2,077 research outputs found
Phase diagram of asymmetric Fermi gas across Feshbach resonance
We study the phase diagram of the dilute two-component Fermi gas at zero
temperature as a function of the polarization and coupling strength. We map out
the detailed phase separations between superfluid and normal states near the
Feshbach resonance. We show that there are three different coexistence of
superfluid and normal phases corresponding to phase separated states between:
(I) the partially polarized superfluid and the fully polarized normal phases,
(II) the unpolarized superfluid and the fully polarized normal phases and (III)
the unpolarized superfluid and the partially polarized normal phases from
strong-coupling BEC side to weak-coupling BCS side. For pairing between two
species, we found this phase separation regime gets wider and moves toward the
BEC side for the majority species are heavier but shifts to BCS side and
becomes narrow if they are lighter.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to LT25 on June 200
Far infrared maser communications technology
An optically pumped FIR laser was constructed and tested. Optimum operating conditions were determined with CH3OH as the lasing medium. The laser was found to operate equally well with flowing gas or in a sealed off configuration. The FIR cavity stability and pump laser stability were found to have significant problems. The absorption coefficient per unit pressure of 1-1 difluoroethylene at the P(22) and P(24) lines of the 10.4 micron CO2 band was measured. The FIR line pumped by P(22) occurs at approximately 890 microns, which may be in an atmospheric transmission window. It was found that significant Stark tuning of absorption lines of methanol and 1-1 difluoroethylene can be accomplished, even at the usual 100 to 300 mTorr operating pressures of FIR lasers. This means that the use of Stark tuning may enable more effective use of pump laser output
Application of NASTRAN for stress analysis of left ventricle of the heart
Knowing the stress and strain distributions in the left ventricular wall of the heart is a prerequisite for the determination of the muscle elasticity and contractility in the process of assessing the functional status of the heart. NASTRAN was applied for the calculation of these stresses and strains and to help in verifying the results obtained by the computer program FEAMPS which was specifically designed for the plane-strain finite-element analysis of the left ventricular cross sections. Adopted for the analysis are the true shape and dimensions of the cross sections reconstructed from multiplanar X-ray views of a left ventricle which was surgically isolated from a dog's heart but metabolically supported to sustain its beating. A preprocessor was prepared to accommodate both FEAMPS and NASTRAN, and it has also facilitated the application of both the triangular element and isoparameteric quadrilateral element versions of NASTRAN. The stresses in several crucial regions of the left ventricular wall calculated by these two independently developed computer programs are found to be in good agreement. Such confirmation of the results is essential in the development of a method which assesses the heart performance
Investigation of new concepts of adaptive devices Quarterly technical report, 15 Jun. - 14 Sep. 1967
Insulated gate field effect transistor with adaptive and memory characteristic
Vertex nomination schemes for membership prediction
Suppose that a graph is realized from a stochastic block model where one of
the blocks is of interest, but many or all of the vertices' block labels are
unobserved. The task is to order the vertices with unobserved block labels into
a ``nomination list'' such that, with high probability, vertices from the
interesting block are concentrated near the list's beginning. We propose
several vertex nomination schemes. Our basic - but principled - setting and
development yields a best nomination scheme (which is a Bayes-Optimal
analogue), and also a likelihood maximization nomination scheme that is
practical to implement when there are a thousand vertices, and which is
empirically near-optimal when the number of vertices is small enough to allow
comparison to the best nomination scheme. We then illustrate the robustness of
the likelihood maximization nomination scheme to the modeling challenges
inherent in real data, using examples which include a social network involving
human trafficking, the Enron Graph, a worm brain connectome and a political
blog network.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/15-AOAS834 in the Annals of
Applied Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aoas/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Phase diagram of a dilute fermion gas with density imbalance
We map out the phase diagram of a dilute two-component atomic fermion gas
with unequal populations and masses under a Feshbach resonance. As in the case
of equal masses, no uniform phase is stable for an intermediate coupling
regime. For majority component heavier, the unstable region moves towards the
BEC side. When the coupling strength is increased from the normal phase, there
is an increased parameter space where the transition is into the FFLO state.
The converse is true if the majority is light.Comment: Proceeding for MS-HTSC VIII meeting, July 9-14 2006, Dresden; To
appear in Physica
Theory for Superconducting Properties of the Cuprates: Doping Dependence of the Electronic Excitations and Shadow States
The superconducting phase of the 2D one-band Hubbard model is studied within
the FLEX approximation and by using an Eliashberg theory. We investigate the
doping dependence of , of the gap function and
of the effective pairing interaction. Thus we find that becomes maximal
for doping. In {\it overdoped} systems decreases due to the
weakening of the antiferromagnetic correlations, while in the {\it underdoped}
systems due to the decreasing quasi particle lifetimes. Furthermore, we find
{\it shadow states} below which affect the electronic excitation spectrum
and lead to fine structure in photoemission experiments.Comment: 10 pages (REVTeX) with 5 figures (Postscript
Superconducting instability in the Holstein-Hubbard model: A numerical renormalization group study
We have studied the d-wave pairing-instability in the two-dimensional
Holstein-Hubbard model at the level of a full fluctuation exchange
approximation which treats both Coulomb and electron-phonon (EP) interaction
diagrammatically on an equal footing. A generalized numerical renormalization
group technique has been developed to solve the resulting self-consistent field
equations. The -wave superconducting phase diagram shows an optimal T_c at
electron concentration ~ 0.9 for the purely electronic Hubbard system. The
EP interaction suppresses the d-wave T_c which drops to zero when the
phonon-mediated on-site attraction becomes comparable to the on-site
Coulomb repulsion . The isotope exponent is negative in this model
and small compared to the classical BCS value or compared
to typical observed values in non-optimally doped cuprate superconductors.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX + 3 PS figures include
The Isotope Effect in d-Wave Superconductors
Based on recently proposed anti-ferromagnetic spin fluctuation exchange
models for -superconductors, we show that coupling to harmonic
phonons {\it{cannot}} account for the observed isotope effect in the cuprate
high- materials, whereas coupling to strongly anharmonic multiple-well
lattice tunneling modes {\it{can}}. Our results thus point towards a strongly
enhanced {\it{effective}} electron-phonon coupling and a possible break-down of
Migdal-Eliashberg theory in the cuprates.Comment: 12 pages + 2 figures, Postscript files, all uuencoded Phys. Rev.
Lett. (1995, to be published
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