13,442 research outputs found
Numerical studies of various Neel-VBS transitions in SU(N) anti-ferromagnets
In this manuscript we review recent developments in the numerical simulations
of bipartite SU(N) spin models by quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) methods. We provide
an account of a large family of newly discovered sign-problem free spin models
which can be simulated in their ground states on large lattices, containing
O(10^5) spins, using the stochastic series expansion method with efficient loop
algorithms. One of the most important applications so far of these Hamiltonians
are to unbiased studies of quantum criticality between Neel and valence bond
phases in two dimensions -- a summary of this body of work is provided. The
article concludes with an overview of the current status of and outlook for
future studies of the "designer" Hamiltonians.Comment: Mini-review article for the proceedings of CCP 2014 (Boston
Analyticity as a Robust Constraint on the LHC Cross Section
It is well known that high energy data alone do not discriminate between
asymptotic and behavior of and cross sections.
By exploiting high quality low energy data, analyticity resolves this ambiguity
in favor of cross sections that grow asymptotically as . We here show
that two methods for incorporating the low energy data into the high energy
fits give numerically identical results and yield essentially identical tightly
constrained values for the LHC cross section. The agreement can be understood
as a new analyticity constraint derived as an extension of a Finite Energy Sum
Rule.Comment: 8 pages, Latex2e, 2 postscript figures; major changes made; accepted
for publication in Phys Rev
Coexistence of density wave and superfluid order in a dipolar Fermi gas
We analyse the coexistence of superfluid and density wave (stripe) order in a
quasi-two-dimensional gas of dipolar fermions aligned by an external field.
Remarkably, the anisotropic nature of the dipolar interaction allows for such a
coexistence in a large region of the zero temperature phase diagram. In this
region, the repulsive part of the interaction drives the stripe formation and
the attractive part induces the pairing, resulting in a supersolid with
-wave Cooper pairs aligned along the stripes. From a momentum space
perspective, the stability of the supersolid phase is due to the fact that the
stripe order renders the Fermi surface only partially gapped, leaving gapless
regions that are most important for -wave pairing. We finally demonstrate
how this supersolid phase can be detected in time-of-flight experiments.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
The Elusive p-air Cross Section
For the \pbar p and systems, we have used all of the extensive data of
the Particle Data Group[K. Hagiwara {\em et al.} (Particle Data Group), Phys.
Rev. D 66, 010001 (2002).]. We then subject these data to a screening process,
the ``Sieve'' algorithm[M. M. Block, physics/0506010.], in order to eliminate
``outliers'' that can skew a fit. With the ``Sieve'' algorithm, a
robust fit using a Lorentzian distribution is first made to all of the data to
sieve out abnormally high \delchi, the individual i point's
contribution to the total . The fits are then made to the
sieved data. We demonstrate that we cleanly discriminate between asymptotic
and behavior of total hadronic cross sections when we require
that these amplitudes {\em also} describe, on average, low energy data
dominated by resonances. We simultaneously fit real analytic amplitudes to the
``sieved'' high energy measurements of and total cross sections
and -values for GeV, while requiring that their asymptotic
fits smoothly join the the and total cross
sections at 4.0 GeV--again {\em both} in magnitude and slope. Our
results strongly favor a high energy fit, basically excluding a fit. Finally, we make a screened Glauber fit for the p-air cross section,
using as input our precisely-determined cross sections at cosmic ray
energies.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, 2 table,Paper delivered at c2cr2005 Conference,
Prague, September 7-13, 2005. Fig. 2 was missing from V1. V3 fixes all
figure
The Impact of External Audience on Second Graders\u27 Writing Quality
The overarching purpose of writing is to communicate; as such, the intended audience is a critical consideration for writers. However, elementary school writing instruction commonly neglects the role of the audience. Typically, children are asked to compose a piece of text without a specific audience that is usually evaluated by the classroom teacher. Previous studies have found a relationship between audience specification and higher quality writing among older children; this study examines the impact of audience specification on young children’s writing. Using a within-subjects design, the study compared writing quality when second-grade students wrote for internal versus external audiences and found that children are more likely to produce higher quality writing when writing for an external audience than when writing for their teacher
Predicting Proton-Air Cross Sections at sqrt s ~30 TeV, using Accelerator and Cosmic Ray Data
We use the high energy predictions of a QCD-inspired parameterization of all
accelerator data on forward proton-proton and antiproton-proton scattering
amplitudes, along with Glauber theory, to predict proton-air cross sections at
energies near \sqrt s \approx 30 TeV. The parameterization of the proton-proton
cross section incorporates analyticity and unitarity, and demands that the
asymptotic proton is a black disk of soft partons. By comparing with the p-air
cosmic ray measurements, our analysis results in a constraint on the inclusive
particle production cross section.Comment: 9 pages, Revtex, uses epsfig.sty, 5 postscript figures. Minor text
revisions. Systematic errors in k included, procedure for extracting k
clarified. Previously undefined symbols now define
Experimental investigation of reactor-loop transients during startup of a simulated SNAP-8 system
Primary loop transients during startup of Rankine cycle space power system in SNAP 8 simulato
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