7,394 research outputs found

    Singularity dominated strong fluctuations for some random matrix averages

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    The circular and Jacobi ensembles of random matrices have their eigenvalue support on the unit circle of the complex plane and the interval (0,1)(0,1) of the real line respectively. The averaged value of the modulus of the corresponding characteristic polynomial raised to the power 2μ2 \mu diverges, for 2μ≤−12\mu \le -1, at points approaching the eigenvalue support. Using the theory of generalized hypergeometric functions based on Jack polynomials, the functional form of the leading asymptotic behaviour is established rigorously. In the circular ensemble case this confirms a conjecture of Berry and Keating.Comment: 11 pages, to appear Commun. Math. Phy

    Nodal domain distributions for quantum maps

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    The statistics of the nodal lines and nodal domains of the eigenfunctions of quantum billiards have recently been observed to be fingerprints of the chaoticity of the underlying classical motion by Blum et al. (Phys. Rev. Lett., Vol. 88 (2002), 114101) and by Bogomolny and Schmit (Phys. Rev. Lett., Vol. 88 (2002), 114102). These statistics were shown to be computable from the random wave model of the eigenfunctions. We here study the analogous problem for chaotic maps whose phase space is the two-torus. We show that the distributions of the numbers of nodal points and nodal domains of the eigenvectors of the corresponding quantum maps can be computed straightforwardly and exactly using random matrix theory. We compare the predictions with the results of numerical computations involving quantum perturbed cat maps.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures. Second version: minor correction

    A method for calculating spectral statistics based on random-matrix universality with an application to the three-point correlations of the Riemann zeros

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    We illustrate a general method for calculating spectral statistics that combines the universal (Random Matrix Theory limit) and the non-universal (trace-formula-related) contributions by giving a heuristic derivation of the three-point correlation function for the zeros of the Riemann zeta function. The main idea is to construct a generalized Hermitian random matrix ensemble whose mean eigenvalue density coincides with a large but finite portion of the actual density of the spectrum or the Riemann zeros. Averaging the random matrix result over remaining oscillatory terms related, in the case of the zeta function, to small primes leads to a formula for the three-point correlation function that is in agreement with results from other heuristic methods. This provides support for these different methods. The advantage of the approach we set out here is that it incorporates the determinental structure of the Random Matrix limit.Comment: 22 page

    Moments of zeta and correlations of divisor-sums: III

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    In this series we examine the calculation of the 2k2kth moment and shifted moments of the Riemann zeta-function on the critical line using long Dirichlet polynomials and divisor correlations. The present paper is concerned with the precise input of the conjectural formula for the classical shifted convolution problem for divisor sums so as to obtain all of the lower order terms in the asymptotic formula for the mean square along [T,2T][T,2T] of a Dirichlet polynomial of length up to T2T^2 with divisor functions as coefficients

    The variance of the number of prime polynomials in short intervals and in residue classes

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    We resolve a function field version of two conjectures concerning the variance of the number of primes in short intervals (Goldston and Montgomery) and in arithmetic progressions (Hooley). A crucial ingredient in our work are recent equidistribution results of N. Katz.Comment: Revised according to referees' comment

    Two-point correlation function for Dirichlet L-functions

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    The two-point correlation function for the zeros of Dirichlet L-functions at a height E on the critical line is calculated heuristically using a generalization of the Hardy-Littlewood conjecture for pairs of primes in arithmetic progression. The result matches the conjectured Random-Matrix form in the limit as E→∞E\rightarrow\infty and, importantly, includes finite-E corrections. These finite-E corrections differ from those in the case of the Riemann zeta-function, obtained in (1996 Phys. Rev. Lett. 77 1472), by certain finite products of primes which divide the modulus of the primitive character used to construct the L-function in question.Comment: 10 page

    Resummation and the semiclassical theory of spectral statistics

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    We address the question as to why, in the semiclassical limit, classically chaotic systems generically exhibit universal quantum spectral statistics coincident with those of Random Matrix Theory. To do so, we use a semiclassical resummation formalism that explicitly preserves the unitarity of the quantum time evolution by incorporating duality relations between short and long classical orbits. This allows us to obtain both the non-oscillatory and the oscillatory contributions to spectral correlation functions within a unified framework, thus overcoming a significant problem in previous approaches. In addition, our results extend beyond the universal regime to describe the system-specific approach to the semiclassical limit.Comment: 10 pages, no figure
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