41,011 research outputs found
Two monotonic functions involving gamma function and volume of unit ball
In present paper, we prove the monotonicity of two functions involving the
gamma function and relating to the -dimensional volume of the
unit ball in .Comment: 7 page
Galaxy growth in the concordance CDM cosmology
We use galaxy and dark halo data from the public database for the Millennium
Simulation to study the growth of galaxies in the De Lucia et al. (2006) model
for galaxy formation. Previous work has shown this model to reproduce many
aspects of the systematic properties and the clustering of real galaxies, both
in the nearby universe and at high redshift. It assumes the stellar masses of
galaxies to increase through three processes, major mergers, the accretion of
smaller satellite systems, and star formation. We show the relative importance
of these three modes to be a strong function of stellar mass and of redshift.
Galaxy growth through major mergers depends strongly on stellar mass, but only
weakly on redshift. Except for massive systems, minor mergers contribute more
to galaxy growth than major mergers at all redshifts and at all stellar masses.
For galaxies significantly less massive than the Milky Way, star formation
dominates the growth at all epochs. For galaxies significantly more massive
than the Milky Way, growth through mergers is the dominant process at all
epochs. At a stellar mass of , star formation dominates
at and mergers at later times. At every stellar mass, the growth rates
through star formation increase rapidly with increasing redshift. Specific star
formation rates are a decreasing function of stellar mass not only at but
also at all higher redshifts. For comparison, we carry out a similar analysis
of the growth of dark matter halos. In contrast to the galaxies, growth rates
depend strongly on redshift, but only weakly on mass. They agree qualitatively
with analytic predictions for halo growth.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Generating EPR beams in a cavity optomechanical system
We propose a scheme to produce continuous variable entanglement between
phase-quadrature amplitudes of two light modes in an optomechanical system. For
proper driving power and detuning, the entanglement is insensitive with bath
temperature and of mechanical oscillator. Under realistic experimental
conditions, we find that the entanglement could be very large even at room
temperature.Comment: 4.1 pages, 4 figures, comments are welcome; to appear in PRA,
published version with corrections of typo
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Machine learning phases in statistical physics
Conventionally, the study of phases in statistical mechan- ics is performed with the help of random sampling tools. Among the most powerful are Monte Carlo simulations consisting of a stochastic importance sampling over state space and evaluation of estimators for physical quantities. The ability of modern machine learning techniques to classify, identify, or in- terpret massive data sets provides a complementary paradigm to the above approach to analyze the exponentially large number of states in statistical physics. In this report, it is demonstrated by application on Ising-type models that deep learning has potential wide applications in solving many-body statis- tical physics problems. In application of supervised learning, we showed that the feed-forward neural network can identify phases and phase transitions in the ferromagnetic Ising model and the convolutional neural network (CNN) is extremely powerful in classifying T = 0 and T = ∞ phases in the Ising gauge model; In application of unsupervised learning, we illustrated that a deep auto-encoder constructed by stacked restricted Boltzmann machines (RBM)
is closely related to the renormalization group (RG) method well understood in modern physics and our reconstruction of Ising spin configurations in the ferromagnetic Ising model is similar to the hand-written digits reconstruction.Statistic
Valley dependent many-body effects in 2D semiconductors
We calculate the valley degeneracy () dependence of the many-body
renormalization of quasiparticle properties in multivalley 2D semiconductor
structures due to the Coulomb interaction between the carriers. Quite
unexpectedly, the dependence of many-body effects is nontrivial and
non-generic, and depends qualitatively on the specific Fermi liquid property
under consideration. While the interacting 2D compressibility manifests
monotonically increasing many-body renormalization with increasing , the
2D spin susceptibility exhibits an interesting non-monotonic dependence
with the susceptibility increasing (decreasing) with for smaller (larger)
values of with the renormalization effect peaking around .
Our theoretical results provide a clear conceptual understanding of recent
valley-dependent 2D susceptibility measurements in AlAs quantum wells.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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