52,968 research outputs found
Non-Markovian disentanglement dynamics of two-qubit system
We investigated the disentanglement dynamics of two-qubit system in
Non-Markovian approach. We showed that only the couple strength with the
environment near to or less than fine-structure constant 1/137, entanglement
appear exponential decay for a certain class of two-qubit entangled state.
While the coupling between qubit and the environment is much larger, system
always appears the sudden-death of entanglement even in the vacuum environment.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figure
Pressure Dependence of Wall Relaxation in Polarized He Gaseous Cells
We have observed a linear pressure dependence of longitudinal relaxation time
() at 4.2 K and 295 K in gaseous He cells made of either bare pyrex
glass or Cs/Rb-coated pyrex due to paramagnetic sites in the cell wall. The
paramagnetic wall relaxation is previously thought to be independent of He
pressure. We develop a model to interpret the observed wall relaxation by
taking into account the diffusion process, and our model gives a good
description of the data
Barrier RF Stacking
A novel wideband RF system, nicknamed the barrier RF, has been designed, fabricated and installed in the Fermilab Main Injector. The cavity is made of seven Finemet cores, and the modulator made of two bipolar high-voltage fast solid-state switches. The system can deliver ±7 kV square pulses at 90 kHz. The main application is to stack two proton batches injected from the Booster and squeeze them into the size of one so that the bunch intensity can be doubled. High intensity beams have been successfully stacked and accelerated to 120 GeV with small losses. The problem of large longitudinal emittance growth is the focus of the present study. An upgraded system with two barrier RF cavities for continuous stacking is under construction. This work is part of the US-Japan collaborative agreement
Theoretical investigation of the dynamic electronic response of a quantum dot driven by time-dependent voltage
We present a comprehensive theoretical investigation on the dynamic
electronic response of a noninteracting quantum dot system to various forms of
time-dependent voltage applied to the single contact lead. Numerical
simulations are carried out by implementing a recently developed hierarchical
equations of motion formalism [J. Chem. Phys. 128, 234703 (2008)], which is
formally exact for a fermionic system interacting with grand canonical
fermionic reservoirs, in the presence of arbitrary time-dependent applied
chemical potentials. The dynamical characteristics of the transient transport
current evaluated in both linear and nonlinear response regimes are analyzed,
and the equivalent classic circuit corresponding to the coupled dot-lead system
is also discussed
Permutable entire functions satisfying algebraic differential equations
It is shown that if two transcendental entire functions permute, and if one
of them satisfies an algebraic differential equation, then so does the other
one.Comment: 5 page
Exact dynamics of dissipative electronic systems and quantum transport: Hierarchical equations of motion approach
A quantum dissipation theory is formulated in terms of hierarchically coupled
equations of motion for an arbitrary electronic system coupled with grand
canonical Fermion bath ensembles. The theoretical construction starts with the
second--quantization influence functional in path integral formalism, in which
the Fermion creation and annihilation operators are represented by Grassmann
variables. Time--derivatives on influence functionals are then performed in a
hierarchical manner, on the basis of calculus--on--path--integral algorithm.
Both the multiple--frequency--dispersion and the non-Markovian reservoir
parametrization schemes are considered for the desired hierarchy construction.
The resulting formalism is in principle exact, applicable to interacting
systems, with arbitrary time-dependent external fields. It renders an exact
tool to evaluate various transient and stationary quantum transport properties
of many-electron systems. At the second--tier truncation level the present
theory recovers the real--time diagrammatic formalism developed by Sch\"{o}n
and coworkers. For a single-particle system, the hierarchical formalism
terminates at the second tier exactly, and the Landuer--B\"{u}ttiker's
transport current expression is readily recovered.Comment: The new versio
Critical Behaviour of One-particle Spectral Weights in the Transverse Ising Model
We investigate the critical behaviour of the spectral weight of a single
quasiparticle, one of the key observables in experiment, for the particular
case of the transverse Ising model.Series expansions are calculated for the
linear chain and the square and simple cubic lattices. For the chain model, a
conjectured exact result is discovered. For the square and simple cubic
lattices, series analyses are used to estimate the critical exponents. The
results agree with the general predictions of Sachdev.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Symbolic Dynamics Analysis of the Lorenz Equations
Recent progress of symbolic dynamics of one- and especially two-dimensional
maps has enabled us to construct symbolic dynamics for systems of ordinary
differential equations (ODEs). Numerical study under the guidance of symbolic
dynamics is capable to yield global results on chaotic and periodic regimes in
systems of dissipative ODEs which cannot be obtained neither by purely
analytical means nor by numerical work alone. By constructing symbolic dynamics
of 1D and 2D maps from the Poincare sections all unstable periodic orbits up to
a given length at a fixed parameter set may be located and all stable periodic
orbits up to a given length may be found in a wide parameter range. This
knowledge, in turn, tells much about the nature of the chaotic limits. Applied
to the Lorenz equations, this approach has led to a nomenclature, i.e.,
absolute periods and symbolic names, of stable and unstable periodic orbits for
an autonomous system. Symmetry breakings and restorations as well as
coexistence of different regimes are also analyzed by using symbolic dynamics.Comment: 35 pages, LaTeX, 13 Postscript figures, uses psfig.tex. The revision
concerns a bug at the end of hlzfig12.ps which prevented the printing of the
whole .ps file from page 2
Broadband RCS Reduction of Microstrip Patch Antenna Using Bandstop Frequency Selective Surface
In this article, a simple and effective approach is presented to reduce the Radar Cross Section (RCS) of microstrip patch antenna in ultra broad frequency band. This approach substitutes a metallic ground plane of a conventional patch antenna with a hybrid ground consisting of bandstop Frequency Selective Surface (FSS) cells with partial metallic plane. To demonstrate the validity of the proposed approach, the influence of different ground planes on antenna’s performance is investigated. Thus, a patch antenna with miniaturized FSS cells is proposed. The results suggest that this antenna shows 3dB RCS reduction almost in the whole out-of operating band within 1-20GHz for wide incident angles when compared to conventional antenna, while its radiation characteristics are sustained simultaneously. The reasonable agreement between the measured and the simulated results verifies the efficiency of the proposed approach. Moreover, this approach doesn’t alter the lightweight, low-profile, easy conformal and easy manufacturing nature of the original antenna and can be extended to obtain low-RCS antennas with metallic planes in broadband that are quite suitable for the applications which are sensitive to the variation of frequencies
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