57,891 research outputs found
Origin of Excitation Energy Dependence on Valence Nucleon Numbers
It has been shown recently that a simple formula in terms of the valence
nucleon numbers and the mass number can describe the essential trends of
excitation energies of the first states in even-even nuclei. By
evaluating the first order energy shift due to the zero-range residual
interaction, we find that the factor which reflects the effective particle
number participating in the interaction from the Fermi orbit governs the main
dependence of the first excitation energy on the valence nucleon numbers.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Class of variational Ansätze for the spin-incoherent ground state of a Luttinger liquid coupled to a spin bath
Interacting one-dimensional electron systems are generally referred to as “Luttinger liquids”, after the effective low-energy theory in which spin and charge behave as separate degrees of freedom with independent energy scales. The “spin-incoherent Luttinger liquid” describes a finite-temperature regime that is realized when the temperature is very small relative to the Fermi energy, but larger than the characteristic spin energy scale. Similar physics can take place in the ground-state, when a Luttinger Liquid is coupled to a spin bath, which effectively introduces a “spin temperature”through its entanglement with the spin degree of freedom. We show that the spin-incoherent state can be exactly written as a factorized wave-function, with a spin wave-function that can be described within a valence bond formalism. This enables us to calculate exact expressions for the momentum distribution function and the entanglement entropy. This picture holds not only for two antiferromagnetically coupled t−J chains, but also for the t−J-Kondo chain with strongly interacting conduction electrons. We argue that this theory is quite universal and may describe a family of problems that could be dubbed “spin-incoherent”.Accepted manuscrip
Spectral function of the one dimensional Hubbard model at finite temperature and the crossover to the spin incoherent regime
The physics of the strongly interacting Hubbard chain (with ) at
finite temperatures undergoes a crossover to a spin incoherent regime when the
temperature is very small relative to the Fermi energy, but larger than the
characteristic spin energy scale. This crossover can be understood by means of
Ogata and Shiba's factorized wave function, where charge and spin are totally
decoupled, and assuming that the charge remains in the ground state, while the
spin is thermally excited and at an effective "spin temperature". We use the
time-dependent density matrix renormalization group method (tDMRG) to calculate
the dynamical contributions of the spin, to reconstruct the single-particle
spectral function of the electrons. The crossover is characterized by a
redistribution of spectral weight both in frequency and momentum, with an
apparent shift by of the minimum of the dispersion.Comment: 4+pages, 3 fig
Uncertainty in Crowd Data Sourcing under Structural Constraints
Applications extracting data from crowdsourcing platforms must deal with the
uncertainty of crowd answers in two different ways: first, by deriving
estimates of the correct value from the answers; second, by choosing crowd
questions whose answers are expected to minimize this uncertainty relative to
the overall data collection goal. Such problems are already challenging when we
assume that questions are unrelated and answers are independent, but they are
even more complicated when we assume that the unknown values follow hard
structural constraints (such as monotonicity).
In this vision paper, we examine how to formally address this issue with an
approach inspired by [Amsterdamer et al., 2013]. We describe a generalized
setting where we model constraints as linear inequalities, and use them to
guide the choice of crowd questions and the processing of answers. We present
the main challenges arising in this setting, and propose directions to solve
them.Comment: 8 pages, vision paper. To appear at UnCrowd 201
Finite-size scaling in complex networks
A finite-size-scaling (FSS) theory is proposed for various models in complex
networks. In particular, we focus on the FSS exponent, which plays a crucial
role in analyzing numerical data for finite-size systems. Based on the
droplet-excitation (hyperscaling) argument, we conjecture the values of the FSS
exponents for the Ising model, the susceptible-infected-susceptible model, and
the contact process, all of which are confirmed reasonably well in numerical
simulations
Key Findings From HSC's 2010 Site Visits: Health Care Markets Weather Economic Downturn, Brace for Health Reform
Presents findings about hospital payment rate increases, hospital-physician alignment, and insurance premiums, funding for safety-net providers, and their implications from HSC's site visits to twelve nationally representative metropolitan communities
Learning from openness : the dynamics of breadth in external innovation linkages
We explore how openness in terms of external linkages generates learning effects, which enable firms to generate more innovation outputs from any given breadth of external linkages. Openness to external knowledge sources, whether through search activity or linkages to external partners in new product development, involves a process of interaction and information processing. Such activities are likely to be subject to a learning process, as firms learn which knowledge sources and collaborative linkages are most useful to their particular needs, and which partnerships are most effective in delivering innovation performance. Using panel data from Irish manufacturing plants, we find evidence of such learning effects: establishments with substantial experience of external collaborations in previous periods derive more innovation output from openness in the current period
Entanglement witnesses arising from Choi type positive linear maps
We construct optimal PPTES witnesses to detect PPT entangled
edge states of type constructed recently \cite{kye_osaka}. To do this,
we consider positive linear maps which are variants of the Choi type map
involving complex numbers, and examine several notions related to optimality
for those entanglement witnesses. Through the discussion, we suggest a method
to check the optimality of entanglement witnesses without the spanning
property.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
Quantum statistical mechanics of Shimura varieties
The Bost-Connes and Connes-Marcolli C*-dynamical systems are seen to be associated to the Shimura varieties for GL(1) and GL(2), respectively. In this thesis we carry out the construction of Bost-Connes-Marcolli systems (consisting of a groupoid and an associated C*-dynamical system) for general Shimura varieties. We study the detailed structure of the underlying groupoid, attach to it various zeta functions (that coincide with statistical-mechanical partition functions and, in certain cases, classical zeta functions), and analyze its low-temperature KMS states. We also study various special cases. Our Shimura-variety approach provides a unified treatment of such C*-dynamical systems, and for the first time allows for the construction of a Bost-Connes system for a general number field F that admits symmetry by the group of connected components of the idele class group of F, and recovers the Dedekind zeta function as a partition function. One noteworthy (and rather crucial) ingredient in our constructions is a reductive monoid for the reductive group associated to the Shimura variety. Such monoids, which have been studied by Lenner, Putcha, Vinberg, and Drinfeld, are closely related to reductive groups, but (to the best of our knowledge) have hitherto played little role in the theory of Shimura varieties. Our work reveals their relation to noncommutative spaces
Modulation of social behavior by the agouti pigmentation gene
Agouti is a secreted neuropeptide that acts as an endogenous antagonist of melanocortin receptors. Mice and rats lacking agouti (called non-agouti) have dark fur due to a disinhibition of melanocortin signaling and pigment deposition in the hair follicle. Non-agouti animals have also been reported to exhibit altered behavior, despite no evidence for the expression of agouti outside the skin. Here we confirm that non-agouti mice show altered social behavior and uncover expression of agouti in the preputial gland, a sebaceous organ in the urinary tract that secretes molecules involved in social behavior. Non-agouti mice had enlarged preputial glands and altered levels of putative preputial pheromones and surgical removal of the gland reversed the behavioral phenotype. These findings demonstrate the existence of an autologous, out-of-skin pathway for the modulation of social behavio
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