1,641 research outputs found
Transverse Spectra of Hadrons in Central Collisions at RHIC and LHC from pQCD+Saturation+Hydrodynamics and from pQCD+Energy Losses
We study the transverse spectra of hadrons in nearly central collisions
at RHIC and LHC in a broad transverse momentum range Low- spectra are
calculated by using boost-invariant hydrodynamics with initial energy and
net-baryon densities from the EKRT pQCD+saturation model. High- spectra
are obtained from pQCD jet calculation including the energy loss of the parton
in the matter prior to its fragmentation to final hadrons.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, proceedings for Quark Matter 200
Strictly correlated uniform electron droplets
We study the energetic properties of finite but internally homogeneous
D-dimensional electron droplets in the strict-correlation limit. The indirect
Coulomb interaction is found to increase as a function of the electron number,
approaching the tighter forms of the Lieb-Oxford bound recently proposed by
Rasanen et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 102, 206406 (2009)]. The bound is satisfied in
three-, two-, and one-dimensional droplets, and in the latter case it is
reached exactly - regardless of the type of interaction considered. Our results
provide useful reference data for delocalized strongly correlated systems, and
they can be used in the development and testing of exchange-correlation density
functionals in the framework of density-functional theory
Controllable quantum scars in semiconductor quantum dots
Quantum scars are enhancements of quantum probability density along classical
periodic orbits. We study the recently discovered phenomenon of strong,
perturbation-induced quantum scarring in the two-dimensional harmonic
oscillator exposed to a homogeneous magnetic field. We demonstrate that both
the geometry and the orientation of the scars are fully controllable with a
magnetic field and a focused perturbative potential, respectively. These
properties may open a path into an experimental scheme to manipulate electric
currents in nanostructures fabricated in a two-dimensional electron gas.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Geometric and impurity effects on quantum rings in magnetic fields
We investigate the effects of impurities and changing ring geometry on the
energetics of quantum rings under different magnetic field strengths. We show
that as the magnetic field and/or the electron number are/is increased, both
the quasiperiodic Aharonov-Bohm oscillations and various magnetic phases become
insensitive to whether the ring is circular or square in shape. This is in
qualitative agreement with experiments. However, we also find that the
Aharonov-Bohm oscillation can be greatly phase-shifted by only a few impurities
and can be completely obliterated by a high level of impurity density. In the
many-electron calculations we use a recently developed fourth-order imaginary
time projection algorithm that can exactly compute the density matrix of a
free-electron in a uniform magnetic field.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, to appear in PR
Exchange-energy functionals for finite two-dimensional systems
Implicit and explicit density functionals for the exchange energy in finite
two-dimensional systems are developed following the approach of Becke and
Roussel [Phys. Rev. A 39, 3761 (1989)]. Excellent agreement for the
exchange-hole potentials and exchange energies is found when compared with the
exact-exchange reference data for the two-dimensional uniform electron gas and
few-electron quantum dots, respectively. Thereby, this work significantly
improves the availability of approximate density functionals for dealing with
electrons in quasi-two-dimensional structures, which have various applications
in semiconductor nanotechnology.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
The Spatial Averaging Limit of Covariant Macroscopic Gravity - Scalar Corrections to the Cosmological Equations
It is known that any explicit averaging scheme of the type essential for
describing the large scale behaviour of the Universe, must necessarily yield
corrections to the Einstein equations applied in the Cosmological setting. The
question of whether or not the resulting corrections to the Einstein equations
are significant, is still a subject of debate, partly due to possible
ambiguities in the averaging schemes available. In particular, it has been
argued in the literature that the effects of averaging could be gauge
artifacts. We apply the formalism of Zalaletdinov's Macroscopic Gravity (MG)
which is a fully covariant and nonperturbative averaging scheme, in an attempt
to construct gauge independent corrections to the standard
Friedmann-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker (FLRW) equations. We find that whereas one
cannot escape the problem of dependence on \emph{one} gauge choice -- which is
inherent in the assumption of large scale homogeneity and isotropy -- it is
however possible to construct \emph{spacetime scalar} corrections to the
standard FLRW equations. This partially addresses the criticism concerning the
corrections being gauge artifacts. For a particular initial choice of gauge
which simplifies the formalism, we explicitly construct these scalars in terms
of the underlying inhomogeneous geometry, and incidentally demonstrate that the
formal structure of the corrections with this gauge choice is identical to that
of analogous corrections derived by Buchert in the context of spatial averaging
of scalars.Comment: 18 pages, no figures, revtex4; v2 - minor clarifications added; v3 -
minor changes in presentation to improve clarity, reference added, to appear
in Phys. Rev.
Gaussian approximations for the exchange-energy functional of current-carrying states: Applications to two-dimensional systems
Electronic structure calculations are routinely carried out within the
framework of density-functional theory, often with great success. For electrons
in reduced dimensions, however, there is still a need for better approximations
to the exchange-correlation energy functional. Furthermore, the need for
properly describing current-carrying states represents an additional challenge
for the development of approximate functionals. In order to make progress along
these directions, we show that simple and efficient expressions for the
exchange energy can be obtained by considering the short-range behavior of the
one-body spin-density matrix. Applications to several two-dimensional systems
confirm the excellent performance of the derived approximations, and verify the
gauge-invariance requirement to be of great importance for dealing with
current-carrying states
Becke-Johnson-type exchange potential for two-dimensional systems
We extend the Becke-Johnson approximation [J. Chem. Phys. 124, 221101 (2006)]
of the exchange potential to two dimensions. We prove and demonstrate that a
direct extension of the underlying formalism may lead to divergent behavior of
the potential. We derive a cure to the approach by enforcing the gauge
invariance and correct asymptotic behavior of the exchange potential. The
procedure leads to an approximation which is shown, in various
quasi-two-dimensional test systems, to be very accurate in comparison with the
exact exchange potential, and thus a considerable improvement over the commonly
applied local-density approximation.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev. B on July 9th, 200
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