimated, reference update

    Separable states and the geometric phases of an interacting two-spin system

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    It is known that an interacting bipartite system evolves as an entangled state in general, even if it is initially in a separable state. Due to the entanglement of the state, the geometric phase of the system is not equal to the sum of the geometric phases of its two subsystems. However, there may exist a set of states in which the nonlocal interaction does not affect the separability of the states, and the geometric phase of the bipartite system is then always equal to the sum of the geometric phases of its subsystems. In this paper, we illustrate this point by investigating a well known physical model. We give a necessary and sufficient condition in which a separable state remains separable so that the geometric phase of the system is always equal to the sum of the geometric phases of its subsystems.Comment: 13 page

    Stability and Capacity of Regular Wireless Networks

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    The Moduli Space of Noncommutative Vortices

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    The abelian Higgs model on the noncommutative plane admits both BPS vortices and non-BPS fluxons. After reviewing the properties of these solitons, we discuss several new aspects of the former. We solve the Bogomoln'yi equations perturbatively, to all orders in the inverse noncommutivity parameter, and show that the metric on the moduli space of k vortices reduces to the computation of the trace of a k-dimensional matrix. In the limit of large noncommutivity, we present an explicit expression for this metric.Comment: Invited contribution to special issue of J.Math.Phys. on "Integrability, Topological Solitons and Beyond"; 10 Pages, 1 Figure. v2: revision of history in introductio

    Enhanced heat transport by turbulent two-phase Rayleigh-B\'enard convection

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    We report measurements of turbulent heat-transport in samples of ethane (C2_2H6_6) heated from below while the applied temperature difference ΔT\Delta T straddled the liquid-vapor co-existance curve Tϕ(P)T_\phi(P). When the sample top temperature TtT_t decreased below TϕT_\phi, droplet condensation occurred and the latent heat of vaporization HH provided an additional heat-transport mechanism.The effective conductivity λeff\lambda_{eff} increased linearly with decreasing TtT_t, and reached a maximum value λeff\lambda_{eff}^* that was an order of magnitude larger than the single-phase λeff\lambda_{eff}. As PP approached the critical pressure, λeff\lambda_{eff}^* increased dramatically even though HH vanished. We attribute this phenomenon to an enhanced droplet-nucleation rate as the critical point is approached.Comment: 4 gages, 6 figure

    A Parameterized Centrality Metric for Network Analysis

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    A variety of metrics have been proposed to measure the relative importance of nodes in a network. One of these, alpha-centrality [Bonacich, 2001], measures the number of attenuated paths that exist between nodes. We introduce a normalized version of this metric and use it to study network structure, specifically, to rank nodes and find community structure of the network. Specifically, we extend the modularity-maximization method [Newman and Girvan, 2004] for community detection to use this metric as the measure of node connectivity. Normalized alpha-centrality is a powerful tool for network analysis, since it contains a tunable parameter that sets the length scale of interactions. By studying how rankings and discovered communities change when this parameter is varied allows us to identify locally and globally important nodes and structures. We apply the proposed method to several benchmark networks and show that it leads to better insight into network structure than alternative methods.Comment: 11 pages, submitted to Physical Review
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