17,355 research outputs found

    Combinatorial realizations of crystals via torus actions on quiver varieties

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    Consider Kashiwara's crystal associated to a highest weight representation of a symmetric Kac-Moody algebra. There is a geometric realization of this object using Nakajima's quiver varieties, but in many particular cases it can also be realized by elementary combinatorial methods. Here we propose a framework for extracting combinatorial realizations from the geometric picture: We construct certain torus actions on the quiver varieties and use Morse theory to index the irreducible components by connected components of the subvariety of torus fixed points. We then discuss the case of affine sl(n). There the fixed point components are just points, and are naturally indexed by multi-partitions. There is some choice in our construction, leading to a family of combinatorial models for each highest weight crystal. Applying this construction to the crystal of the fundamental representation recovers a family of combinatorial realizations recently constructed by Fayers. This gives a more conceptual proof of Fayers' result as well as a generalization to higher level. We also discuss a relationship with Nakajima's monomial crystal.Comment: 23 pages, v2: added Section 8 on monomial crystals and some references; v3: many small correction

    Geometric and combinatorial realizations of crystal graphs

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    For irreducible integrable highest weight modules of the finite and affine Lie algebras of type A and D, we define an isomorphism between the geometric realization of the crystal graphs in terms of irreducible components of Nakajima quiver varieties and the combinatorial realizations in terms of Young tableaux and Young walls. For affine type A, we extend the Young wall construction to arbitrary level, describing a combinatorial realization of the crystals in terms of new objects which we call Young pyramids.Comment: 34 pages, 17 figures; v2: minor typos corrected; v3: corrections to section 8; v4: minor typos correcte

    Thermodynamic Construction of an One-Step Replica-Symmetry-Breaking Solution in Finite Connectivity Spin Glasses

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    An one-step replica-symmetry-breaking solution for finite connectivity spin-glass models with K body interaction is constructed at finite temperature using the replica method and thermodynamic constraints. In the absence of external fields, this construction provides a general extension of replica symmetric solution at finite replica number to one-step replica-symmetry-breaking solution. It is found that this result is formally equivalent to that of the one-step replica-symmetry-breaking cavity method. To confirm the validity of the obtained solution, Monte Carlo simulations are performed for K = 2 and 3. The thermodynamic quantities of the Monte Carlo results extrapolated to a large-size limit are consistent with those estimated by our solution for K = 2 at all simulated temperatures and for K = 3 except near the transition temperature.Comment: 11pages, 19 figures. Added content and references. Accepted to Phys. Rev.

    Analyses of multiplicity distributions by means of the Modified Negative Binomial Distribution and its KNO scaling function

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    We analyze various data of multiplicity distributions by means of the Modified Negative Binomial Distribution (MNBD) and its KNO scaling function, since this MNBD explains the oscillating behavior of the cumulant moment observed in e^+e^- annihilations, h-h collisions and e-p collisions. In the present analyses, we find that the MNBD(discrete distributions) describes the data of charged particles in e^+e^- annihilations much better than the Negative Binomial Distribution (NBD). To investigate stochastic property of the MNBD, we derive the KNO scaling function from the discrete distribution by using a straightforward method and the Poisson transform. It is a new KNO function expressed by the Laguerre polynomials. In analyses of the data by using the KNO scaling function, we find that the MNBD describes the data better than the gamma function.Thus, it can be said that the MNBD is one of useful formulas as well as NBD.Comment: 12 pages, latex, 3 figure

    High-Energy Spin Dynamics in La1.69_{1.69}Sr0.31_{0.31}NiO4_4

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    We have mapped out the spin dynamics in a stripe-ordered nickelate, La2x_{2-x}Srx_{x}NiO4_{4} with x0.31x \simeq 0.31, using inelastic neutron scattering. We observe spin-wave excitations up to 80 meV emerging from the incommensurate magnetic peaks with an almost isotropic spin-velocity: cs0.32\hbar c_s\sim 0.32 eV \AA, very similar to the velocity in the undoped, insulating parent compound, La2_{2}NiO4_{4}. We also discuss the similarities and differences of the inferred spin-excitation spectrum with those reported in superconducting high-TcT_c cuprates.Comment: 4 figure

    Inverted Hybrid Inflation as a solution to gravitino problems in Gravity Mediation

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    It was recently found that the decay of inflaton and the SUSY breaking field produces many gravitinos in the gravity mediation scenario. These discoveries led to an exclusion of many inflation models such as chaotic, (smooth) hybrid, topological and new inflation models. Under these circumstances we searched for a successful inflation model and found that the ``inverted'' hybrid inflation models can solve the gravitino overproduction problem by their distinctive shape of the potential. Furthermore, we found that this inflation model simultaneously can explain the observed baryon asymmetry through the non-thermal leptogenesis and is consistent with the WMAP results, that is, ns=0.9510.019+0.015n_s=0.951^{+0.015}_{-0.019} and the negligible tensor to scalar ratio.Comment: 23 pages, 2 figures in

    Spin-squeezed Ground States in the Bilayer Quantum Hall Ferromagnet

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    A "squeezed-vacuum" state considered in quantum optics is shown to be realized in the ground-state wavefunction for the bilayer quantum Hall system at the total Landau level filling of ν=1/m\nu=1/m (m: odd integer). This is derived in the boson approximation, where a particle-hole pair creation across the symmetric-antisymmetric gap, ΔSAS\Delta_{SAS}, is regarded as a boson. In terms of the pseudospin describing the layers, the state is a spin-squeezed state, where the degree of squeezing is controlled by the layer separation and ΔSAS\Delta_{SAS}. An exciton condensation, which amounts to a rotated spin-squeezed state, has a higher energy due to the degraded SU(2) symmetry for ΔSAS0\Delta_{SAS} \neq 0.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, one figure, to appear in PRB Rapid Communicatio

    A Systematic Study of X-Ray Flares from Low-Mass Young Stellar Objects in the Rho Ophiuchi Star-Forming Region with Chandra

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    We report on the results of a systematic study of X-ray flares from low-mass young stellar objects, using Chandra observations of the main region of the Rho Oph. From 195 X-ray sources, including class I-III sources and some young brown dwarfs, we detected a total of 71 X-ray flares. Most of the flares have the typical profile of solar and stellar flares, fast rise and slow decay. We derived the time-averaged temperature (kT), luminosity (L_X), rise and decay timescales (tau_r and tau_d) of the flares, finding that (1) class I-II sources tend to have a high kT, (2) the distribution of L_X during flares is nearly the same for all classes, and (3) positive and negative log-linear correlations are found between tau_r and tau_d, and kT and tau_r. In order to explain these relations, we used the framework of magnetic reconnection model to formulate the observational parameters as a function of the half-length of the reconnected magnetic loop (L) and magnetic field strength (B). The estimated L is comparable to the typical stellar radius of these objects (10^{10-11} cm), which indicates that the observed flares are triggered by solar-type loops, rather than larger ones (10^{12} cm) connecting the star with its inner accretion disk. The higher kT observed for class I sources may be explained by a higher magnetic field strength (about 500 G) than for class II-III sources (200-300 G).Comment: 33 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in PASJ, the complete version of tables are available at ftp://ftp-cr.scphys.kyoto-u.ac.jp/pub/crmember/kensuke/PASJ_RhoOph/KI_all.tar .g
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