3,986 research outputs found
Quantum Pumping with Ultracold Atoms on Microchips: Fermions versus Bosons
We present a design for simulating quantum pumping of electrons in a
mesoscopic circuit with ultra-cold atoms in a micro-magnetic chip trap. We
calculate theoretical results for quantum pumping of both bosons and fermions,
identifying differences and common features, including geometric behavior and
resonance transmission. We analyze the feasibility of experiments with bosonic
Rb and fermionic K atoms with an emphasis on reliable atomic
current measurements.Comment: 4 pages; 4 figure
Pêches expérimentales de l'œil de bœuf (Etelis oculatus) aux filets profonds en Guadeloupe (F.W.I.); Experimental deep sea gill net fishery of queen snapper (Etelis oculatus) in Guadeloupe (F.W.I.); Pescas experimentales del pargo cachucho (Etelis oculatus) con redes profundas en Guadeloupe (F.W.I.)
Light hadrons with improved staggered quarks: approaching the continuum limit
We have extended our program of QCD simulations with an improved
Kogut-Susskind quark action to a smaller lattice spacing, approximately 0.09
fm. Also, the simulations with a approximately 0.12 fm have been extended to
smaller quark masses. In this paper we describe the new simulations and
computations of the static quark potential and light hadron spectrum. These
results give information about the remaining dependences on the lattice
spacing. We examine the dependence of computed quantities on the spatial size
of the lattice, on the numerical precision in the computations, and on the step
size used in the numerical integrations. We examine the effects of
autocorrelations in "simulation time" on the potential and spectrum. We see
effects of decays, or coupling to two-meson states, in the 0++, 1+, and 0-
meson propagators, and we make a preliminary mass computation for a radially
excited 0- meson.Comment: 43 pages, 16 figure
Flow generated by radial flow impellers: PIV measurements and CFD simulations
Particle image velocimetry (PIV) and computational fluid dynamics (CFD) have been used to
investigate the single phase and gas-liquid flow generated by a Scaba SRGT turbine. The key
details of the trailing vortices, the turbulent flow around the impeller blades and the
accumulation of gas have been studied by using PIV measurements and CFD simulations.
Both the experimental and numerical results show that the flow and the trailing vortices are
not altered significantly upon gassing. The simulated results are generally in good agreement
with the experimental findings. The CFD simulations also show that only small low-pressure
regions exist behind the blades of the Scaba turbine compared with the very large lowpressure
zones formed by the Rushton turbine. These results enable better understanding of
the improved performance of the Scaba turbine for gas-liquid dispersions compared with the
Rushton turbine
Lattice Gauge Fixing as Quenching and the Violation of Spectral Positivity
Lattice Landau gauge and other related lattice gauge fixing schemes are known
to violate spectral positivity. The most direct sign of the violation is the
rise of the effective mass as a function of distance. The origin of this
phenomenon lies in the quenched character of the auxiliary field used to
implement lattice gauge fixing, and is similar to quenched QCD in this respect.
This is best studied using the PJLZ formalism, leading to a class of covariant
gauges similar to the one-parameter class of covariant gauges commonly used in
continuum gauge theories. Soluble models are used to illustrate the origin of
the violation of spectral positivity. The phase diagram of the lattice theory,
as a function of the gauge coupling and the gauge-fixing parameter
, is similar to that of the unquenched theory, a Higgs model of a type
first studied by Fradkin and Shenker. The gluon propagator is interpreted as
yielding bound states in the confined phase, and a mixture of fundamental
particles in the Higgs phase, but lattice simulation shows the two phases are
connected. Gauge field propagators from the simulation of an SU(2) lattice
gauge theory on a lattice are well described by a quenched mass-mixing
model. The mass of the lightest state, which we interpret as the gluon mass,
appears to be independent of for sufficiently large .Comment: 28 pages, 14 figures, RevTeX
Double Fe-impurity charge state in the topological insulator BiSe
The influence of individual impurities of Fe on the electronic properties of
topological insulator BiSe is studied by Scanning Tunneling Microscopy.
The microscope tip is used in order to remotely charge/discharge Fe impurities.
The charging process is shown to depend on the impurity location in the
crystallographic unit cell, on the presence of other Fe impurities in the close
vicinity, as well as on the overall doping level of the crystal. We present a
qualitative explanation of the observed phenomena in terms of tip-induced local
band bending. Our observations evidence that the specific impurity neighborhood
and the position of the Fermi energy with respect to the Dirac point and bulk
bands have both to be taken into account when considering the electron
scattering on the disorder in topological insulators.Comment: 10 pages, accepted for publication in Applied Physics Letters, minor
bugs were correcte
The role of Lattice QCD in flavor physics
Understanding flavor physics is one of the most important tasks of particle
physics today, which is motivating an extraordinary experimental and
theoretical investigational effort. Important progress in this field has
already been achieved in the last few years, with Lattice QCD calculations
playing an essential role in this effort. I will describe some lattice
contributions to the studies of flavor physics by focusing particularly on the
determination of the CKM matrix and on the study of CP violation in the
Standard Model.Comment: Talk presented at Lattice2004(plenary), Fermilab, June 21-26, 2004.
10 pages, 7 figure
- …
