2,086 research outputs found
Formation of shock waves in a Bose-Einstein condensate
We consider propagation of density wave packets in a Bose-Einstein
condensate. We show that the shape of initially broad, laser-induced, density
perturbation changes in the course of free time evolution so that a shock wave
front finally forms. Our results are well beyond predictions of commonly used
zero-amplitude approach, so they can be useful in extraction of a speed of
sound from experimental data. We discuss a simple experimental setup for shock
propagation and point out possible limitations of the mean-field approach for
description of shock phenomena in a BEC.Comment: 8 pages & 6 figures, minor changes, more references, to appear in
Phys. Rev.
Nonlinear Schr\"odinger Equation with Spatio-Temporal Perturbations
We investigate the dynamics of solitons of the cubic Nonlinear Schr\"odinger
Equation (NLSE) with the following perturbations: non-parametric
spatio-temporal driving of the form , damping, and a
linear term which serves to stabilize the driven soliton. Using the time
evolution of norm, momentum and energy, or, alternatively, a Lagrangian
approach, we develop a Collective-Coordinate-Theory which yields a set of ODEs
for our four collective coordinates. These ODEs are solved analytically and
numerically for the case of a constant, spatially periodic force . The
soliton position exhibits oscillations around a mean trajectory with constant
velocity. This means that the soliton performs, on the average, a
unidirectional motion although the spatial average of the force vanishes. The
amplitude of the oscillations is much smaller than the period of . In
order to find out for which regions the above solutions are stable, we
calculate the time evolution of the soliton momentum and soliton
velocity : This is a parameter representation of a curve which is
visited by the soliton while time evolves. Our conjecture is that the soliton
becomes unstable, if this curve has a branch with negative slope. This
conjecture is fully confirmed by our simulations for the perturbed NLSE.
Moreover, this curve also yields a good estimate for the soliton lifetime: the
soliton lives longer, the shorter the branch with negative slope is.Comment: 21 figure
Dynamical correlations in electronic transport through a system of coupled quantum dots
Current auto- and cross-correlations are studied in a system of two
capacitively coupled quantum dots. We are interested in a role of Coulomb
interaction in dynamical correlations, which occur outside the Coulomb blockade
region (for high bias). After decomposition of the current correlation
functions into contributions between individual tunneling events, we can show
which of them are relevant and lead to sub-/supper-Poissonian shot noise and
negative/positive cross-correlations. The results are differentiated for a weak
and strong inter-dot coupling. Interesting results are for the strong coupling
case when electron transfer in one of the channel is strongly correlated with
charge drag in the second channel. We show that cross-correlations are
non-monotonic functions of bias voltage and they are in general negative
(except some cases with asymmetric tunnel resistances). This is effect of local
potential fluctuations correlated by Coulomb interaction, which mimics the
Pauli exclusion principle
Automation of monitoring in gas producing company
Specific character of monitoring in gas producing company has been considered. Corporate geoinformation system «Magistral-Vostok» for controlling gas producing enterprises was suggested, the experience of this system introduction in «Vostokgasprom» was describe
Impurity-induced stabilization of solitons in arrays of parametrically driven nonlinear oscillators
Chains of parametrically driven, damped pendula are known to support
soliton-like clusters of in-phase motion which become unstable and seed
spatiotemporal chaos for sufficiently large driving amplitudes. We show that
the pinning of the soliton on a "long" impurity (a longer pendulum) expands
dramatically its stability region whereas "short" defects simply repel solitons
producing effective partition of the chain. We also show that defects may
spontaneously nucleate solitons.Comment: 4 pages in RevTeX; 7 figures in ps forma
On the forward cone quantization of the Dirac field in "longitudinal boost-invariant" coordinates with cylindrical symmetry
We obtain a complete set of free-field solutions of the Dirac equation in a
(longitudinal) boost-invariant geometry with azimuthal symmetry and use these
solutions to perform the canonical quantization of a free Dirac field of mass
. This coordinate system which uses the 1+1 dimensional fluid rapidity and the fluid proper time is
relevant for understanding particle production of quarks and antiquarks
following an ultrarelativistic collision of heavy ions, as it incorporates the
(approximate) longitudinal "boost invariance" of the distribution of outgoing
particles. We compare two approaches to solving the Dirac equation in
curvilinear coordinates, one directly using Vierbeins, and one using a
"diagonal" Vierbein representation
Impact of the strong electromagnetic field on the QCD effective potential for homogeneous Abelian gluon field configurations
The one-loop quark contribution to the QCD effective potential for the
homogeneous Abelian gluon field in the presence of external strong
electromagnetic field is evaluated. The structure of extrema of the potential
as a function of the angles between chromoelectric, chromomagnetic and
electromagnetic fields is analyzed. In this setup, the electromagnetic field is
considered as an external one while the gluon field represents domain
structured nonperturbative gluon configurations related to the QCD vacuum in
the confinement phase. Two particularly interesting gluon configurations,
(anti-)self-dual and crossed orthogonal chromomagnetic and chromoelectric
fields, are discussed specifically. Within this simplified framework it is
shown that the strong electromagnetic fields can play a catalysing role for a
deconfinement transition. At the qualitative level, the present consideration
can be seen as a highly simplified study of an impact of the electromagnetic
fields generated in relativistic heavy ion collisions on the strongly
interacting hadronic matter.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Renormalizing the Schwinger-Dyson equations in the auxiliary field formulation of field theory
In this paper we study the renormalization of the Schwinger-Dyson equations
that arise in the auxiliary field formulation of the O(N) field
theory. The auxiliary field formulation allows a simple interpretation of the
large-N expansion as a loop expansion of the generating functional in the
auxiliary field , once the effective action is obtained by integrating
over the fields. Our all orders result is then used to obtain finite
renormalized Schwinger-Dyson equations based on truncation expansions which
utilize the two-particle irreducible (2-PI) generating function formalism. We
first do an all orders renormalization of the two- and three-point function
equations in the vacuum sector. This result is then used to obtain explicitly
finite and renormalization constant independent self-consistent S-D equations
valid to order~1/N, in both 2+1 and 3+1 dimensions. We compare the results for
the real and imaginary parts of the renormalized Green's functions with the
related \emph{sunset} approximation to the 2-PI equations discussed by Van Hees
and Knoll, and comment on the importance of the Landau pole effect.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figure
Density and spin response functions in ultracold fermionic atom gases
We propose a new method of detecting the onset of superfluidity in a
two-component ultracold fermionic gas of atoms governed by an attractive
short-range interaction. By studying the two-body correlation functions we find
that a measurement of the momentum distribution of the density and spin
response functions allows one to access separately the normal and anomalous
densities. The change in sign at low momentum transfer of the density response
function signals the transition between a BEC and a BCS regimes, characterized
by small and large pairs, respectively. This change in sign of the density
response function represents an unambiguous signature of the BEC to BCS
crossover. Also, we predict spin rotational symmetry-breaking in this system
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