830 research outputs found

    Open Boundaries for the Nonlinear Schrodinger Equation

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    We present a new algorithm, the Time Dependent Phase Space Filter (TDPSF) which is used to solve time dependent Nonlinear Schrodinger Equations (NLS). The algorithm consists of solving the NLS on a box with periodic boundary conditions (by any algorithm). Periodically in time we decompose the solution into a family of coherent states. Coherent states which are outgoing are deleted, while those which are not are kept, reducing the problem of reflected (wrapped) waves. Numerical results are given, and rigorous error estimates are described. The TDPSF is compatible with spectral methods for solving the interior problem. The TDPSF also fails gracefully, in the sense that the algorithm notifies the user when the result is incorrect. We are aware of no other method with this capability.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figure

    Uniformly high order accurate essentially non-oscillatory schemes 3

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    In this paper (a third in a series) the construction and the analysis of essentially non-oscillatory shock capturing methods for the approximation of hyperbolic conservation laws are presented. Also presented is a hierarchy of high order accurate schemes which generalizes Godunov's scheme and its second order accurate MUSCL extension to arbitrary order of accuracy. The design involves an essentially non-oscillatory piecewise polynomial reconstruction of the solution from its cell averages, time evolution through an approximate solution of the resulting initial value problem, and averaging of this approximate solution over each cell. The reconstruction algorithm is derived from a new interpolation technique that when applied to piecewise smooth data gives high-order accuracy whenever the function is smooth but avoids a Gibbs phenomenon at discontinuities. Unlike standard finite difference methods this procedure uses an adaptive stencil of grid points and consequently the resulting schemes are highly nonlinear

    Numerical Methods for Multilattices

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    Among the efficient numerical methods based on atomistic models, the quasicontinuum (QC) method has attracted growing interest in recent years. The QC method was first developed for crystalline materials with Bravais lattice and was later extended to multilattices (Tadmor et al, 1999). Another existing numerical approach to modeling multilattices is homogenization. In the present paper we review the existing numerical methods for multilattices and propose another concurrent macro-to-micro method in the numerical homogenization framework. We give a unified mathematical formulation of the new and the existing methods and show their equivalence. We then consider extensions of the proposed method to time-dependent problems and to random materials.Comment: 31 page

    Geometry and dynamics of higher-spin frame fields

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    We give a systematic account of unconstrained free bosonic higher-spin fields on D-dimensional Minkowski and (Anti-)de Sitter spaces in the frame formalism. The generalized spin connections are determined by solving a chain of torsion-like constraints. Via a generalization of the vielbein postulate these allow to determine higher-spin Christoffel symbols, whose relation to the de Wit--Freedman connections is discussed. We prove that the generalized Einstein equations, despite being of higher-derivative order, give rise to the AdS Fronsdal equations in the compensator formulation. To this end we derive Damour-Deser identities for arbitrary spin on AdS. Finally we discuss the possibility of a geometrical and local action principle, which is manifestly invariant under unconstrained higher-spin symmetries.Comment: 30 pages, uses youngtab.sty, v2: minor changes, references adde

    Pulsating Strings in Deformed Backgrounds

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    This is a brief summary on pulsating strings in beta deformed backgrounds found recently.Comment: 8 pages. Talk presented at Quantum Theory and Symmetries 7, Prague, August 7-13, 201

    The SU(3) spin chain sigma model and string theory

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    The ferromagnetic integrable SU(3) spin chain provides the one loop anomalous dimension of single trace operators involving the three complex scalars of N=4 supersymmetric Yang-Mills. We construct the non-linear sigma model describing the continuum limit of the SU(3) spin chain. We find that this sigma model corresponds to a string moving with large angular momentum in the five-sphere in AdS_5xS^5. The energy and spectrum of fluctuations for rotating circular strings with angular momenta along three orthogonal directions of the five-sphere is reproduced as a particular case from the spin chain sigma model.Comment: 14 pages. Latex.v2: Misprints corrected. v3: Minor changes and improved details from journal versio

    Field theory simulation of Abelian-Higgs cosmic string cusps

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    We have performed a lattice field theory simulation of cusps in Abelian-Higgs cosmic strings. The results are in accord with the theory that the portion of the strings which overlaps near the cusp is released as radiation. The radius of the string cores which must touch to produce the evaporation is approximately r=1r = 1 in natural units. In general, the modifications to the string shape due to the cusp may produce many cusps later in the evolution of a string loop, but these later cusps will be much smaller in magnitude and more closely resemble kinks.Comment: 9 pages, RevTeX, 13 figures with eps

    Anomalous dimension and local charges

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    AdS space is the universal covering of a hyperboloid. We consider the action of the deck transformations on a classical string worldsheet in AdS5×S5AdS_5\times S^5. We argue that these transformations are generated by an infinite linear combination of the local conserved charges. We conjecture that a similar relation holds for the corresponding operators on the field theory side. This would be a generalization of the recent field theory results showing that the one loop anomalous dimension is proportional to the Casimir operator in the representation of the Yangian algebra.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX; v2: added explanations, reference

    The Generalized Dirichlet to Neumann map for the KdV equation on the half-line

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    For the two versions of the KdV equation on the positive half-line an initial-boundary value problem is well posed if one prescribes an initial condition plus either one boundary condition if qtq_{t} and qxxxq_{xxx} have the same sign (KdVI) or two boundary conditions if qtq_{t} and qxxxq_{xxx} have opposite sign (KdVII). Constructing the generalized Dirichlet to Neumann map for the above problems means characterizing the unknown boundary values in terms of the given initial and boundary conditions. For example, if {q(x,0),q(0,t)}\{q(x,0),q(0,t) \} and {q(x,0),q(0,t),qx(0,t)}\{q(x,0),q(0,t),q_{x}(0,t) \} are given for the KdVI and KdVII equations, respectively, then one must construct the unknown boundary values {qx(0,t),qxx(0,t)}\{q_{x}(0,t),q_{xx}(0,t) \} and {qxx(0,t)}\{q_{xx}(0,t) \}, respectively. We show that this can be achieved without solving for q(x,t)q(x,t) by analysing a certain ``global relation'' which couples the given initial and boundary conditions with the unknown boundary values, as well as with the function Φ(t)(t,k)\Phi^{(t)}(t,k), where Φ(t)\Phi^{(t)} satisifies the tt-part of the associated Lax pair evaluated at x=0x=0. Indeed, by employing a Gelfand--Levitan--Marchenko triangular representation for Φ(t)\Phi^{(t)}, the global relation can be solved \emph{explicitly} for the unknown boundary values in terms of the given initial and boundary conditions and the function Φ(t)\Phi^{(t)}. This yields the unknown boundary values in terms of a nonlinear Volterra integral equation.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figure

    On one-loop correction to energy of spinning strings in S^5

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    We revisit the computation (hep-th/0306130) of 1-loop AdS_5 x S^5 superstring sigma model correction to energy of a closed circular string rotating in S^5. The string is spinning around its center of mass with two equal angular momenta J_2=J_3 and its center of mass angular momentum is J_1. We revise the argument in hep-th/0306130 that the 1-loop correction is suppressed by 1/J factor (J= J_1 + 2 J_2 is the total SO(6) spin) relative to the classical term in the energy and use numerical methods to compute the leading 1-loop coefficient. The corresponding gauge theory result is known (hep-th/0405055) only in the J_1=0 limit when the string solution becomes unstable and thus the 1-loop shift of the energy formally contains an imaginary part. While the comparison with gauge theory may not be well-defined in this case, our numerical string theory value of the 1-loop coefficient seems to disagree with the gauge theory one. A plausible explanation should be (as in hep-th/0405001) in the different order of limits taken on the gauge theory and the string theory sides of the AdS/CFT duality.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figure
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