1,825 research outputs found
Symmetry restoration and quantumness reestablishment
A realistic quantum many-body system, characterized by a generic microscopic
Hamiltonian, is accessible only through approximation methods. The mean field
theories, as the simplest practices of approximation methods, commonly serve as
a powerful tool, but unfortunately often violate the symmetry of the
Hamiltonian. The conventional BCS theory, as an excellent mean field approach,
violates the particle number conservation and completely erases quantumness
characterized by concurrence and quantum discord between different modes. We
restore the symmetry by using the projected BCS theory and the exact numerical
solution and find that the lost quantumness is synchronously reestablished. We
show that while entanglement remains unchanged with the particle numbers,
quantum discord behaves as an extensive quantity with respect to the system
size. Surprisingly, discord is hardly dependent on the interaction strengths.
The new feature of discord offers promising applications in modern quantum
technologies.Comment: 17 pages and 3 figure
The puzzle of anomalously large isospin violations in
The BES-III Collaboration recently report the observation of anomalously
large isospin violations in , where the in the invariant mass
spectrum appears to be much narrower ( 10 MeV) than the peak width
(50 MeV) measured in other processes. We show that a mechanism, named as
triangle singularity (TS), can produce a narrow enhancement between the charged
and neutral thresholds, i.e., . It can also
lead to different invariant mass spectra for
and , which can possibly explain the long-standing puzzle
about the need for two close states and in
and , respectively. The TS could be a key to our
understanding of the nature of and advance our knowledge
about the mixing between and .Comment: 4 pages and 7 eps figures; Journal-matched versio
The Age-Redshift Relationship of Old Passive Galaxies
We use 32 age measurements of passively evolving galaxies as a function of
redshift to test and compare the standard model (CDM) with the Universe. We show that the latter fits the data with a reduced
for a Hubble constant km
. By comparison, the optimal flat CDM
model, with two free parameters (including and km ), fits the age-\emph{z} data with a reduced .
Based solely on their values, both models appear to account
for the data very well, though the optimized CDM parameters are only
marginally consistent with those of the concordance model ( and km ). Fitting the age-
data with the latter results in a reduced . However,
because of the different number of free parameters in these models, selection
tools, such as the Akaike, Kullback and Bayes Information Criteria, favour
over CDM with a likelihood of
versus . These results are suggestive, though not yet
compelling, given the current limited galaxy age- sample. We carry out Monte
Carlo simulations based on these current age measurements to estimate how large
the sample would have to be in order to rule out either model at a confidence level. We find that if the real cosmology is CDM, a
sample of galaxy ages would be sufficient to rule out
at this level of accuracy, while galaxy ages would be required to
rule out CDM if the real Universe were instead .Comment: 36 pages, 13 figures, 1 table; accepted for publication in The
Astronomical Journal. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1405.238
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