5,770 research outputs found
Density oscillations in trapped dipolar condensates
We investigated the ground state wave function and free expansion of a
trapped dipolar condensate. We find that dipolar interaction may induce both
biconcave and dumbbell density profiles in, respectively, the pancake- and
cigar-shaped traps. On the parameter plane of the interaction strengths, the
density oscillation occurs only when the interaction parameters fall into
certain isolated areas. The relation between the positions of these areas and
the trap geometry is explored. By studying the free expansion of the condensate
with density oscillation, we show that the density oscillation is detectable
from the time-of-flight image.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figure
Coherent population trapping and dynamical instability in the nonlinearly coupled atom-molecule system
We study the possibility of creating a coherent population trapping (CPT)
state, involving free atomic and ground molecular condensates, during the
process of associating atomic condensate into molecular condensate. We
generalize the Bogoliubov approach to this multi-component system and study the
collective excitations of the CPT state in the homogeneous limit. We develop a
set of analytical criteria based on the relationship among collisions involving
atoms and ground molecules, which are found to strongly affect the stability
properties of the CPT state, and use it to find the stability diagram and to
systematically classify various instabilities in the long-wavelength limit.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
Creating stable molecular condensate using a generalized Raman adiabatic passage scheme
We study the Feshbach resonance assisted stimulated adiabatic passage of an
effective coupling field for creating stable molecules from atomic Bose
condensate. By exploring the properties of the coherent population trapping
state, we show that, contrary to the previous belief, mean-field shifts need
not to limit the conversion efficiency as long as one chooses an adiabatic
passage route that compensates the collision mean-field phase shifts and avoids
the dynamical unstable regime.Comment: 4+\epsilon pages, 3 figure
Properties of a coupled two species atom-heteronuclear molecule condensate
We study the coherent association of a two-species atomic condensate into a
condensate of heteronuclear diatomic molecules, using both a semiclassical
treatment and a quantum mechanical approach. The differences and connections
between the two approaches are examined. We show that, in this coupled
nonlinear atom-molecule system, the population difference between the two
atomic species plays a significant role in the ground-state stability
properties as well as in coherent population oscillation dynamics.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Fermionic R-operator approach for the small-polaron model with open boundary condition
Exact integrability and algebraic Bethe ansatz of the small-polaron model
with the open boundary condition are discussed in the framework of the quantum
inverse scattering method (QISM). We employ a new approach where the fermionic
R-operator which consists of fermion operators is a key object. It satisfies
the Yang-Baxter equation and the reflection equation with its corresponding
K-operator. Two kinds of 'super-transposition' for the fermion operators are
defined and the dual reflection equation is obtained. These equations prove the
integrability and the Bethe ansatz equation which agrees with the one obtained
from the graded Yang-Baxter equation and the graded reflection equations.Comment: 10 page
Measurement back-action on the quantum spin-mixing dynamics of a spin-1 Bose-Einstein condensate
We consider a small F=1 spinor condensate inside an optical cavity driven by
an optical probe field, and subject the output of the probe to a homodyne
detection, with the goal of investigating the effect of measurement back-action
on the spin dynamics of the condensate. Using the stochastic master equation
approach, we show that the effect of back-action is sensitive to not only the
measurement strength but also the quantum fluctuation of the spinor condensate.
The same method is also used to estimate the atom numbers below which the
effect of back-action becomes so prominent that extracting spin dynamics from
this cavity-based detection scheme is no longer practical
Does stability of relativistic dissipative fluid dynamics imply causality?
We investigate the causality and stability of relativistic dissipative fluid
dynamics in the absence of conserved charges. We perform a linear stability
analysis in the rest frame of the fluid and find that the equations of
relativistic dissipative fluid dynamics are always stable. We then perform a
linear stability analysis in a Lorentz-boosted frame. Provided that the ratio
of the relaxation time for the shear stress tensor, , to the sound
attenuation length, , fulfills a certain
asymptotic causality condition, the equations of motion give rise to stable
solutions. Although the group velocity associated with perturbations may exceed
the velocity of light in a certain finite range of wavenumbers, we demonstrate
that this does not violate causality, as long as the asymptotic causality
condition is fulfilled. Finally, we compute the characteristic velocities and
show that they remain below the velocity of light if the ratio
fulfills the asymptotic causality condition.Comment: 30 pages, 10 figures
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Three-Gorges Dam Fine Sediment Pollutant Transport: Turbulence SPH Model Simulation of Multi-Fluid Flows
YesThe Three Gorges Dam (TGD) constructed at the Yangtze River, China represents a revolutionary project to
battle against the mage-scale flooding problems while improving the local economy at the same time.
However, the large-scale fine-size sediment and pollutant material transport caused by the TGD operation are
found to be inevitable and long-lasting. In this paper, a multi-fluid Incompressible Smoothed Particle
Hydrodynamics (ISPH) model is used to simulate the multi-fluid flows similar to the fine sediment materials
transport (in muddy flows) and water flow mixing process. The SPH method is a mesh-free particle modeling
approach that can treat the free surfaces and multi-interfaces in a straightforward manner. The proposed
model is based on the universal multi-fluid flow equations and a unified pressure equation is used to account
for the interaction arising from the different fluid components. A Sub-Particle-Scale (SPS) turbulence model
is included to address the turbulence effect generated during the flow process. The proposed model is used to
investigate two cases of multi-fluid flows generated from the polluted flow intrusions into another fluid. The
computations are found in good agreement with the practical situations. Sensitivity studies have also been
carried out to evaluate the particle spatial resolution and turbulence modeling on the flow simulations. The
proposed ISPH model could provide a promising tool to study the practical multi-fluid flows in the TGD
operation environment.The Major State Basic Research Development Program (973 program) of China (No. 2013CB036402) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 51479087)
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