33,455 research outputs found
The temperature dependence of the local tunnelling conductance in cuprate superconductors with competing AF order
Based on the model with proper chosen parameters for describing
the cuprate superconductors, it is found that near the optimal doping at low
temperature (), only the pure d-wave superconductivity (SC) prevails and
the antiferromagnetic (AF) order is completely suppressed. At higher , the
AF order with stripe modulation and the accompanying charge order may emerge,
and they could exist above the SC transition temperature. We calculate the
local differential tunnelling conductance (LDTC) from the local density of
states (LDOS) and show that their energy variations are rather different from
each other as increases. Although the calculated modulation periodicity in
the LDTC/LDOS and bias energy dependence of the Fourier amplitude of LDTC in
the "pseudogap" region are in good agreement with the recent STM experiment
[Vershinin , Science {\bf 303}, 1995 (2004)], we point out that some of
the energy dependent features in the LDTC do not represent the intrinsic
characteristics of the sample
Effective Low-Energy Model for f-Electron Delocalization
We consider a Periodic Anderson Model (PAM) with a momentum-dependent
inter-band hybridization that is strongly suppressed near the Fermi level.
Under these conditions, we reduce the PAM to an effective low-energy
Hamiltonian, , by expanding in the small parameter (
is the maximum inter-band hybridization amplitude and is the hopping
integral of the broad band). The resulting model consists of a t-J f-band
coupled via the Kondo exchange to the electrons in the broad band. allows for studying the f-electron delocalization transition. The result
is a doping-induced Mott transition for the f-electron delocalization, which we
demonstrate by density-matrix renormalization group (DMRG) calculations
Post-Oligarchic Evolution of Protoplanetary Embryos and the Stability of Planetary Systems
We investigate the orbit-crossing time (T_c) of protoplanet systems both with
and without a gas-disk background. The protoplanets are initially with equal
masses and separation (EMS systems) scaled by their mutual Hill's radii. In a
gas-free environment, we find log (T_c/yr) = A+B \log (k_0/2.3). Through a
simple analytical approach, we demonstrate that the evolution of the velocity
dispersion in an EMS system follows a random walk. The stochastic nature of
random-walk diffusion leads to (i) an increasing average eccentricity ~
t^1/2, where t is the time; (ii) Rayleigh-distributed eccentricities
(P(e,t)=e/\sigma^2 \exp(-e^2/(2\sigma^2)) of the protoplanets; (iii) a
power-law dependence of T_c on planetary separation. As evidence for the
chaotic diffusion, the observed eccentricities of known extra solar planets can
be approximated by a Rayleigh distribution. We evaluate the isolation masses of
the embryos, which determine the probability of gas giant formation, as a
function of the dust and gas surface densities.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures (2 color ones), accepted for publication in Ap
Bilateral symmetry of object silhouettes under perspective projection
Symmetry is an important property of objects and is exhibited in different forms e.g., bilateral, rotational, etc. This paper presents an algorithm for computing the bilateral symmetry of silhouettes of shallow objects under perspective distortion, exploiting the invariance of the cross ratio to projective transformations. The basic idea is to use the cross ratio to compute a number of midpoints of cross sections and then fit a straight line through them. The goodness-of-fit determines the likelihood of the line to be the axis of symmetry. We analytically estimate the midpoint’s location as a function of the vanishing point for a given object silhouette. Hence finding the symmetry axis amounts to a 2D search in the space of vanishing points. We present experiments on two datasets as well as internet images of symmetric objects that validate our approach. under perspectivities, we analytically compute a set of midpoints of the object as a function of the vanishing point. Then, we fit a straight line passing through the midpoints. The goodness-of-fit defines the likelihood of this line to be a symmetry axis. Using the proposed method, searching for the symmetry axis is reduced to searching for a vanishing point. Our approach is global in the sense that we consider the whole silhouette of the object rather than small parts of it. The results show that the method presented here is capable of finding axes of symmetry of considerably distorted perspective images. 2 Related Work
Interacting Individuals Leading to Zipf's Law
We present a general approach to explain the Zipf's law of city distribution.
If the simplest interaction (pairwise) is assumed, individuals tend to form
cities in agreement with the well-known statisticsComment: 4 pages 2 figure
Fermi gas in harmonic oscillator potentials
Assuming the validity of grand canonical statistics, we study the properties
of a spin-polarized Fermi gas in harmonic traps. Universal forms of Fermi
temperature , internal energy and the specific heat per particle of
the trapped Fermi gas are calculated as a {\it function} of particle number,
and the results compared with those of infinite number particles.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, LATE
The momentum distribution of J/psi in B decays
The discrepancy between theory and data in the momentum distribution of slow
J/psi in B decays has been several times addressed as a puzzle. Using the most
recent results on exclusive B decays into J/psi and heavy kaons or exotic
mesons and reconsidering the non-relativistic-QCD calculation of the color
octet fragmentation component, we show that an improvement in the comparison
between data and theory can be obtained. There is still room for a better fit
to data and this may imply that new exotic mesons of the XYZ kind have yet to
be discovered.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables. To appear in Physical Review
Chemical evolution of star clusters
I discuss the chemical evolution of star clusters, with emphasis on old
globular clusters, in relation to their formation histories. Globular clusters
clearly formed in a complex fashion, under markedly different conditions from
any younger clusters presently known. Those special conditions must be linked
to the early formation epoch of the Galaxy and must not have occurred since.
While a link to the formation of globular clusters in dwarf galaxies has been
suggested, present-day dwarf galaxies are not representative of the
gravitational potential wells within which the globular clusters formed.
Instead, a formation deep within the proto-Galaxy or within dark-matter
minihaloes might be favoured. Not all globular clusters may have formed and
evolved similarly. In particular, we may need to distinguish Galactic halo from
Galactic bulge clusters.Comment: 27 pages, 2 figures. To appear as invited review article in a special
issue of the Phil. Trans. Royal Soc. A: Ch. 6 "Star clusters as tracers of
galactic star-formation histories" (ed. R. de Grijs). Fully peer reviewed.
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