13,076 research outputs found
Theory of Resonant Inelastic X-ray Scattering by Collective Magnetic Excitations
I present a tractable theory for the Resonant Inelastic X-ray Scattering
(RIXS) spectral function of magnons. The low-energy transition operator is
written as a product of local spin operators times fundamental x-ray absorption
spectra. This leads to simple selection rules for the magnetic cross section.
The scattering cross section linear (quadratic) in spin operators is
proportional to the magnetic circular (linear) dichroic absorption. RIXS is a
novel tool to measure magnetic quasi particles (magnons) and the incoherent
spectral weight, as well as multiple magnons up to very high energy losses, in
small samples, thin films and multilayers, complementary to Neutron scattering
Identifying decays at the LHC
In this paper we present two machine learning algorithms to identify
mesons from radiative bosons decays at the LHC. The combined algorithm is
able to identify mesons via its hadronic decays with an efficiency of 67%
while suppressing a background of quark and gluon jets by a factor of 100.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Kinetic cross coupling between non-conserved and conserved fields in phase field models
We present a phase field model for isothermal transformations of two
component alloys that includes Onsager kinetic cross coupling between the
non-conserved phase field and the conserved concentration field. We also
provide the reduction of the phase field model to the corresponding macroscopic
description of the free boundary problem. The reduction is given in a general
form. Additionally we use an explicit example of a phase field model and check
that the reduced macroscopic description, in the range of its applicability, is
in excellent agreement with direct phase field simulations. The relevance of
the newly introduced terms to solute trapping is also discussed
A pattern-recognition theory of search in expert problem solving
Understanding how look-ahead search and pattern recognition interact is one of the important research questions in the study of expert problem-solving. This paper examines the implications of the template theory (Gobet & Simon, 1996a), a recent theory of expert memory, on the theory of problem solving in chess. Templates are "chunks" (Chase & Simon, 1973) that have evolved into more complex data structures and that possess slots allowing values to be encoded rapidly. Templates may facilitate search in three ways: (a) by allowing information to be stored into LTM rapidly; (b) by allowing a search in the template space in addition to a search in the move space; and (c) by compensating loss in the "mind's eye" due to interference and decay. A computer model implementing the main ideas of the theory is presented, and simulations of its search behaviour are discussed. The template theory accounts for the slight skill difference in average depth of search found in chess players, as well as for other empirical data
Symmetry Protected Topological Order in Open Quantum Systems
We systematically investigate the robustness of symmetry protected
topological (SPT) order in open quantum systems by studying the evolution of
string order parameters and other probes under noisy channels. We find that
one-dimensional SPT order is robust against noisy couplings to the environment
that satisfy a strong symmetry condition, while it is destabilized by noise
that satisfies only a weak symmetry condition, which generalizes the notion of
symmetry for closed systems. We also discuss "transmutation" of SPT phases into
other SPT phases of equal or lesser complexity, under noisy channels that
satisfy twisted versions of the strong symmetry condition
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