5,333 research outputs found
Quantum and classical phase transitions in double-layer quantum Hall ferromagnets
We consider the problem of quantum and classical phase transitions in
double-layer quantum Hall systems at (m odd integers) from a
long-wavelength statistical mechanics viewpoint. We derive an explicit mapping
of the long-wavelength Lagrangian of the quantum Hall system into that of a
three-dimensional isotropic classical XY model whose coupling constant depends
on the quantum fluctuation in the original quantum Hall Hamiltonian. Universal
properties of the quantum phase transition at the critical layer separation are
completely determined by this mapping. The dependence of the
Kosterlitz-Thouless transition temperature on layer separation, including
quantum fluctuation effects, is approximately obtained by simple finite-size
scaling analyses.Comment: 12 pages, RevTeX, figures include
Towards Fine-Grained Prosody Control for Voice Conversion
In a typical voice conversion system, prior works utilize various acoustic
features (e.g., the pitch, voiced/unvoiced flag, aperiodicity) of the source
speech to control the prosody of generated waveform. However, the prosody is
related with many factors, such as the intonation, stress and rhythm. It is a
challenging task to perfectly describe the prosody through acoustic features.
To deal with this problem, we propose prosody embeddings to model prosody.
These embeddings are learned from the source speech in an unsupervised manner.
We conduct experiments on our Mandarin corpus recoded by professional speakers.
Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method enables fine-grained
control of the prosody. In challenging situations (such as the source speech is
a singing song), our proposed method can also achieve promising results
Coulomb drag between disordered two-dimensional electron gas layers
We derive and evaluate expressions for the frictional Coulomb drag between
disordered two-dimensional electron gas layers. Our derivation is based on the
memory-function formalism and the expression for the drag reduces to previously
known results in the ballistic limit. We find that Coulomb drag is appreciably
enhanced by disorder at low temperatures when the mean-free-path within a layer
is comparable to or shorter than the layer separation. In high mobility
two-dimensional electron gas systems, where the drag has been studied
experimentally, the effect of disorder on the drag is negligible at attainable
temperatures. We predict that an enhancement due to disorder and a crossover in
the temperature-dependence and layer-separation dependence will be observable
at low temperatures in moderate and low mobility samples.Comment: 17 pages, revtex, iucm93-00
The Hofstadter Spectrum and Photoluminescence
The observability of the Hofstadter spectrum generated by a Wigner crystal
using photoluminescence techniques is studied. Itinerant hole geometries are
examined, in which a hole may combine directly with electrons in the lattice.
It is found that when the effect of lattice distortions of the WC due to
interactions with the hole are accounted for, only the largest Hofstadter gaps
are observable. To overcome the problems of lattice distortion, a novel
geometry is proposed, involving a two layer system with electrons in one layer
forming a WC and in the other a full Landau level. It is found that
recombination of electrons in the full Landau level with {\it localized} holes
reflects the full Hofstadter spectrum of the lattice.Comment: 13 pages in RevTex, figures available upon reques
Wigner crystal states for the two-dimensional electron gas in a double quantum well system
Using the Hartree-Fock approximation, we calculate the energy of different
Wigner crystal states for the two-dimensional electron gas of a double quantum
well system in a strong magnetic field. Our calculation takes interlayer
hopping as well as an in-plane magnetic field into consideration. The ground
The ground state at small layer separations is a one-component triangular
lattice Wigner state. As the layer separation is increased, the ground state
first undergoes a transition to two stacked square lattices, and then undergoes
another transition at an even larger layer separation to a two-component
triangular lattice. The range of the layer separation at which the
two-component square lattice occurs as the ground state shrinks, and eventually
disappears, as the interlayer hopping is increased. An in-plane magnetic field
induces another phase transition from a commensurate to a incommensurate state,
similar to that of quantum Hall state observed recently. We calculate
the critical value of the in-plane field of the transition and find that the
anisotropy of the Wigner state, {\it i.e.,}, the relative orientation of the
crystal and the in-plane magnetic field, has a negligible effect on the
critical value for low filling fractions. The effect of this anisotropy on the
low-lying phonon energy is discussed. A novel exerimental geometry is proposed
in which the parallel magnetic field is used to enhance the orientational
correlations in the ground state when the crystal is subject toa random
potential.Comment: RevTex 3.0, 22pages, 3figures available upon request. ukcm-xxx
Unusual temperature dependent resistivity of a semiconductor quantum wire
We calculate the electronic resistivity of a GaAs-based semiconductor quantum
wire in the presence of acoustic phonon scattering. We find that the usual
Drude-Boltzmann transport theory leads to a low temperature activated behavior
instead of the well-known Bloch-Gr\"uneisen power law. Many-body
electron-phonon renormalization, which is entirely negligible in higher
dimensional systems, has a dramatic effect on the low temperature quantum wire
transport properties as it qualitatively modifies the temperature dependence of
the resistivity from the exponentially activated behavior to an approximate
power law behavior at sufficiently low temperatures.Comment: 11 pages, RevTex, 4 figures. Also available at
http://www-cmg.physics.umd.edu/~lzheng/preprint
The Distance Coloring of Graphs
Let be a connected graph with maximum degree . We
investigate the upper bound for the chromatic number of the
power graph . It was proved that with equality if and
only is a Moore graph. If is not a Moore graph, and holds one of
the following conditions: (1) is non-regular, (2) the girth , (3) , and the connectivity if
, but if , (4) is
sufficiently large than a given number only depending on , then
. By means of the spectral radius of the
adjacency matrix of , it was shown that ,
with equality holds if and only if is a star or a Moore graph with diameter
2 and girth 5, and if
Canted antiferromagnetic and spin singlet quantum Hall states in double-layer systems
We present details of earlier studies (Zheng et al, Phys. Rev. Lett. 78, 310
(1997) and Das Sarma et al, ibid 79, 917 (1997)) and additional new results on
double-layer quantum Hall systems at a total filling \nu = 2 \nu_1, where a
single layer at filling \nu_1 forms a ferromagnetic, fully spin-polarized,
gapped incompressible quantum Hall state. For the case \nu_1 = 1, a detailed
Hartree-Fock analysis is carried out on a realistic, microscopic Hamiltonian.
Apart from the state continuously connected to the ground state of two well
separated layers, we find two double-layer quantum Hall phases: one with a
finite interlayer antiferromagnetic spin ordering in the plane orthogonal to
the applied field (the `canted' state), and the other a spin singlet. The
quantum transitions between the various quantum Hall states are continuous, and
are signaled by the softening of collective intersubband spin density
excitations. For the case of general \nu_1, closely related results are
obtained by a semi-phenomenological continuum quantum field theory description
of the low-lying spin excitations using a non-linear sigma model. Because of
its broken symmetry, the canted phase supports a linearly dispersing Goldstone
mode and has a finite temperature Kosterlitz-Thouless transition. We present
results on the form of the phase diagram, the magnitude of the canted order
parameter, the collective excitation dispersions, the specific heat, the form
of the dynamic light scattering spectrum at finite temperature, and the
Kosterlitz-Thouless critical temperature. Our findings are consistent with
recent experimental results.Comment: 60 pages, RevTex, 16 figure
Spin-Excitation-Instability-Induced Quantum Phase Transitions in Double-Layer Quantum Hall Systems
We study intersubband spin density collective modes in double-layer quantum
Hall systems at within the time-dependent Hartree-Fock approximation.
We find that these intersubband spin density excitations may soften under
experimentally accessible conditions, signaling a phase transition to a new
quantum Hall state with interlayer inplane antiferromagnetic spin correlations.
We show that this novel canted antiferromagnetic phase is energetically stable
and that the phase transition is continuous.Comment: Revised final version to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Investigation of Multimodal Features, Classifiers and Fusion Methods for Emotion Recognition
Automatic emotion recognition is a challenging task. In this paper, we
present our effort for the audio-video based sub-challenge of the Emotion
Recognition in the Wild (EmotiW) 2018 challenge, which requires participants to
assign a single emotion label to the video clip from the six universal emotions
(Anger, Disgust, Fear, Happiness, Sad and Surprise) and Neutral. The proposed
multimodal emotion recognition system takes audio, video and text information
into account. Except for handcraft features, we also extract bottleneck
features from deep neutral networks (DNNs) via transfer learning. Both temporal
classifiers and non-temporal classifiers are evaluated to obtain the best
unimodal emotion classification result. Then possibilities are extracted and
passed into the Beam Search Fusion (BS-Fusion). We test our method in the
EmotiW 2018 challenge and we gain promising results. Compared with the baseline
system, there is a significant improvement. We achieve 60.34% accuracy on the
testing dataset, which is only 1.5% lower than the winner. It shows that our
method is very competitive.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figures and 4 Tables. EmotiW2018 challeng
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