19,475 research outputs found
Equi-energy sampler with applications in statistical inference and statistical mechanics
We introduce a new sampling algorithm, the equi-energy sampler, for efficient
statistical sampling and estimation. Complementary to the widely used
temperature-domain methods, the equi-energy sampler, utilizing the
temperature--energy duality, targets the energy directly. The focus on the
energy function not only facilitates efficient sampling, but also provides a
powerful means for statistical estimation, for example, the calculation of the
density of states and microcanonical averages in statistical mechanics. The
equi-energy sampler is applied to a variety of problems, including exponential
regression in statistics, motif sampling in computational biology and protein
folding in biophysics.Comment: This paper discussed in: [math.ST/0611217], [math.ST/0611219],
[math.ST/0611221], [math.ST/0611222]. Rejoinder in [math.ST/0611224].
Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/009053606000000515 in the Annals of
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Exotic fermion multiplets as a solution to baryon asymmetry, dark matter and neutrino masses
We propose an extension to the standard model where three exotic fermion
5-plets and one scalar 6-plet are added to the particle content. By demanding
that all interactions are renormalizable and standard model gauge invariant, we
show that the lightest exotic particle in this model can be a dark matter
candidate as long as the new 6-plet scalar does not develop a nonzero vacuum
expectation value. Furthermore, light neutrino masses are generated radiatively
at one-loop while the baryon asymmetry is produced by the CP-violating decays
of the second lightest exotic particle. We have demonstrated using concrete
examples that there is a parameter space where a consistent solution to the
problems of baryon asymmetry, dark matter and neutrino masses can be obtained.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures (REVTeX4.1), v2: some refs added, v3: typos
corrected, Sec.VI.B, C modified, this version to appear in PR
Numerical study of large-eddy breakup and its effect on the drag characteristics of boundary layers
The break-up of a field of eddies by a flat-plate obstacle embedded in a boundary layer is studied using numerical solutions to the two-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations. The flow is taken to be incompressible and unsteady. The flow field is initiated from rest. A train of eddies of predetermined size and strength are swept into the computational domain upstream of the plate. The undisturbed velocity profile is given by the Blasius solution. The disturbance vorticity generated at the plate and wall, plus that introduced with the eddies, mix with the background vorticity and is transported throughout the entire flow. All quantities are scaled by the plate length, the unidsturbed free-stream velocity, and the fluid kinematic viscosity. The Reynolds number is 1000, the Blasius boundary layer thickness is 2.0, and the plate is positioned a distance of 1.0 above the wall. The computational domain is four units high and sixteen units long
Quantum many-body models with cold atoms coupled to photonic crystals
Using cold atoms to simulate strongly interacting quantum systems represents
an exciting frontier of physics. However, as atoms are nominally neutral point
particles, this limits the types of interactions that can be produced. We
propose to use the powerful new platform of cold atoms trapped near
nanophotonic systems to extend these limits, enabling a novel quantum material
in which atomic spin degrees of freedom, motion, and photons strongly couple
over long distances. In this system, an atom trapped near a photonic crystal
seeds a localized, tunable cavity mode around the atomic position. We find that
this effective cavity facilitates interactions with other atoms within the
cavity length, in a way that can be made robust against realistic
imperfections. Finally, we show that such phenomena should be accessible using
one-dimensional photonic crystal waveguides in which coupling to atoms has
already been experimentally demonstrated
Numerical evidences of spin-1/2 chain approaching spin-1 chain
In this article, we study the one dimensional Heisenberg spin-1/2 alternating
bond chain in which the nearest neighbor exchange couplings are ferromagnetic
(FM) and antiferromagnetic (AF) alternatively. By using exact diagonalization
and density matrix renormalization groups (DMRG) method, we discuss how the
system approaches to the AF uniform spin-1 chain under certain condition. When
the ratio of AF to FM coupling strength}
\textit{is very small, the physical quantities of the alternating bond chain
such as the spin-spin correlation, the string correlation function and the spin
density coincide with that of the AF uniform spin-1 chain. The edge state
problem is discussed in the present model with small}\textit{limit. In
addition, the Haldane gap of the AF uniform spin-1 chain is 4-times of the gap
of the system considered.Comment: 9pages,8page
Superradiance for atoms trapped along a photonic crystal waveguide
We report observations of superradiance for atoms trapped in the near field
of a photonic crystal waveguide (PCW). By fabricating the PCW with a band edge
near the D transition of atomic cesium, strong interaction is achieved
between trapped atoms and guided-mode photons. Following short-pulse
excitation, we record the decay of guided-mode emission and find a superradiant
emission rate scaling as for average atom number atoms, where
is the peak single-atom radiative decay
rate into the PCW guided mode and is the Einstein- coefficient
for free space. These advances provide new tools for investigations of
photon-mediated atom-atom interactions in the many-body regime.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure
A new mechanism for a naturally small Dirac neutrino mass
A mechanism is proposed in which a right-handed neutrino zero mode and a
right-handed charged lepton zero mode can be localized at the same place along
an extra compact dimension while having markedly different spreads in their
wave functions: a relatively narrow one for the neutrino and a rather broad one
for the charged lepton. In their overlaps with the wave function for the
left-handed zero modes, this mechanism could produce a natural large hierarchy
in the effective Yukawa couplings in four dimensions, and hence a large
disparity in masses.Comment: 6 pages (2 with figures), twocolumn forma
Nonvolatile memory with molecule-engineered tunneling barriers
We report a novel field-sensitive tunneling barrier by embedding C60 in SiO2
for nonvolatile memory applications. C60 is a better choice than ultra-small
nanocrystals due to its monodispersion. Moreover, C60 provides accessible
energy levels to prompt resonant tunneling through SiO2 at high fields.
However, this process is quenched at low fields due to HOMO-LUMO gap and large
charging energy of C60. Furthermore, we demonstrate an improvement of more than
an order of magnitude in retention to program/erase time ratio for a metal
nanocrystal memory. This shows promise of engineering tunnel dielectrics by
integrating molecules in the future hybrid molecular-silicon electronics.Comment: to appear in Applied Physics Letter
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