10,020 research outputs found
Anomalous magneto-oscillations and spin precession
A semiclassical analysis based on concepts developed in quantum chaos reveals
that anomalous magneto-oscillations in quasi two-dimensional systems with
spin-orbit interaction reflect the non-adiabatic spin precession of a classical
spin vector along the cyclotron orbits.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Anomalous Josephson Current in Junctions with Spin-Polarizing Quantum Point Contacts
We consider a ballistic Josephson junction with a quantum point contact in a
two-dimensional electron gas with Rashba spin-orbit coupling. The point contact
acts as a spin filter when embedded in a circuit with normal electrodes. We
show that with an in-plane external magnetic field an anomalous supercurrent
appears even for zero phase difference between the superconducting electrodes.
In addition, the external field induces large critical current asymmetries
between the two flow directions, leading to supercurrent rectifying effects.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in PR
INTEGRAL spectral variability study of the atoll 4U 1820-30: first detection of hard X-ray emission
We study the 4-200 keV spectral and temporal behaviour of the low mass X-ray
binary 4U 1820-30 with INTEGRAL during 2003-2005. This source as been observed
in both the soft (banana) and hard (island) spectral states. A high energy
tail, above 50 keV, in the hard state has been observed for the first time.
This places the source in the category of X-ray bursters showing high-energy
emission. The tail can be modeled as a soft power law component, with the
photon index of ~2.4, on top of thermal Comptonization emission from a plasma
with the electron temperature of kT_e~6 keV and optical depth of \tau~4.
Alternatively, but at a lower goodness of the fit, the hard-state broad band
spectrum can be accounted for by emission from a hybrid, thermal-nonthermal,
plasma. During this monitoring the source spent most of the time in the soft
state, usual for this source, and the >~4 keV spectra are represented by
thermal Comptonization with kT_e~3 keV and \tau~6-7.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication by Ap
Energetic proton spectra in the 11 June 1991 solar flare
The June 11, 1991 gamma-ray flare seen by the Compton Gamma-ray Observatory (CGRO) displays several features that make it a dynamic and rich event. It is a member of a class of long duration gamma-ray events with both 2.223 MeV and greater than 8 MeV emission for hours after the impulsive phase. It also contains an inter-phase between the impulsive and extended phases that presents a challenge to the standard gamma-ray line (GRL) flare picture. This phase has strong 2.223 MeV emission and relatively weak 4.44 MeV emission indicative of a very hard parent proton spectrum. However, this would indicate emission greater than 8 MeV, which is absent from this period. We present the application of new spectroscopy techniques to this phase of the flare in order to present a reasonable explanation for this seemly inconsistent picture
Macroscopic quantum entanglement between an optomechanical cavity and a continuous field in presence of non-Markovian noise
Probing quantum entanglement with macroscopic objects allows us to test quantum mechanics in new regimes. One way to realize such behavior is to couple a macroscopic mechanical oscillator to a continuous light field via radiation pressure. In view of this, the system that is discussed comprises an optomechanical cavity driven by a coherent optical field in the unresolved sideband regime where we assume Gaussian states and dynamics. We develop a framework to quantify the amount of entanglement in the system numerically. Different from previous work, we treat non-Markovian noise and take into account both the continuous optical field and the cavity mode. We apply our framework to the case of the Advanced Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory and discuss the parameter regimes where entanglement exists, even in the presence of quantum and classical noises
Manifestly Gauge-Invariant General Relativistic Perturbation Theory: II. FRW Background and First Order
In our companion paper we identified a complete set of manifestly
gauge-invariant observables for general relativity. This was possible by
coupling the system of gravity and matter to pressureless dust which plays the
role of a dynamically coupled observer. The evolution of those observables is
governed by a physical Hamiltonian and we derived the corresponding equations
of motion. Linear perturbation theory of those equations of motion around a
general exact solution in terms of manifestly gauge invariant perturbations was
then developed. In this paper we specialise our previous results to an FRW
background which is also a solution of our modified equations of motion. We
then compare the resulting equations with those derived in standard
cosmological perturbation theory (SCPT). We exhibit the precise relation
between our manifestly gauge-invariant perturbations and the linearly
gauge-invariant variables in SCPT. We find that our equations of motion can be
cast into SCPT form plus corrections. These corrections are the trace that the
dust leaves on the system in terms of a conserved energy momentum current
density. It turns out that these corrections decay, in fact, in the late
universe they are negligible whatever the value of the conserved current. We
conclude that the addition of dust which serves as a test observer medium,
while implying modifications of Einstein's equations without dust, leads to
acceptable agreement with known results, while having the advantage that one
now talks about manifestly gauge-invariant, that is measurable, quantities,
which can be used even in perturbation theory at higher orders.Comment: 51 pages, no figure
SPI Measurements of Galactic 26Al
The precision measurement of the 1809 keV gamma-ray line from Galactic
Al is one of the goals of the SPI spectrometer on INTEGRAL with its Ge
detector camera. We aim for determination of the detailed shape of this
gamma-ray line, and its variation for different source regions along the plane
of the Galaxy. Data from the first part of the core program observations of the
first mission year have been inspected. A clear detection of the \Al line at
about 5--7 significance demonstrates that SPI will deepen \Al studies.
The line intensity is consistent with expectations from previous experiments,
and the line appears narrower than the 5.4 keV FWHM reported by GRIS, more
consistent with RHESSI's recent value. Only preliminary statements can be made
at this time, however, due to the multi-component background underlying the
signal at \about 40 times higher intensity than the signal from Galactic
Al.Comment: 5 pages, 8 figures; accepted for publication in A&A (special INTEGRAL
volume
Tight bounds for classical and quantum coin flipping
Coin flipping is a cryptographic primitive for which strictly better
protocols exist if the players are not only allowed to exchange classical, but
also quantum messages. During the past few years, several results have appeared
which give a tight bound on the range of implementable unconditionally secure
coin flips, both in the classical as well as in the quantum setting and for
both weak as well as strong coin flipping. But the picture is still incomplete:
in the quantum setting, all results consider only protocols with perfect
correctness, and in the classical setting tight bounds for strong coin flipping
are still missing. We give a general definition of coin flipping which unifies
the notion of strong and weak coin flipping (it contains both of them as
special cases) and allows the honest players to abort with a certain
probability. We give tight bounds on the achievable range of parameters both in
the classical and in the quantum setting.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figures; v2: published versio
- …