10,037 research outputs found
Geometry versus Entanglement in Resonating Valence Bond Liquids
We investigate the behavior of bipartite as well as genuine multipartite
entanglement of a resonating valence bond state on a ladder. We show that the
system possesses significant amounts of bipartite entanglement in the steps of
the ladder while no substantial bipartite entanglement is present in the rails.
Genuine multipartite entanglement present in the system is negligible. The
results are in stark contrast with the entanglement properties of the same
state on isotropic lattices in two and higher dimensions, indicating that the
geometry of the lattice can have important implications on the quality of
quantum information and other tasks that can be performed by using multiparty
states on that lattice.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, RevTeX
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Investigation of Shallow Sedimentary Structure of the Anchorage Basin, Alaska, Using Simulated Annealing Inversion of Site Response
This study deals with shallow sedimentary structure of the Anchorage basin in Alaska. For this purpose, inversion of site response [SR(f)] data in the frequency range 0.5-11.0 Hz from various sites of the basin has been performed using the simulated annealing method to compute subsurface layer thickness, shear-wave velocity (beta), density, and shear-wave quality factor. The one-dimensional (1D) models for the aforementioned parameters were obtained with preset bounds on the basis of available geological information such that the L-2 norm error between the observed and computed site response attained a global minimum. Next, the spatial distribution of the important parameter beta was obtained by interpolating values yielded by the 1D models. The results indicate the presence of three distinct velocity zones as the source of spatial variation of SR(f) in the Anchorage basin. In the uppermost part of the basin, the beta values of fine-grain Quaternary sediments mainly lie in the range of 180-500 m/sec with thickness varying from 15 to 50 m. This formation overlies relatively thick (80-200 m) coarse-grain Quaternary sediments with beta values in the range of 600-900 m/sec. These two Quaternary units are, in turn, overlain on Tertiary sediments with beta > 1000 m/sec located at depths of 100 and 250 m, respectively, in the central and western side along the Knik Arm parts of the basin. The important implication of the result is that the sources of spatial variation of SR(f) in the Anchorage basin for the frequency band 0.5-11 Hz, besides in the uppermost 30 m, are found to be deeper than this depth. Thus, use of commonly considered geological formations in the depth intervals from 0 to 30 m for the ground-motion interpretation will likely yield erroneous results in the Anchorage basin.GIEnvironment and Natural Resources InstituteSchool of Engineering of the University of Alaska, AnchorageGeological Science
Inflation is the generic feature of phantom field-not the big-rip
A class of solutions for phantom field corresponding to a generalized
k-essence lagrangian has been presented, employing a simple method which
provides the scope to explore many such. All the solutions having dynamical
state parameter are found to touch the magic line w = -1, asymptotically. The
solutions with constant equation of state can represent phantom, quitessence or
an ordinary scalar field cosmologies depending on the choice of a couple of
parameters of the theory. For w approximately equal to -1, quintessence and
phantom models are indistinguishable through the Hubble parameter. Finally,
inflation rather than big-rip has been found to be the generic feature of
phantom cosmology.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
On the universality of distribution of ranked cluster masses at critical percolation
The distribution of masses of clusters smaller than the infinite cluster is
evaluated at the percolation threshold. The clusters are ranked according to
their masses and the distribution of the scaled masses M for any
rank r shows a universal behaviour for different lattice sizes L (D is the
fractal dimension). For different ranks however, there is a universal
distribution function only in the large rank limit, i.e., (y and are defined in the text), where the
universal scaling function g is found to be Gaussian in nature.Comment: 4 pages, to appear in J. Phys.
Interacting holographic tachyon model of dark energy
We propose a holographic tachyon model of dark energy with interaction
between the components of the dark sector. The correspondence between the
tachyon field and the holographic dark energy densities allows the
reconstruction of the potential and the dynamics of the tachyon scalar field in
a flat Friedmann-Robertson-Walker universe. We show that this model can
describe the observed accelerated expansion of our universe with a parameter
space given by the most recent observational results.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in IJMP
Metastability in Monte Carlo simulation of 2D Ising films and in Fe monolayer strips
Effective Curie temperatures measured in Fe monolayer strips agree reasonable
with computer sinulations of two-dimensional Ising model strips. The
simulations confirm the domain structure seen already by Albano et al.Comment: 3 pages, plain tex, 5 postscript figure
Fundamental Strings in Open String Theory at the Tachyonic Vacuum
We show that the world-volume theory on a D-p-brane at the tachyonic vacuum
has solitonic string solutions whose dynamics is governed by the Nambu-Goto
action of a string moving in (25+1) dimensional space-time. This provides
strong evidence for the conjecture that at this vacuum the full (25+1)
dimensional Poincare invariance is restored. We also use this result to argue
that the open string field theory at the tachyonic vacuum must contain closed
string excitations.Comment: LaTeX file, 16 pages, references and clarification adde
A note on the decay of noncommutative solitons
We propose an ansatz for the equations of motion of the noncommutative model
of a tachyonic scalar field interacting with a gauge field, which allows one to
find time-dependent solutions describing decaying solitons. These correspond to
the collapse of lower dimensional branes obtained through tachyon condensation
of unstable brane systems in string theory.Comment: 8 pages, no figures. Extended version, references adde
The Mass, Normalization and Late Time behavior of the Tachyon Field
We study the dynamics of the tachyon field . We derive the mass of the
tachyon as the pole of the propagator which does not coincide with the standard
mass given in the literature in terms of the second derivative of or
. We determine the transformation of the tachyon in order to have a
canonical scalar field . This transformation reduces to the one obtained
for small but it is also valid for large values of . This is
specially interesting for the study of dark energy where . We
also show that the normalized tachyon field is constrained to the
interval where are zeros of the original
potential . This results shows that the field does not know of the
unboundedness of , as suggested for bosonic open string tachyons. Finally
we study the late time behavior of tachyon field using the L'H\^{o}pital rule.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
Optimal bundle formation and pricing of two products with limited stock
Cataloged from PDF version of article.In this study, we consider the stochastic modeling of a retail firm that sells two types of perishable products in a single period not only as independent items but also as a bundle. Our emphasis is on understanding the bundling practices on the inventory and pricing decisions of the firm. One of the issues we address is to decide on the number of bundles to be formed from the initial product inventory levels and the price of the bundle to maximize the expected profit. Product demands follow a Poisson Process with a price dependent rate. Customer reservation prices are assumed to have a joint distribution. We study the impact of reservation price distributions, initial inventory levels, product prices, demand arrival rates and cost of bundling. We observe that the expected profit decreases as the correlation between the reservation prices of two products increases. With negative correlation, bundling cost has a significant impact on the number of bundles formed. When the product prices are low, the retailer sells individual products as well as the bundle (mixed bundling), when they are high, the retailer sells only bundles (pure bundling). The expected profit and the number of bundles offered decrease as the variance of the reservation price distribution increases. For high starting inventory levels, the retailer reduces bundle price and offers more bundles. The number of bundle sales decreases and the number of individual product sales increases when the arrival rate increases since the need for bundling decreases. Impacts of substitutability and complementarity of products are also investigated. The retailer forms more bundles, or charges higher prices for the bundle or both as the products become more complementary and less substitutable. © 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
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