3,780 research outputs found
Symmetry protection of topological order in one-dimensional quantum spin systems
We discuss the characterization and stability of the Haldane phase in integer
spin chains on the basis of simple, physical arguments. We find that an odd-
Haldane phase is a topologically non-trivial phase which is protected by any
one of the following three global symmetries: (i) the dihedral group of
-rotations about and axes; (ii) time-reversal symmetry
; (iii) link inversion symmetry (reflection
about a bond center), consistently with previous results [Phys. Rev. B
\textbf{81}, 064439 (2010)]. On the other hand, an even- Haldane phase is
not topologically protected (i.e., it is indistinct from a trivial,
site-factorizable phase). We show some numerical evidence that supports these
claims, using concrete examples.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, extended version: several new examples and
numerical results added. Journal reference adde
A theoretical approach to thermal noise caused by an inhomogeneously distributed loss -- Physical insight by the advanced modal expansion
We modified the modal expansion, which is the traditional method used to
calculate thermal noise. This advanced modal expansion provides physical
insight about the discrepancy between the actual thermal noise caused by
inhomogeneously distributed loss and the traditional modal expansion. This
discrepancy comes from correlations between the thermal fluctuations of the
resonant modes. The thermal noise spectra estimated by the advanced modal
expansion are consistent with the results of measurements of thermal
fluctuations caused by inhomogeneous losses.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Role of unstable periodic orbits in phase transitions of coupled map lattices
The thermodynamic formalism for dynamical systems with many degrees of
freedom is extended to deal with time averages and fluctuations of some
macroscopic quantity along typical orbits, and applied to coupled map lattices
exhibiting phase transitions. Thereby, it turns out that a seed of phase
transition is embedded as an anomalous distribution of unstable periodic
orbits, which appears as a so-called q-phase transition in the spatio-temporal
configuration space. This intimate relation between phase transitions and
q-phase transitions leads to one natural way of defining transitions and their
order in extended chaotic systems. Furthermore, a basis is obtained on which we
can treat locally introduced control parameters as macroscopic ``temperature''
in some cases involved with phase transitions.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures; further explanation and 2 figures are added
(minor revision
Rescue with an anti-inflammatory peptide of chickens infected H5N1 avian flu
Chickens suffering from avian flu caused by H5N1 influenza virus are destined to die within 2 days due to a systemic inflammatory response. Since HVJ infection (1,2) and influenza virus infection (3,4) cause infected cells to activate homologous serum complement, the systemic inflammatory response elicited could be attributed to the unlimited generation of C5a anaphylatoxin of the complement system, which is a causative peptide of serious inflammation. In monkeys inoculated with a lethal dose of LPS (4 mg/kg body weight), inhibition of C5a by an inhibitory peptide termed AcPepA (5) rescued these animals from serious septic shock which would have resulted in death within a day (6). Therefore, we tested whether AcPepA could also have a beneficial effect on chickens with bird flu. On another front, enhanced production of endothelin-1 (ET-1) and the activation of mast cells (MCs) have been implicated in granulocyte sequestration (7). An endothelin receptor derived antisense homology box peptide (8) designated ETR-P1/fl was shown to antagonize endothelin A receptor (ET-A receptor) (9) and reduce such inflammatory responses as endotoxin-shock (10) and hemorrhagic shock (11), thereby suppressing histamine release in the circulation (12). Thus, we also administered ETR-P1/fl to bird flu chickens expecting suppression of a systemic inflammatory response
The pi N -> pi pi N reaction around the N(1440) energy
We study the pi N -> pi pi N reaction around the N(1440) mass-shell energy.
Considering the total cross sections and invariant mass distributions, we
discuss the role of N(1440) and its decay processes. The calculation is
performed by extending our previous approach [Phys. Rev. C 69, 025206 (2004)]
to this reaction, in which only the nucleon and Delta(1232) were considered as
intermediate baryon states. The characteristics observed in the recent data for
the pi- p -> pi0 pi0 n reaction obtained by Crystal Ball Collaboration (CBC),
can be understood as a strong interference between the two decay processes:
N(1440) -> pi Delta(1232) and N(1440) -> N(pi pi)_S. It is also found that the
scalar-isoscalar pi pi rescattering effect in the NN*(pi pi)_S vertex, which
corresponds to the propagation of sigma meson, seems to be necessary for
explain ing the several observables of the pi N -> pi pi N reaction: the large
asymmetric shape in the pi0-pi0 invariant mass distributions of the pi- p ->
pi0 pi0 n reaction and the pi+ p -> pi+ pi+ n total cross section.Comment: 28 pages, 13 figures. Version to appear in Phys. Rev.
On Detection of Black Hole Quasi-Normal Ringdowns: Detection Efficiency and Waveform Parameter Determination in Matched Filtering
Gravitational radiation from a slightly distorted black hole with ringdown
waveform is well understood in general relativity. It provides a probe for
direct observation of black holes and determination of their physical
parameters, masses and angular momenta (Kerr parameters). For ringdown searches
using data of gravitational wave detectors, matched filtering technique is
useful. In this paper, we describe studies on problems in matched filtering
analysis in realistic gravitational wave searches using observational data.
Above all, we focus on template constructions, matches or signal-to-noise
ratios (SNRs), detection probabilities for Galactic events, and accuracies in
evaluation of waveform parameters or black hole hairs. We have performed
matched filtering analysis for artificial ringdown signals which are generated
with Monte-Carlo technique and injected into the TAMA300 observational data. It
is shown that with TAMA300 sensitivity, the detection probability for Galactic
ringdown events is about 50% for black holes of masses greater than with SNR . The accuracies in waveform parameter estimations
are found to be consistent with the template spacings, and resolutions for
black hole masses and the Kerr parameters are evaluated as a few % and , respectively. They can be improved up to and for events
of by using fine-meshed template bank in the hierarchical
search strategy.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure
Geodynamo and mantle convection simulations on the Earth Simulator using the Yin-Yang grid
We have developed finite difference codes based on the Yin-Yang grid for the
geodynamo simulation and the mantle convection simulation. The Yin-Yang grid is
a kind of spherical overset grid that is composed of two identical component
grids. The intrinsic simplicity of the mesh configuration of the Yin-Yang grid
enables us to develop highly optimized simulation codes on massively parallel
supercomputers. The Yin-Yang geodynamo code has achieved 15.2 Tflops with 4096
processors on the Earth Simulator. This represents 46% of the theoretical peak
performance. The Yin-Yang mantle code has enabled us to carry out mantle
convection simulations in realistic regimes with a Rayleigh number of
including strongly temperature-dependent viscosity with spatial contrast up to
.Comment: Plenary talk at SciDAC 200
Quantum Interference of Impurity Bound States in BiSrCa(CuZn)O Probed by Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopy
In conventional superconductors, magnetic impurities form an impurity band
due to quantum interference of the impurity bound states, leading to
suppression of the superconducting transition temperature. Such quantum
interference effects can also be expected in d-wave superconductors. Here, we
use scanning tunneling microscopy to investigate the effect of multiple
non-magnetic impurities on the local electronic structure of the
high-temperature superconductor
BiSrCa(CuZn)O. We find several
fingerprints of quantum interference of the impurity bound states including:
(i) a two-dimensional modulation of local density-of-states with a period of
approximately 5.4 \AA\ along the - and -axes, which is indicative of the
d-wave superconducting nature of the cuprates; (ii) abrupt spatial variations
of the impurity bound state energy; (iii)an appearance of positive energy
states; (iv) a split of the impurity bound state. All of these findings provide
important insight into how the impurity band in d-wave superconductors is
formed.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, to be published in PR
Theory of Low Temperature Electron Spin Resonance in Half-integer Spin Antiferromagnetic Chains
A theory of low temperature (T) electron spin resonance (ESR) in half-integer
spin antiferromagnetic chains is developed using field theory methods and
avoiding previous approximations. It is compared to experiments on Cu benzoate.
Power laws are predicted for the line-width broadening due to various types of
anisotropy. At T -> 0, zero width absorption peaks occur in some cases. The
second ESR peak in Cu benzoate, observed at T<.76K, is argued not to indicate
Neel order as previously claimed, but to correspond to a sine-Gordon "breather"
excitation.Comment: 4 pages, REVTEX, 3 PostScript figures embedded in tex
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