15,412 research outputs found

    Chiral phase transition at high temperature and density in the QCD-like theory

    Get PDF
    The chiral phase transition at finite temperature T and/or chemical potential μ\mu is studied using the QCD-like theory with a variational approach. The ``QCD-like theory'' means the improved ladder approximation with an infrared cutoff in terms of a modified running coupling. The form of Cornwall-Jackiw-Tomboulis effective potential is modified by the use of the Schwinger-Dyson equation for generally nonzero current quark mass. We then calculate the effective potential at finite T and/or μ\mu and investigate the phase structure in the chiral limit. We have a second-order phase transition at Tc=129T_c=129 MeV for μ=0\mu=0 and a first-order one at μc=422\mu_c=422 MeV for T=0. A tricritical point in the T-μ\mu plane is found at T=107 MeV, μ=210\mu=210 MeV. The position is close to that of the random matrix model and some version of the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Physical Review

    Heat conduction of single-walled carbon nanotube isotope-superlattice structures: A molecular dynamics study

    Full text link
    Heat conduction of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) isotope-superlattice is investigated by means of classical molecular dynamics simulations. Superlattice structures were formed by alternately connecting SWNTs with different masses. On varying the superlattice period, the critical value with minimum effective thermal conductivity was identified, where dominant physics switches from zone-folding effect to thermal boundary resistance of lattice interface. The crossover mechanism is explained with the energy density spectra where zone-folding effects can be clearly observed. The results suggest that the critical superlattice period thickness depends on the mean free path distribution of diffusive-ballistic phonons. The reduction of the thermal conductivity with superlattice structures beats that of the one-dimensional alloy structure, though the minimum thermal conductivity is still slightly higher than the value obtained by two-dimensional random mixing of isotopes.Comment: 7 Pages, 5 figures, accepted to Phys. Rev.

    Constituent quark model for nuclear stopping in high energy nuclear collisions

    Get PDF
    We study the nuclear stopping in high energy nuclear collisions using the constituent quark model. It is assumed that wounded nucleons with different number of interacted quarks hadronize in different ways. The probabilities of having such wounded nucleons are evaluated for proton-proton, proton-nucleus and nucleus-nucleus collisions. After examining our model in proton-proton and proton-nucleus collisions and fixing the hadronization functions, it is extended to nucleus-nucleus collisions. It is used to calculate the rapidity distribution and the rapidity shift of final state protons in nucleus-nucleus collisions. The computed results are in good agreement with the experimental data on ^{32}\mbox{S} +\ ^{32}\mbox{S} at Elab=200E_{lab} = 200 AGeV and ^{208}\mbox{Pb} +\ ^{208}\mbox{Pb} at Elab=160E_{lab} = 160 AGeV. Theoretical predictions are also given for proton rapidity distribution in ^{197}\mbox{Au} +\ ^{197}\mbox{Au} at s=200\sqrt{s} = 200 AGeV (BNL-RHIC). We predict that the nearly baryon free region will appear in the midrapidity region and the rapidity shift is Δy=2.22\langle \Delta y \rangle = 2.22.Comment: 40 pages, 16 Postscript figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Nuclear pasta structures and the charge screening effect

    Full text link
    Non uniform structures of the nucleon matter at subnuclear densities are numerically studied by means of the density functional theory with relativistic mean-fields coupled with the electric field. A particular role of the charge screening effects is demonstrated.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, submitted to PR

    Package of facts and theorems for efficiently generating entanglement criteria for many qubits

    Full text link
    We present a package of mathematical theorems, which allow to construct multipartite entanglement criteria. Importantly, establishing bounds for certain classes of entanglement does not take an optimization over continuous sets of states. These bonds are found from the properties of commutativity graphs of operators used in the criterion. We present two examples of criteria constructed according to our method. One of them detects genuine 5-qubit entanglement without ever referring to correlations between all five qubits.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Quantum Molecular Dynamics Approach to the Nuclear Matter Below the Saturation Density

    Get PDF
    Quantum molecular dynamics is applied to study the ground state properties of nuclear matter at subsaturation densities. Clustering effects are observed as to soften the equation of state at these densities. The structure of nuclear matter at subsaturation density shows some exotic shapes with variation of the density.Comment: 21 pages of Latex (revtex), 9 Postscript figure

    Superconductivity without Local Inversion Symmetry; Multi-layer Systems

    Full text link
    While multi-layer systems can possess global inversion centers, they can have regions with locally broken inversion symmetry. This can modify the superconducting properties of such a system. Here we analyze two dimensional multi-layer systems yielding spatially modulated antisymmetric spin-orbit coupling (ASOC) and discuss superconductivity with mixed parity order parameters. In particular, the influence of ASOC on the spin susceptibility is investigated at zero temperature. For weak inter-layer coupling we find an enhanced spin susceptibility induced by ASOC, which hints the potential importance of this aspect for superconducting phase in specially structured superlattices.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, proceedings of the 26th International Conference on Low Temperature Physics (LT26
    corecore