366,328 research outputs found

    Gravitational Lensing and Anisotropies of CBR on the Small Angular Scales

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    We investigate the effect of gravitational lensing, produced by linear density perturbations, for anisotropies of the Cosmic Background Radiation (CBR) on scales of arcminutes. In calculations, a flat universe (Ω=1\Omega=1) and the Harrison-Zel'dovich spectrum (n=1n=1) are assumed. The numerical results show that on scales of a few arcminutes, gravitational lensing produces only negligible anisotropies in the temperature of the CBR. Our conclusion disagrees with that of Cay\'{o}n {\it et al.} who argue that the amplification of ΔT/T\Delta T/T on scales ≤3′\le 3' may even be larger than 100\%.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS. 16 pages, 2 figures, tarred, compressed and uuencoded Postscript file

    Rotating Superconductors and the Frame-independent London Equation

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    A frame-independent, thermodynamically exact London equation is presented, which is especially valid for rotating superconductors. A direct result is the unexpectedly high accuracy (∼10−10\sim10^{-10}) for the usual expression of the London moment.Comment: 4 pages, 0 figure

    Witnessing a Poincar\'e recurrence with Mathematica

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    The often elusive Poincar\'e recurrence can be witnessed in a completely separable system. For such systems, the problem of recurrence reduces to the classic mathematical problem of simultaneous Diophantine approximation of multiple numbers. The latter problem then can be somewhat satisfactorily solved by using the famous Lenstra-Lenstra-Lov\'{a}sz (LLL) algorithm, which is implemented in the Mathematica built-in function \verb"LatticeReduce". The procedure is illustrated with a harmonic chain. The incredibly large recurrence times are obtained exactly. They follow the expected scaling law very well.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure

    A random matrix definition of the boson peak

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    The density of vibrational states for glasses and jammed solids exhibits universal features, including an excess of modes above the Debye prediction known as the boson peak located at a frequency ω∗\omega^* . We show that the eigenvector statistics for boson peak modes are universal, and develop a new definition of the boson peak based on this universality that displays the previously observed characteristic scaling ω∗∼p−1/2\omega^*\sim p^{-1/2} . We identify a large new class of random matrices that obey a generalized global tranlational invariance constraint and demonstrate that members of this class also have a boson peak with precisely the same universal eigenvector statistics. We denote this class as boson peak random matrices, and conjecture it comprises a new universality class. We characterize the eigenvector statistics as a function of coordination number, and find that one member of this new class reproduces the scaling of ω∗\omega^{*} with coordination number that is observed near the jamming transition.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, Supplementary Figures available at https://mmanning.expressions.syr.edu/epl2015

    Phonon-Assisted Gain in a Semiconductor Double Quantum Dot Maser

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    We develop a microscopic model for the recently demonstrated double quantum dot (DQD) maser. In characterizing the gain of this device we find that, in addition to the direct stimulated emission of photons, there is a large contribution from the simultaneous emission of a photon and a phonon, i.e., the phonon sideband. We show that this phonon-assisted gain typically dominates the overall gain which leads to masing. Recent experimental data are well fit with our model.Comment: v1: 6 pgs, 2 figures; v2: 6 pgs, 3 figures, added Fig 2b and Fig. 3b, modified main text; v3: 6+ pgs, 3 figures, modified main tex
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