2,459 research outputs found
Holographic storage of multiple coherence gratings in a Bose-Einstein condensate
We demonstrate superradiant conversion between a two-mode collective atomic
state and a single-mode light field in an elongated cloud of Bose-condensed
atoms. Two off-resonant write beams induce superradiant Raman scattering,
producing two independent coherence gratings with a different wave vector in
the cloud. By applying phase-matched read beams after a controllable delay, the
gratings can be selectively converted into the light field also in a
superradiant way. Due to the large cooperativity parameter and the small
velocity width of the condensate, a high conversion efficiency of % and
a long storage time of s were achieved.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
A first-principles study of tunneling magnetoresistance in Fe/MgAl2O4/Fe(001) magnetic tunnel junctions
We investigated the spin-dependent transport properties of Fe/MgAl2O4/Fe(001)
magnetic tunneling junctions (MTJs) on the basis of first-principles
calculations of the electronic structures and the ballistic conductance. The
calculated tunneling magnetoresistance (TMR) ratio of a Fe/MgAl2O4/Fe(001) MTJ
was about 160%, which was much smaller than that of a Fe/MgO/Fe(001) MTJ
(1600%) for the same barrier thickness. However, there was an evanescent state
with delta 1 symmetry in the energy gap around the Fermi level of normal spinel
MgAl2O4, indicating the possibility of a large TMR in Fe/MgAl2O4/Fe(001) MTJs.
The small TMR ratio of the Fe/MgAl2O4/Fe(001) MTJ was due to new conductive
channels in the minority spin states resulting from a band-folding effect in
the two-dimensional (2-D) Brillouin zone of the in-plane wave vector (k//) of
the Fe electrode. Since the in-plane cell size of MgAl2O4 is twice that of the
primitive in-plane cell size of bcc Fe, the bands in the boundary edges are
folded, and minority-spin states coupled with the delta 1 evanescent state in
the MgAl2O4 barrier appear at k//=0, which reduces the TMR ratio of the MTJs
significantly.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl
Efficient time series detection of the strong stochasticity threshold in Fermi-Pasta-Ulam oscillator lattices
In this work we study the possibility of detecting the so-called strong
stochasticity threshold, i.e. the transition between weak and strong chaos as
the energy density of the system is increased, in anharmonic oscillator chains
by means of the 0-1 test for chaos. We compare the result of the aforementioned
methodology with the scaling behavior of the largest Lyapunov exponent computed
by means of tangent space dynamics, that has so far been the most reliable
method available to detect the strong stochasticity threshold. We find that
indeed the 0-1 test can perform the detection in the range of energy density
values studied. Furthermore, we determined that conventional nonlinear time
series analysis methods fail to properly compute the largest Lyapounov exponent
even for very large data sets, whereas the computational effort of the 0-1 test
remains the same in the whole range of values of the energy density considered
with moderate size time series. Therefore, our results show that, for a
qualitative probing of phase space, the 0-1 test can be an effective tool if
its limitations are properly taken into account.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures; accepted for publication in Physical Review
Heavy quark effects on parton distribution functions in the unpolarized virtual photon up to the next-to-leading order in QCD
We investigate the heavy quark mass effects on the parton distribution
functions in the unpolarized virtual photon up to the next-to-leading order in
QCD. Our formalism is based on the QCD-improved parton model described by the
DGLAP evolution equation as well as on the operator product expansion
supplemented by the mass-independent renormalization group method. We evaluate
the various components of the parton distributions inside the virtual photon
with the massive quark effects, which are included through the initial
condition for the heavy quark distributions, or equivalently from the matrix
element of the heavy quark operators. We discuss some features of our results
for the heavy quark effects and their factorization-scheme dependence.Comment: 16 pages, 16 figures, version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Chiral anomalies in the reduced model
On the basis of an observation due to Kiskis, Narayanan and Neuberger, we
show that there is a remnant of chiral anomalies in the reduced model when a
Dirac operator which obeys the Ginsparg-Wilson relation is employed for the
fermion sector. We consider fermions belonging to the fundamental
representation of the gauge group U(N) or SU(N). For vector-like theories, we
determine a general form of the axial anomaly or the topological charge within
a framework of a U(1) embedding. For chiral gauge theories with the gauge group
U(N), a remnant of gauge anomaly emerges as an obstruction to a smooth fermion
integration measure. The pure gauge action of gauge-field configurations which
cause these non-trivial phenomena always diverges in the 't Hooft
limit when d>2.Comment: 20 pages, uses JHEP.cls and amsfonts.sty, the final version to appear
in JHE
Risk prediction to inform surveillance of chronic kidney disease in the US Healthcare Safety Net: a cohort study.
BackgroundThe capacity of electronic health record (EHR) data to guide targeted surveillance in chronic kidney disease (CKD) is unclear. We sought to leverage EHR data for predicting risk of progressing from CKD to end-stage renal disease (ESRD) to help inform surveillance of CKD among vulnerable patients from the healthcare safety-net.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective cohort study of adults (n = 28,779) with CKD who received care within 2 regional safety-net health systems during 1996-2009 in the Western United States. The primary outcomes were progression to ESRD and death as ascertained by linkage with United States Renal Data System and Social Security Administration Death Master files, respectively, through September 29, 2011. We evaluated the performance of 3 models which included demographic, comorbidity and laboratory data to predict progression of CKD to ESRD in conditions commonly targeted for disease management (hypertension, diabetes, chronic viral diseases and severe CKD) using traditional discriminatory criteria (AUC) and recent criteria intended to guide population health management strategies.ResultsOverall, 1730 persons progressed to end-stage renal disease and 7628 died during median follow-up of 6.6 years. Performance of risk models incorporating common EHR variables was highest in hypertension, intermediate in diabetes and chronic viral diseases, and lowest in severe CKD. Surveillance of persons who were in the highest quintile of ESRD risk yielded 83-94 %, 74-95 %, and 75-82 % of cases who progressed to ESRD among patients with hypertension, diabetes and chronic viral diseases, respectively. Similar surveillance yielded 42-71 % of ESRD cases among those with severe CKD. Discrimination in all conditions was universally high (AUC ≥0.80) when evaluated using traditional criteria.ConclusionsRecently proposed discriminatory criteria account for varying risk distribution and when applied to common clinical conditions may help to inform surveillance of CKD in diverse populations
Target Mass Corrections for the Virtual Photon Structure Functions to the Next-to-next-to-leading Order in QCD
We investigate target mass effects in the unpolarized virtual photon
structure functions and in
perturbative QCD for the kinematical region , where
is the mass squared of the probe (target) photon and is
the QCD scale parameter. We obtain the Nachtmann moments for the structure
functions and then, by inverting the moments, we get the expressions in closed
form for up to the next-to-next-to-leading order and
for up to the next-to-leading order, both of which
include the target mass corrections. Numerical analysis exhibits that target
mass effects appear at large and become sizable near , the maximal value of , as the ratio
increases.Comment: 24 pages, LaTeX, 7 eps figures, REVTeX
What Happens If an Unbroken Flavor Symmetry Exists?
Without assuming any specific flavor symmetry and/or any specific mass matrix
forms, it is demonstrated that if a flavor symmetry (a discrete symmetry, a
U(1) symmetry, and so on) exists, we cannot obtain the CKM quark mixing matrix
and the MNS lepton mixing matrix except for those between two families
for the case with the completely undegenerated fermion masses, so that we can
never give the observed CKM and MNS mixings. Only in the limit of (), we can obtain three family mixing with an interesting
constraint ().Comment: 10 pages, no figure, title and presentation change
A simple construction of fermion measure term in U(1) chiral lattice gauge theories with exact gauge invariance
In the gauge invariant formulation of U(1) chiral lattice gauge theories
based on the Ginsparg-Wilson relation, the gauge field dependence of the
fermion measure is determined through the so-called measure term. We derive a
closed formula of the measure term on the finite volume lattice. The Wilson
line degrees of freedom (torons) of the link field are treated separately to
take care of the global integrability. The local counter term is explicitly
constructed with the local current associated with the cohomologically trivial
part of the gauge anomaly in a finite volume. The resulted formula is very
close to the known expression of the measure term in the infinite volume with a
single parameter integration, and would be useful in practical implementations.Comment: 25 pages, uses JHEP3.cls, the version to appear in JHE
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