66,679 research outputs found
Axiomatic Holonomy Maps and Generalized Yang-Mills Moduli Space
This article is a follow-up of ``Holonomy and Path Structures in General
Relativity and Yang-Mills Theory" by Barrett, J. W. (Int.J.Theor.Phys., vol.30,
No.9, 1991). Its main goal is to provide an alternative proof of this part of
the reconstruction theorem which concerns the existence of a connection. A
construction of connection 1-form is presented. The formula expressing the
local coefficients of connection in terms of the holonomy map is obtained as an
immediate consequence of that construction. Thus the derived formula coincides
with that used in "On Loop Space Formulation of Gauge Theories" by Chan, H.-M.,
Scharbach, P. and Tsou S.T. (Ann.Phys., vol.167, 454-472, 1986). The
reconstruction and representation theorems form a generalization of the fact
that the pointed configuration space of the classical Yang-Mills theory is
equivalent to the set of all holonomy maps. The point of this generalization is
that there is a one-to-one correspondence not only between the holonomy maps
and the orbits in the space of connections, but also between all maps from the
loop space on to group fulfilling some axioms and all possible
equivalence classes of bundles with connection, where the equivalence
relation is defined by bundle isomorphism in a natural way.Comment: amslatex, 7 pages, no figure
Modeling of secondary organic aerosol yields from laboratory chamber data
Laboratory chamber data serve as the basis for constraining models of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation. Current models fall into three categories: empirical two-product (Odum), product-specific, and volatility basis set. The product-specific and volatility basis set models are applied here to represent laboratory data on the ozonolysis of α-pinene under dry, dark, and low-NOx conditions in the presence of ammonium sulfate seed aerosol. Using five major identified products, the model is fit to the chamber data. From the optimal fitting, SOA oxygen-to-carbon (O/C) and hydrogen-to-carbon (H/C) ratios are modeled. The discrepancy between measured H/C ratios and those based on the oxidation products used in the model fitting suggests the potential importance of particle-phase reactions. Data fitting is also carried out using the volatility basis set, wherein oxidation products are parsed into volatility bins. The product-specific model is most likely hindered by lack of explicit inclusion of particle-phase accretion compounds. While prospects for identification of the majority of SOA products for major volatile organic compounds (VOCs) classes remain promising, for the near future empirical product or volatility basis set models remain the approaches of choice
Transverse Entanglement Migration in Hilbert Space
We show that, although the amount of mutual entanglement of photons
propagating in free space is fixed, the type of correlations between the
photons that determine the entanglement can dramatically change during
propagation. We show that this amounts to a migration of entanglement in
Hilbert space, rather than real space. For the case of spontaneous parametric
down conversion, the migration of entanglement in transverse coordinates takes
place from modulus to phase of the bi-photon state and back again. We propose
an experiment to observe this migration in Hilbert space and to determine the
full entanglement.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Kinetic modeling of Secondary Organic Aerosol formation: effects of particle- and gas-phase reactions of semivolatile products
The distinguishing mechanism of formation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) is the partitioning of semivolatile hydrocarbon oxidation products between the gas and aerosol phases. While SOA formation is typically described in terms of partitioning only, the rate of formation and ultimate yield of SOA can also depend on the kinetics of both gas- and aerosol-phase processes. We present a general equilibrium/kinetic model of SOA formation that provides a framework for evaluating the extent to which the controlling mechanisms of SOA formation can be inferred from laboratory chamber data. With this model we examine the effect on SOA formation of gas-phase oxidation of first-generation products to either more or less volatile species, of particle-phase reaction (both first- and second-order kinetics), of the rate of parent hydrocarbon oxidation, and of the extent of reaction of the parent hydrocarbon. The effect of pre-existing organic aerosol mass on SOA yield, an issue of direct relevance to the translation of laboratory data to atmospheric applications, is examined. The importance of direct chemical measurements of gas- and particle-phase species is underscored in identifying SOA formation mechanisms
A Model Behind the Standard Model
In spite of its many successes, the Standard Model makes many empirical
assumptions in the Higgs and fermion sectors for which a deeper theoretical
basis is sought. Starting from the usual gauge symmetry plus the 3 assumptions: (A) scalar fields as vielbeins in
internal symmetry space \cite{framevec}, (B) the ``confinement picture'' of
symmetry breaking \cite{tHooft,Banovici}, (C) generations as ``dual'' to colour
\cite{genmixdsm}, we are led to a scheme which offers: (I) a geometrical
significance to scalar fields, (II) a theoretical criterion on what scalar
fields are to be introduced, (III) a partial explanation of why appears
broken while confines, (IV) baryon-lepton number (B - L) conservation,
(V) the standard electroweak structure, (VI) a 3-valued generation index for
leptons and quarks, and (VII) a dynamical system with all the essential
features of an earlier phenomenological model \cite{genmixdsm} which gave a
good description of the known mass and mixing patterns of quarks and leptons
including neutrino oscillations. There are other implications the consistency
of which with experiment, however, has not yet been systematically explored. A
possible outcome is a whole new branch of particle spectroscopy from
confinement, potentially as rich in details as that of hadrons from colour
confinement, which will be accessible to experiment at high energy.Comment: 66 pages, added new material on phenomenology, and some new
reference
Analysis of recent type Ia supernova data based on evolving dark energy models
We study characters of recent type Ia supernova (SNIa) data using evolving
dark energy models with changing equation of state parameter w. We consider
sudden-jump approximation of w for some chosen redshift spans with double
transitions, and constrain these models based on Markov Chain Monte Carlo
(MCMC) method using the SNIa data (Constitution, Union, Union2) together with
baryon acoustic oscillation A parameter and cosmic microwave background shift
parameter in a flat background. In the double-transition model the Constitution
data shows deviation outside 1 sigma from LCDM model at low (z < 0.2) and
middle (0.2 < z < 0.4) redshift bins whereas no such deviations are noticeable
in the Union and Union2 data. By analyzing the Union members in the
Constitution set, however, we show that the same difference is actually due to
different calibration of the same Union sample in the Constitution set, and is
not due to new data added in the Constitution set. All detected deviations are
within 2 sigma from the LCDM world model. From the LCDM mock data analysis, we
quantify biases in the dark energy equation of state parameters induced by
insufficient data with inhomogeneous distribution of data points in the
redshift space and distance modulus errors. We demonstrate that location of
peak in the distribution of arithmetic means (computed from the MCMC chain for
each mock data) behaves as an unbiased estimator for the average bias, which is
valid even for non-symmetric likelihood distributions.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, published in the Phys. Rev.
Supersolid and charge density-wave states from anisotropic interaction in an optical lattice
We show anisotropy of the dipole interaction between magnetic atoms or polar
molecules can stabilize new quantum phases in an optical lattice. Using a well
controlled numerical method based on the tensor network algorithm, we calculate
phase diagram of the resultant effective Hamiltonian in a two-dimensional
square lattice - an anisotropic Hubbard model of hard-core bosons with
attractive interaction in one direction and repulsive interaction in the other
direction. Besides the conventional superfluid and the Mott insulator states,
we find the striped and the checkerboard charge density wave states and the
supersolid phase that interconnect the superfluid and the striped solid states.
The transition to the supersolid phase has a mechanism different from the case
of the soft-core Bose Hubbard model.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures
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