12,836 research outputs found

    Phonon engineering with superlattices: generalized nanomechanical potentials

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    Earlier implementations to simulate coherent wave propagation in one-dimensional potentials using acoustic phonons with gigahertz-terahertz frequencies were based on coupled nanoacoustic resonators. Here, we generalize the concept of adiabatic tuning of periodic superlattices for the implementation of effective one-dimensional potentials giving access to cases that cannot be realized by previously reported phonon engineering approaches, in particular the acoustic simulation of electrons and holes in a quantum well or a double well potential. In addition, the resulting structures are much more compact and hence experimentally feasible. We demonstrate that potential landscapes can be tailored with great versatility in these multilayered devices, apply this general method to the cases of parabolic, Morse and double-well potentials and study the resulting stationary phonon modes. The phonon cavities and potentials presented in this work could be probed by all-optical techniques like pump-probe coherent phonon generation and Brillouin scattering

    Canonical Quantization of SU(3) Skyrme Model in a General Representation

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    A complete canonical quantization of the SU(3) Skyrme model performed in the collective coordinate formalism in general irreducible representations. In the case of SU(3) the model differs qualitatively in different representations. The Wess-Zumino-Witten term vanishes in all self-adjoint representations in the collective coordinate method for separation of space and time variables. The canonical quantization generates representation dependent quantum mass corrections, which can stabilize the soliton solution. The standard symmetry breaking mass term, which in general leads to representation mixing, degenerates to the SU(2) form in all self-adjoint representations.Comment: 24 RevTex4 pages, no figure

    Effect of a Weak Electromagnetic Field on Particle Acceleration by a Rotating Black Hole

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    We study high energy charged particle collisions near the horizon in an electromagnetic field around a rotating black hole and reveal the condition of the fine-tuning to obtain arbitrarily large center-of-mass (CM) energy. We demonstrate that the CM energy can be arbitrarily large as the uniformly magnetized rotating black hole arbitrarily approaches maximal rotation under the situation that a charged particle plunges from the innermost stable circular orbit (ISCO) and collides with another particle near the horizon. Recently, Frolov [Phys. Rev. D 85, 024020 (2012)] proposed that the CM energy can be arbitrarily high if the magnetic field is arbitrarily strong, when a particle collides with a charged particle orbiting the ISCO with finite energy near the horizon of a uniformly magnetized Schwarzschild black hole. We show that the charged particle orbiting the ISCO around a spinning black hole needs arbitrarily high energy in the strong field limit. This suggests that Frolov's process is unstable against the black hole spin. Nevertheless, we see that magnetic fields may substantially promote the capability of rotating black holes as particle accelerators in astrophysical situations.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figure

    Acceleration of colliding shells around a black hole: Validity of the test particle approximation in the Banados-Silk-West process

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    Recently, Banados, Silk and West (BSW) showed that the total energy of two colliding test particles has no upper limit in their center of mass frame in the neighborhood of an extreme Kerr black hole, even if these particles were at rest at infinity in the infinite past. We call this mechanism the BSW mechanism or BSW process. The large energy of such particles would generate strong gravity, although this has not been taken into account in the BSW analysis. A similar mechanism is seen in the collision of two spherical test shells in the neighborhood of an extreme Reissner-Nordstr\"om black hole. In this paper, in order to draw some implications concerning the effects of gravity generated by colliding particles in the BSW process, we study a collision of two spherical dust shells, since their gravity can be exactly treated. We show that the energy of two colliding shells in the center of mass frame observable from infinity has an upper limit due to their own gravity. Our result suggests that an upper limit also exists for the total energy of colliding particles in the center of mass frame in the observable domain in the BSW process due the gravity of the particles.Comment: 19 pages, 2 figures, title change

    Observation of an optical non-Fermi-liquid behavior in the heavy fermion state of YbRh2_{2}Si2_{2}

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    We report far-infrared optical properties of YbRh2_{2}Si2_{2} for photon energies down to 2 meV and temperatures 0.4 -- 300 K. In the coherent heavy quasiparticle state, a linear dependence of the low-energy scattering rate on both temperature and photon energy was found. We relate this distinct dynamical behavior different from that of Fermi liquid materials to the non-Fermi liquid nature of YbRh2_{2}Si2_{2} which is due to its close vicinity to an antiferromagnetic quantum critical point.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. submitte

    Electronic inhomogeneity in EuO: Possibility of magnetic polaron states

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    We have observed the spatial inhomogeneity of the electronic structure of a single-crystalline electron-doped EuO thin film with ferromagnetic ordering by employing infrared magneto-optical imaging with synchrotron radiation. The uniform paramagnetic electronic structure changes to a uniform ferromagnetic structure via an inhomogeneous state with decreasing temperature and increasing magnetic field slightly above the ordering temperature. One possibility of the origin of the inhomogeneity is the appearance of magnetic polaron states.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Contour methods for long-range Ising models: weakening nearest-neighbor interactions and adding decaying fields

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    We consider ferromagnetic long-range Ising models which display phase transitions. They are long-range one-dimensional Ising ferromagnets, in which the interaction is given by Jx,y=J(xy)1xy2αJ_{x,y} = J(|x-y|)\equiv \frac{1}{|x-y|^{2-\alpha}} with α[0,1)\alpha \in [0, 1), in particular, J(1)=1J(1)=1. For this class of models one way in which one can prove the phase transition is via a kind of Peierls contour argument, using the adaptation of the Fr\"ohlich-Spencer contours for α0\alpha \neq 0, proposed by Cassandro, Ferrari, Merola and Presutti. As proved by Fr\"ohlich and Spencer for α=0\alpha=0 and conjectured by Cassandro et al for the region they could treat, α(0,α+)\alpha \in (0,\alpha_{+}) for α+=log(3)/log(2)1\alpha_+=\log(3)/\log(2)-1, although in the literature dealing with contour methods for these models it is generally assumed that J(1)1J(1)\gg1, we can show that this condition can be removed in the contour analysis. In addition, combining our theorem with a recent result of Littin and Picco we prove the persistence of the contour proof of the phase transition for any α[0,1)\alpha \in [0,1). Moreover, we show that when we add a magnetic field decaying to zero, given by hx=h(1+x)γh_x= h_*\cdot(1+|x|)^{-\gamma} and γ>max{1α,1α}\gamma >\max\{1-\alpha, 1-\alpha^* \} where α0.2714\alpha^*\approx 0.2714, the transition still persists.Comment: 13 page
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