1,497 research outputs found
Composite reweighting with Imaginary Chemical Potentials in SU(3)
We review the overlap pathology of the Glasgow reweighting method for finite
density QCD, and discuss the sampling bias that effects the determination of
the ensemble-averaged fugacity polynomial expansion coefficients that form the
Grand Canonical Partition function. The expectation of the difference in free
energies between canonical partition functions generated with different
measures is presented as an indicator of a systematic quark number dependent
biasing in the reweighting approach. The advantages of building up an unbiased
polynomial expansion for the Grand Canonical Partition function through a
series of parallel ensembles generated by reweighting with imaginary chemical
potentials are then contrasted with addressing the overlap pathology through a
secondary reweighting.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure, Lattice2002(nonzerot
Composite reweighting SU(2) QCD at Finite Temperature
The Glasgow reweighting method is evaluated for SU(2) lattice gauge theory at
nonzero \mu and finite T. We establish that the ' overlap problem' of SU(3)
measurements, in which the transition points determined from thermodynamic
observables have an unphysical dependence on the value of \mu used in the
reweighting persists for SU(2). By combining the information from different
lattice ensembles we alleviate sampling bias in the fugacity expansion, and
identify the Lee-Yang zeros associated with the transition to a high density
phase that can plausibly be associated with diquark condensation. We also
confirm the existence of a line of first order transitions above a critical
point in the T-\mu plane previously identified by effective chiral lagrangian
calculations.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
A hybrid strain and thermal energy harvester based on an infra-red sensitive Er3+ modified poly(vinylidene fluoride) ferroelectret structure
In this paper, a novel infra-red (IR) sensitive Er3+ modified poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF) (Er-PVDF) film is developed for converting both mechanical and thermal energies into useful electrical power. The addition of Er3+ to PVDF is shown to improve piezoelectric properties due to the formation of a self-polarized ferroelectric ÎČ-phase and the creation of an electret-like porous structure. In addition, we demonstrate that Er3+ acts to enhance heat transfer into the Er-PVDF film due to its excellent infrared absorbance, which, leads to rapid and large temperature fluctuations and improved pyroelectric energy transformation. We demonstrate the potential of this novel material for mechanical energy harvesting by creating a durable ferroelectret energy harvester/nanogenerator (FTNG). The high thermal stability of the ÎČ-phase enables the FTNG to harvest large temperature fluctuations (ÎTâ~â24âK). Moreover, the superior mechanosensitivity, SMâ~â3.4 VPaâ1 of the FTNG enables the design of a wearable self-powered health-care monitoring system by human-machine integration. The combination of rare-earth ion, Er3+ with the ferroelectricity of PVDF provides a new and robust approach for delivering smart materials and structures for self-powered wireless technologies, sensors and Internet of Things (IoT) devices
Chemisorption theory of ammonia on copper
We present local-density-approximation calculations of ammonia adsorption on copper clusters of different sizes (6 to 18 atoms) modelling the (100) and (111) surface. Including for some of the copper atoms only one instead of eleven electrons explicitly in the calculation, did not always work satisfactorily. Comparison of adsorption energies for clusters of related geometry indicates a preference for onefold adsorption. This is due to the Pauli repulsion of the lone-pair orbital of ammonia with the copper 3d electrons. which is minimal for onefold adsorption. as well as an interaction with 4s electrons, which is most attractive in the onefold geometr
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Three-dimensional finite element simulations of the rolling of superconducting wire
The goal of this work was to show the utility of using finite-element simulations to ascertain the quality of superconducting tape, created by the repeated rolling of an initially round wire. Steady-state simulations of the rolling reductions of a two, material superconducting wire were performed using ISAIAH, a three-dimensional nonlinear finite-element code. The simulations were done in conjunction with Dave Korzekwa at Los Alamos National Laboratory to produce results that could be compared with experimental findings. Results indicate that ISAIAH is capable of producing potentially useful data, but further work is necessary to obtain meaningful quantitative comparisons between simulations and experiments. This report describes the simulations that have been conducted to date and also indicates several directions for the future development of this research
Energy-Momentum Tensor of Particles Created in an Expanding Universe
We present a general formulation of the time-dependent initial value problem
for a quantum scalar field of arbitrary mass and curvature coupling in a FRW
cosmological model. We introduce an adiabatic number basis which has the virtue
that the divergent parts of the quantum expectation value of the
energy-momentum tensor are isolated in the vacuum piece of , and
may be removed using adiabatic subtraction. The resulting renormalized
is conserved, independent of the cutoff, and has a physically transparent,
quasiclassical form in terms of the average number of created adiabatic
`particles'. By analyzing the evolution of the adiabatic particle number in de
Sitter spacetime we exhibit the time structure of the particle creation
process, which can be understood in terms of the time at which different
momentum scales enter the horizon. A numerical scheme to compute as a
function of time with arbitrary adiabatic initial states (not necessarily de
Sitter invariant) is described. For minimally coupled, massless fields, at late
times the renormalized goes asymptotically to the de Sitter invariant
state previously found by Allen and Folacci, and not to the zero mass limit of
the Bunch-Davies vacuum. If the mass m and the curvature coupling xi differ
from zero, but satisfy m^2+xi R=0, the energy density and pressure of the
scalar field grow linearly in cosmic time demonstrating that, at least in this
case, backreaction effects become significant and cannot be neglected in de
Sitter spacetime.Comment: 28 pages, Revtex, 11 embedded .ps figure
Scaling of the B and D meson spectrum in lattice QCD
We give results for the and the meson spectrum using NRQCD on the
lattice in the quenched approximation. The masses of radially and orbitally
excited states are calculated as well as -wave hyperfine and -wave fine
structure. Radially excited -states are observed for the first time. Radial
and orbital excitation energies match well to experiment, as does the
strange-non-strange -wave splitting. We compare the light and heavy quark
mass dependence of various splittings to experiment. Our -results cover a
range in lattice spacings of more than a factor of two. Our -results are
from a single lattice spacing and we compare them to numbers in the literature
from finer lattices using other methods. We see no significant dependence of
physical results on the lattice spacing.
PACS: 11.15.Ha 12.38.Gc 14.40.Lb 14.40.NdComment: 78 pages, 29 tables, 30 figures Revised version. Minor corrections to
spelling and wordin
Geology of the Llanidloes district : British Geological Survey Sheet 164
This Sheet Explanation provides a summary of the geology of the district covered by Geological 1:50 000 Series
Map Sheet 164 (Llanidloes), published in 2010 as a Bedrock and Superficial Deposits edition. The district mostly
lies within the county of Powys, but includes small parts of Ceredigion in the extreme west and south-west. Much of
the western part of the district is occupied by the deeply dissected uplands of the Cambrian Mountains, a designated
Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. In this area the land rises to 740 m on the flanks of Plynlimon (Pumlumon
Fawr), the highest summit in the range. It falls away towards the eastern part of the district into rolling countryside
that includes the important catchment of the River Severn (Afon Hafren) and its tributaries, the largest of which are
the rivers Carno, Trannon, Cerist, Clywedog and Dulas. A major reservoir (Llyn Clywedog) occupies the upper
reaches of the Clywedog valley, its purpose being to regulate river discharge and groundwater levels within the
catchment. The south-western part of the district is drained by the River Wye (Afon Gwy) and its tributaries, that
flow south-eastwards via Llangurig. The sources of both the Severn and Wye are situated on the eastern flanks of
Plynlimon within the western part of the district.
The town of Llanidloes is the main centre of population, with smaller settlements at Llangurig, Carno, Trefeglwys,
Caersws and Staylittle; the Newtown conurbation impinges on the eastern part of the district. Much of the district is
given over to beef and dairy farming, although sheep are reared in the remote upland areas in the west and extensive
forestry plantations have been developed in places. The Ordovician and Silurian rocks of the district have been
exploited locally, in the past, as a source of building material and, recently, commercial quantities of sandstone
aggregate have been excavated at Penstrowed Quarry [SO 0680 9100]. The district includes part of the Central
Wales Mining Field from which substantial volumes of lead and zinc ore were extracted during the 19th and early
20th centuries. A number of former mine sites are still visible, notably along the Van, Nant-y-ricket, Dylife,
Dyfngwm and Llanerchyraur lodes (Jones, 1922[1]; IGS, 1974), and the historic Bryntail Mine, below the Clywedog
Dam has been restored as a site of industrial archaeological interest.
The district is underlain by a succession of Late Ordovician (Ashgill) to Silurian sedimentary rocks, over 5 km thick,
deposited between 450 and 420 million years ago in the Early Palaeozoic Welsh Basin (Figure P930911). The basin
developed on a fragment of the ancient supercontinent of Gondwana, known as Eastern Avalonia (e.g. Pickering et
al., 1988[2]), that drifted northwards to collide with the continents of Baltica and Laurentia during the Late
Ordovician and Silurian (Soper and Hutton, 1984[3]; Soper and Woodcock, 1990[4]; Woodcock and Strachan,
2000[5]). To the east and the south of the basin lay the Midland Platform, a relatively stable shallow marine shelf that
was subject to periodic emergence. The basinal sediments are predominantly deep marine turbiditic facies that were
introduced into the district by density currents from southerly, south-easterly and north-westerly quadrants. Coeval
shallower-water âshelfalâ sediments were deposited north and east of the district, and locally impinge on its northern
margins. Thickness variations within the major sedimentary units suggest that, at times, syndepositional fault
movements were an important control on their distribution. During late Silurian (Ludlow) times, shallowing of the
basin occurred, and sandstones, variably interpreted as a turbiditic (Cave and Hains, 2001[6]) or storm-generated
facies (Tyler and Woodcock, 1987[7]), were laid down over the eastern part of the district and adjacent areas. The
shallowing was a result of tectonic reconfiguration of the basin, a precursor to the late Caledonian (Acadian)
Orogeny that affected the region during the late Early Devonian, around 400 million years ag
Unitarity of Quantum Theory and Closed Time-Like Curves
Interacting quantum fields on spacetimes containing regions of closed
timelike curves (CTCs) are subject to a non-unitary evolution . Recently, a
prescription has been proposed, which restores unitarity of the evolution by
modifying the inner product on the final Hilbert space. We give a rigorous
description of this proposal and note an operational problem which arises when
one considers the composition of two or more non-unitary evolutions. We propose
an alternative method by which unitarity of the evolution may be regained, by
extending to a unitary evolution on a larger (possibly indefinite) inner
product space. The proposal removes the ambiguity noted by Jacobson in
assigning expectation values to observables localised in regions spacelike
separated from the CTC region. We comment on the physical significance of the
possible indefiniteness of the inner product introduced in our proposal.Comment: 13 pages, LaTeX. Final revised paper to be published in Phys Rev D.
Some changes are made to expand our discussion of Anderson's Proposal for
restoring unitarit
Motion of Inertial Observers Through Negative Energy
Recent research has indicated that negative energy fluxes due to quantum
coherence effects obey uncertainty principle-type inequalities of the form
|\Delta E|\,{\Delta \tau} \lprox 1\,. Here is the magnitude of
the negative energy which is transmitted on a timescale . Our main
focus in this paper is on negative energy fluxes which are produced by the
motion of observers through static negative energy regions. We find that
although a quantum inequality appears to be satisfied for radially moving
geodesic observers in two and four-dimensional black hole spacetimes, an
observer orbiting close to a black hole will see a constant negative energy
flux. In addition, we show that inertial observers moving slowly through the
Casimir vacuum can achieve arbitrarily large violations of the inequality. It
seems likely that, in general, these types of negative energy fluxes are not
constrained by inequalities on the magnitude and duration of the flux. We
construct a model of a non-gravitational stress-energy detector, which is
rapidly switched on and off, and discuss the strengths and weaknesses of such a
detector.Comment: 18pp + 1 figure(not included, available on request), in LATEX,
TUPT-93-
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