4,835 research outputs found
Quantized Rabi Oscillations and Circular Dichroism in Quantum Hall Systems
The dissipative response of a quantum system upon a time-dependent drive can
be exploited as a probe of its geometric and topological properties. In this
work, we explore the implications of such phenomena in the context of
two-dimensional gases subjected to a uniform magnetic field. It is shown that a
filled Landau level exhibits a quantized circular dichroism, which can be
traced back to its underlying non-trivial topology. Based on selection rules,
we find that this quantized circular dichroism can be suitably described in
terms of Rabi oscillations, whose frequencies satisfy simple quantization laws.
Moreover, we discuss how these quantized dissipative responses can be probed
locally, both in the bulk and at the boundaries of the quantum Hall system.
This work suggests alternative forms of topological probes in quantum systems
based on circular dichroism.Comment: 7 pages, including 3 figures and Appendi
High-field irreversible moment reorientation in the antiferromagnet FeTe
Magnetization measurements have been performed on single-crystalline
FeTe in pulsed magnetic fields up to 53 T
and temperatures from 4.2 to 65 K. At K, a non-reversible reorientation
of the antiferromagnetic moments is observed at T as the pulsed
field is on the rise. No anomaly is observed at during the fall of the
field and, as long as the temperature is unchanged, during both rises and falls
of additional field pulses. The transition at is reactivated if the
sample is warmed up above the N\'{e}el temperature K and cooled
down again. The magnetic field-temperature phase diagram of FeTe in
is also investigated. We present the temperature
dependence of , as well as that of the antiferromagnetic-to-paramagnetic
borderline in temperatures above 40 K.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Isolated OB Associations in Stripped HI Gas Clouds
HST ACS/HRC images in UV (F250W), V (F555W), and I (F814W) resolve three
isolated OB associations that lie up to 30 kpc from the stellar disk of the S0
galaxy NGC 1533. Previous narrow-band Halpha imaging and optical spectroscopy
showed these objects as unresolved intergalactic HII regions having Halpha
luminosities consistent with single early-type O stars. These young stars lie
in stripped HI gas with column densities ranging from 1.5 - 2.5 * 10^20 cm^-2
and velocity dispersions near 30 km s^-1. Using the HST broadband colors and
magnitudes along with previously-determined Halpha luminosities, we place
limits on the masses and ages of each association, considering the importance
of stochastic effects for faint (M_V >-8) stellar populations. The upper limits
to their stellar masses range from 600 M_sun to 7000 M_sun, and ages range from
2 - 6 Myrs. This analysis includes an updated calculation of the conversion
factor between the ionizing luminosity and the total number of main sequence O
stars contained within an HII region. The photometric properties and sizes of
the isolated associations and other objects in the HRC fields are consistent
with those of Galactic stellar associations, open clusters and/or single O and
B stars. We interpret the age-size sequence of associations and clustered field
objects as an indication that these isolated associations are most likely
rapidly dispersing. Furthermore, we consider the possibility that these
isolated associations represent the first generation of stars in the HI ring
surrounding NGC 1533. This work suggests star formation in the unique
environment of a galaxy's outermost gaseous regions proceeds similarly to that
within the Galactic disk and that star formation in tidal debris may be
responsible for building up a younger halo component.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, 6 tables; accepted for publication in Ap
Magnetic properties of Gd_xY_{1-x}Fe_2Zn_{20}: dilute, large, moments in a nearly ferromagnetic Fermi liquid
Single crystals of the dilute, rare earth bearing, pseudo-ternary series,
Gd_xY_{1-x}Fe_2Zn_{20} were grown out of Zn-rich solution. Measurements of
magnetization, resistivity and heat capacity on Gd_xY_{1-x}Fe_2Zn_{20} samples
reveal ferromagnetic order of Gd^{3+} local moments across virtually the whole
series (). The magnetic properties of this series, including the
ferromagnetic ordering, the reduced saturated moments at base temperature, the
deviation of the susceptibilities from Curie-Weiss law and the anomalies in the
resistivity, are understood within the frame work of dilute,
moments (Gd^{3+}) embedded in a nearly ferromagnetic Fermi liquid
(YFe_2Zn_{20}). The s-d model is employed to further explain the variation of
with x as well as the temperature dependences of of the
susceptibilities
Star Forming Objects in the Tidal Tails of Compact Groups
A search for star forming objects belonging to tidal tails has been carried
out in a sample of deep Halpha images of 16 compact groups of galaxies. A total
of 36 objects with Halpha luminosity larger than 10^38 erg s-1 have been
detected in five groups. The fraction of the total Halpha luminosity of their
respective parent galaxies shown by the tidal objects is always below 5% except
for the tidal features of HCG95, whose Halpha luminosity amounts to 65% of the
total luminosity. Out of this 36 objects, 9 star forming tidal dwarf galaxy
candidates have been finally identified on the basis of their projected
distances to the nuclei of the parent galaxies and their total Halpha
luminosities. Overall, the observed properties of the candidates resemble those
previously reported for the so-called tidal dwarf galaxies.Comment: 5 gif figures. Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journa
PassGAN: A Deep Learning Approach for Password Guessing
State-of-the-art password guessing tools, such as HashCat and John the
Ripper, enable users to check billions of passwords per second against password
hashes. In addition to performing straightforward dictionary attacks, these
tools can expand password dictionaries using password generation rules, such as
concatenation of words (e.g., "password123456") and leet speak (e.g.,
"password" becomes "p4s5w0rd"). Although these rules work well in practice,
expanding them to model further passwords is a laborious task that requires
specialized expertise. To address this issue, in this paper we introduce
PassGAN, a novel approach that replaces human-generated password rules with
theory-grounded machine learning algorithms. Instead of relying on manual
password analysis, PassGAN uses a Generative Adversarial Network (GAN) to
autonomously learn the distribution of real passwords from actual password
leaks, and to generate high-quality password guesses. Our experiments show that
this approach is very promising. When we evaluated PassGAN on two large
password datasets, we were able to surpass rule-based and state-of-the-art
machine learning password guessing tools. However, in contrast with the other
tools, PassGAN achieved this result without any a-priori knowledge on passwords
or common password structures. Additionally, when we combined the output of
PassGAN with the output of HashCat, we were able to match 51%-73% more
passwords than with HashCat alone. This is remarkable, because it shows that
PassGAN can autonomously extract a considerable number of password properties
that current state-of-the art rules do not encode.Comment: This is an extended version of the paper which appeared in NeurIPS
2018 Workshop on Security in Machine Learning (SecML'18), see
https://github.com/secml2018/secml2018.github.io/raw/master/PASSGAN_SECML2018.pd
b anti-b Higgs production at the LHC: Yukawa corrections and the leading Landau singularity
At tree-level Higgs production in association with a b-quark pair proceeds
through the small Yukawa bottom coupling in the Standard Model. Even in the
limit where this coupling vanishes, electroweak one-loop effects, through the
top-Higgs Yukawa coupling in particular, can still trigger this reaction. This
contribution is small for Higgs masses around 120GeV but it quickly picks up
for higher Higgs masses especially because the one-loop amplitude develops a
leading Landau singularity and new thresholds open up. These effects can be
viewed as the production of a pair of top quarks which rescatter to give rise
to Higgs production through WW fusion. We study the leading Landau singularity
in detail. Since this singularity is not integrable when the one-loop amplitude
is squared, we regulate the cross section by taking into account the width of
the internal top and W particles. This requires that we extend the usual box
one-loop function to the case of imaginary masses. We show how this can be
implemented analytically in our case. We study in some detail the cross section
at the LHC as a function of the Higgs mass and show how some distributions can
be drastically affected compared to the tree-level result.Comment: 48 pages, 20 figures. Phys.Rev.D accepted version. Conclusions
unchanged, minor changes and references adde
3C 48: Stellar Populations and the Kinematics of Stars and Gas in the Host Galaxy
We present deep Keck LRIS spectroscopy of the host galaxy of 3C 48. Our
observations at various slit positions sample the different luminous components
near the quasar, including the apparent tidal tail to the NW and several strong
emission line regions.
By fitting Bruzual & Charlot (1996) population synthesis models to our
spectra, we obtain ages for the most recent major episodes of star formation in
various parts of the host galaxy covered by our slits. There is vigorous
current star formation in regions just NE and SE of the quasar and
post-starburst regions with ages up to ~10^8 years in other parts of the host
galaxy, but most of the NW tidal tail shows no sign of significant recent star
formation. We use these model fits, together with the kinematics of the stars
and gas, to outline a plausible evolutionary history for the host galaxy, its
recent starburst activity, the triggering of the quasar, and the interaction of
the radio jet with the ambient gas.
There is strong evidence that the 3C 48 host is an ongoing merger, and that
it is probably near the peak of its starburst activity. Nevertheless, the
quasar itself seems to suffer little extinction, perhaps because we are viewing
it along a particularly favorable line-of-sight.Comment: 27 pages plus 11 figures (7 postscript, 4 gif). Postscript version
including figures (1840 kb) available at
http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/~canaguby/preprints.html . Accepted for publication
in Ap
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