209,531 research outputs found
Early Time Dynamics of Gluon Fields in High Energy Nuclear Collisions
Nuclei colliding at very high energy create a strong, quasi-classical gluon
field during the initial phase of their interaction. We present an analytic
calculation of the initial space-time evolution of this field in the limit of
very high energies using a formal recursive solution of the Yang-Mills
equations. We provide analytic expressions for the initial chromo-electric and
chromo-magnetic fields and for their energy-momentum tensor. In particular, we
discuss event-averaged results for energy density and energy flow as well as
for longitudinal and transverse pressure of this system. For example, we find
that the ratio of longitudinal to transverse pressure very early in the system
behaves as where
is the longitudinal proper time, is related to the saturation scales
of the two nuclei, and with a scale to
be defined later. Our results are generally applicable if .
As already discussed in a previous paper, the transverse energy flow of
the gluon field exhibits hydrodynamic-like contributions that follow transverse
gradients of the energy density . In addition, a
rapidity-odd energy flow also emerges from the non-abelian analog of Gauss' Law
and generates non-vanishing angular momentum of the field. We will discuss the
space-time picture that emerges from our analysis and its implications for
observables in heavy ion collisions.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figure
Aharonov-Bohm oscillations in the local density of states
The scattering of electrons with inhomogeneities produces modulations in the
local density of states of a metal. We show that electron interference
contributions to these modulations are affected by the magnetic field via the
Aharonov-Bohm effect. This can be exploited in a simple STM setup that serves
as an Aharonov-Bohm interferometer at the nanometer scale.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. v2 added reference
Spin torque ferromagnetic resonance with magnetic field modulation
We demonstrate a technique of broadband spin torque ferromagnetic resonance
(ST-FMR) with magnetic field modulation for measurements of spin wave
properties in magnetic nanostructures. This technique gives great improvement
in sensitivity over the conventional ST-FMR measurements, and application of
this technique to nanoscale magnetic tunnel junctions (MTJs) reveals a rich
spectrum of standing spin wave eigenmodes. Comparison of the ST-FMR
measurements with micromagnetic simulations of the spin wave spectrum allows us
to explain the character of low-frequency magnetic excitations in nanoscale
MTJs.Comment: Also see: http://faculty.sites.uci.edu/krivorotovgroup
On reduced density matrices for disjoint subsystems
We show that spin and fermion representations for solvable quantum chains
lead in general to different reduced density matrices if the subsystem is not
singly connected. We study the effect for two sites in XX and XY chains as well
as for sublattices in XX and transverse Ising chains.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Landscape phage, phage display, stripped phage, biosensors, detection, affinity reagent, nanotechnology, Salmonella typhimurium, Bacillus anthracis
Filamentous phage, such as fd used in this study, are thread-shaped bacterial
viruses. Their outer coat is a tube formed by thousands equal copies of the
major coat protein pVIII. We constructed libraries of random peptides fused to
all pVIII domains and selected phages that act as probes specific for a panel
of test antigens and biological threat agents. Because the viral carrier is
infective, phage borne bio-selective probes can be cloned individually and
propagated indefinitely without needs of their chemical synthesis or
reconstructing. We demonstrated the feasibility of using landscape phages and
their stripped fusion proteins as new bioselective materials that combine
unique characteristics of affinity reagents and self assembling membrane
proteins. Biorecognition layers fabricated from phage-derived probes bind
biological agents and generate detectable signals. The performance of
phage-derived materials as biorecognition films was illustrated by detection of
streptavidin-coated beads, Bacillus anthracis spores and Salmonella typhimurium
cells. With further refinement, the phage-derived analytical platforms for
detecting and monitoring of numerous threat agents may be developed, since the
biodetector films may be obtained from landscape phages selected against any
bacteria, virus or toxin. As elements of field-use detectors, they are superior
to antibodies, since they are inexpensive, highly specific and strong binders,
resistant to high temperatures and environmental stresses.Comment: Submitted on behalf of TIMA Editions
(http://irevues.inist.fr/tima-editions
Ground state energy of unitary fermion gas with the Thomson Problem approach
The dimensionless universal coefficient defines the ratio of the
unitary fermions energy density to that for the ideal non-interacting ones in
the non-relativistic limit with T=0. The classical Thomson Problem is taken as
a nonperturbative quantum many-body arm to address the ground state energy
including the low energy nonlinear quantum fluctuation/correlation effects.
With the relativistic Dirac continuum field theory formalism, the concise
expression for the energy density functional of the strongly interacting limit
fermions at both finite temperature and density is obtained. Analytically, the
universal factor is calculated to be . The energy gap is
\Delta=\frac{{5}{18}{k_f^2}/(2m).Comment: Identical to published version with revisions according to comment
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