2,242 research outputs found
Free field realization of the BMS Ising model
In this work, we study the inhomogeneous BMS free fermion theory, and show
that it gives a free field realization of the BMS Ising model. We find that
besides the BMS symmetry there exists an anisotropic scaling symmetry in BMS
free fermion theory. As a result, the symmetry of the theory gets enhanced to
an infinite dimensional symmetry generated by a BMS-Kac-Moody algebra, similar
to the one in the BMS free scalar model. Different from the BMS free scalar
case, the Kac-Moody level in the algebra is nonvanishing now such that the
corresponding modules are further enlarged to BMS-Kac-Moody staggered modules.
We show that there exists an underlying structure in the operator
product expansion of the currents, and the BMS-Kac-Moody staggered modules can
be viewed as highest-weight modules of this -algebra. Moreover we obtain the
BMS Ising model by a fermion-boson duality. This BMS Ising model is not a
minimal model with respect to BMS, since the minimal model construction
based on BMS Kac determinant always leads to chiral Virasoro minimal models.
Instead, the underlying algebra of the BMS Ising model is the
-algebra, which can be understood as a quantum conformal BMS
algebra.Comment: 49 pages; v2: references added, typos corrected, statement modified;
v3: references added, typos corrected, more explanations adde
Spatial damping of propagating sausage waves in coronal cylinders
Sausage modes are important in coronal seismology. Spatially damped
propagating sausage waves were recently observed in the solar atmosphere. We
examine how wave leakage influences the spatial damping of sausage waves
propagating along coronal structures modeled by a cylindrical density
enhancement embedded in a uniform magnetic field. Working in the framework of
cold magnetohydrodynamics, we solve the dispersion relation (DR) governing
sausage waves for complex-valued longitudinal wavenumber at given real
angular frequencies . For validation purposes, we also provide
analytical approximations to the DR in the low-frequency limit and in the
vicinity of , the critical angular frequency separating trapped
from leaky waves. In contrast to the standing case, propagating sausage waves
are allowed for much lower than . However, while able
to direct their energy upwards, these low-frequency waves are subject to
substantial spatial attenuation. The spatial damping length shows little
dependence on the density contrast between the cylinder and its surroundings,
and depends only weakly on frequency. This spatial damping length is of the
order of the cylinder radius for , where
and are the cylinder radius and the Alfv\'en speed in the
cylinder, respectively. We conclude that if a coronal cylinder is perturbed by
symmetric boundary drivers (e.g., granular motions) with a broadband spectrum,
wave leakage efficiently filters out the low-frequency components.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Quantum non-demolition measurement of photon number with atom-light interferometers
When atoms are illuminated by an off-resonant field, the AC Stark effect will lead to phase shifts in atomic states. The phase shifts are proportional to the photon number of the off-resonant illuminating field. By measuring the atomic phase with newly developed atom-light hybrid interferometers, we can achieve quantum non-demolition measurement of the photon number of the optical field. In this paper, we analyze theoretically the performance of this QND measurement scheme by using the QND measurement criteria established by Holland et al [Phys. Rev. A 42, 2995 (1990)]. We find the quality of the QND measurement depends on the phase resolution of the atom-light hybrid interferometers. We apply this QND measurement scheme to a twin-photon state from parametric amplifier to verify the photon correlation in the twin beams. Furthermore, a sequential QND measurement procedure is analyzed for verifying the projection property of quantum measurement and for the quantum information tapping. Finally, we discuss the possibility for single-photon-number-resolving detection via QND measurement
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