22,704 research outputs found

    Cooling of a Micro-mechanical Resonator by the Back-action of Lorentz Force

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    Using a semi-classical approach, we describe an on-chip cooling protocol for a micro-mechanical resonator by employing a superconducting flux qubit. A Lorentz force, generated by the passive back-action of the resonator's displacement, can cool down the thermal motion of the mechanical resonator by applying an appropriate microwave drive to the qubit. We show that this onchip cooling protocol, with well-controlled cooling power and a tunable response time of passive back-action, can be highly efficient. With feasible experimental parameters, the effective mode temperature of a resonator could be cooled down by several orders of magnitude.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure

    Proton Decay, Fermion Masses and Texture from Extra Dimensions in SUSY GUTs

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    In supersymmetry, there are gauge invariant dimension 5 proton decay operators which must be suppressed by a mass scale much larger than the Planck mass. It is natural to expect that this suppression should be explained by a mechanism that explains the hierarchical structure of the fermion mass matrices. We apply this argument to the case where wave functions of chiral multiplets are localized under a kink background along an extra spatial dimension and the Yukawa couplings as well as the coefficients of the proton decay operators are determined by the overlap of the relevant wave functions. A configuration is found in the context of SU(5) supersymmetric grand unified theory that yields realistic values of quark masses, mixing angles, CP phase and charged lepton masses and sufficiently small genuine dimension 5 proton decay operators. Inclusion of SU(5) breaking effects is essential in order to obtain non-vanishing CP phase as well as correct lepton masses. The resulting mass matrix has a texture structure in which texture zeros are a consequence of extremely small overlap of the wave functions. Our approach requires explicit breaking of supersymmetry in the extra dimension, which can be realized in (de)constructing extra dimension.Comment: 23 pages, 2 figures, comments adde

    Quantum Condensates in Nuclear Matter: Problems

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    In connection with the contribution "Quantum Condensates in Nuclear Matter" some problems are given to become more familiar with the techniques of many-particle physics.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figur

    Non-equilibrium Goldstone phenomenon in tachyonic preheating

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    The dominance of the direct production of elementary Goldstone waves is demonstrated in tachyonic preheating by numerically determining the evolution of the dispersion relation, the equation of state and the kinetic power spectra for the angular degree of freedom of the complex matter field. The importance of the domain structure in the order parameter distribution for the quantitative understanding of the excitation mechanism is emphasized. Evidence is presented for the very early decoupling of the low-momentum Goldstone modes.Comment: 14 LaTeX pages, 5 figures, version published in Phys. Rev.

    Hydrogen dissociation on the Mg(0001) surface from quantum Monte Carlo calculations

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    We have used diffusion Monte Carlo (DMC) simulations to calculate the energy barrier for H2_2 dissociation on the Mg(0001) surface. The calculations employ pseudopotentials and systematically improvable B-spline basis sets to expand the single particle orbitals used to construct the trial wavefunctions. Extensive tests on system size, time step, and other sources of errors, performed on periodically repeated systems of up to 550 atoms, show that all these errors together can be reduced to ∼0.03\sim 0.03 eV. The DMC dissociation barrier is calculated to be 1.18±0.031.18 \pm 0.03 eV, and is compared to those obtained with density functional theory using various exchange-correlation functionals, with values ranging between 0.44 and 1.07 eV.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Physical Review

    Large Magnetic Moments of Arsenic-Doped Mn Clusters and their Relevance to Mn-Doped III-V Semiconductor Ferromagnetism

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    We report electronic and magnetic structure of arsenic-doped manganese clusters from density-functional theory using generalized gradient approximation for the exchange-correlation energy. We find that arsenic stabilizes manganese clusters, though the ferromagnetic coupling between Mn atoms are found only in Mn2_2As and Mn4_4As clusters with magnetic moments 9 μB\mu_B and 17 μB\mu_B, respectively. For all other sizes, x=x= 3, 5-10, Mnx_xAs clusters show ferrimagnetic coupling. It is suggested that, if grown during the low temperature MBE, the giant magnetic moments due to ferromagnetic coupling in Mn2_2As and Mn4_4As clusters could play a role on the ferromagnetism and on the variation observed in the Curie temperature of Mn-doped III-V semiconductors.Comment: 4 Pages, 3 Figures[1 EPS and 2 JPG files], RevTeX

    D-term chaotic inflation in supergravity

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    Even though the chaotic inflation is one of the most popular inflation models for its simple dynamics and compelling resolutions to the initial condition problems, its realization in supergravity has been considered a challenging task. We discuss how the chaotic inflation dominated by the D-term can be induced in supergravity, which would give a new perspective on the inflation model building in supergravity.Comment: 5 pages, to appear in Phys. Rev.
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