15,711 research outputs found
Wavefunctions and counting formulas for quasiholes of clustered quantum Hall states on a sphere
The quasiholes of the Read-Rezayi clustered quantum Hall states are
considered, for any number of particles and quasiholes on a sphere, and for any
degree k of clustering. A set of trial wavefunctions, that are zero-energy
eigenstates of a k+1-body interaction, and so are symmetric polynomials that
vanish when any k+1 particle coordinates are equal, is obtained explicitly and
proved to be both complete and linearly independent. Formulas for the number of
states are obtained, without the use of (but in agreement with) conformal field
theory, and extended to give the number of states for each angular momentum. An
interesting recursive structure emerges in the states that relates those for k
to those for k-1. It is pointed out that the same numbers of zero-energy states
can be proved to occur in certain one-dimensional models that have recently
been obtained as limits of the two-dimensional k+1-body interaction
Hamiltonians, using results from the combinatorial literature.Comment: 9 pages. v2: minor corrections; additional references; note added on
connection with one-dimensional Hamiltonians of recent interes
Estimates of Marine Mammal, Sea Turtle, and Seabird Mortality in the California Drift Gillnet Fishery for Swordfish and Thresher Shark, 1996–2002
Estimates of incidental marine mammal, sea turtle, and seabird mortality in the California drift gillnet fishery
for broadbill swordfish, Xiphias gladius, and common thresher shark, Alopias vulpinus, are summarized for the 7-year period, 1996 to 2002. Fishery observer coverage was 19% over the period (3,369 days observed/17,649 days fished). An experiment to test the effectiveness of acoustic
pingers on reducing marine mammal entanglements in this fishery began in 1996 and resulted in statistically significant reductions in marine mammal bycatch. The most commonly entangled marine mammal species were the short-beaked common dolphin, Delphinus delphis; California sea
lion, Zalophus californianus; and northern right whale dolphin, Lissodelphis borealis. Estimated mortality by species (CV and observed mortality in parentheses) from
1996 to 2002 is 861 (0.11, 133) short-beaked common dolphins; 553 (0.16, 103) California sea lions; 151 (0.25, 31) northern right whale dolphins; 150 (0.21, 27) northern
elephant seals, Mirounga angustirostris; 54 (0.41, 10) long-beaked common dolphins, Delphinus capensis; 44 (0.53, 6) Dall’s porpoise, Phocoenoides dalli; 19 (0.60, 5) Risso’s dolphins, Grampus griseus; 11 (0.71, 2) gray whales, Eschrichtius robustus; 7 (0.83, 2) sperm whales, Physeter
macrocephalus; 7 (0.96, 1) short-finned pilot whales, Globicephala macrorhychus; 12 (1.06, 1) minke whales, Balaenoptera acutorostrata; 5 (1.05, 1) fin whales, Balaenoptera physalus; 11 (0.68, 2) unidentified pinnipeds; 33 (0.52, 4) leatherback turtles, Dermochelys coriacea; 18 (0.57, 3) loggerhead turtles, Caretta caretta; 13 (0.73, 3)
northern fulmars, Fulmarus glacialis; and 6 (0.86, 2) unidentified birds
Silent emergency alarm system for schools and the like
An emergency alert system is described. In a school each classroom (or other area) is instrumented with a hidden microphone and receiver tuned to a non-audible frequency. The receivers' outputs are connected to a central display unit in the school's administrative office. Each instructor is provided with a small concealable transmitter which, when hand activated by the instructor upon the occurrance of any emergency, generates a non-audible signal at the receiver's tuned frequency
A twisted conformal field theory description of the Quantum Hall Effect
We construct an effective conformal field theory by using a procedure which
induces twisted boundary conditions for the fundamental scalar fields. That
allows to describe a quantum Hall fluid at Jain hierarchical filling,
nu=m/(2pm+1), in terms of one charged scalar field and m-1 neutral ones. Then
the resulting algebra of the chiral primary fields is U(1)xW_m. Finally the
ground state wave functions are given as correlators of appropriate composite
fields (a-electrons).Comment: 11 pages, plain Late
A dipole interpretation of the state
We consider the problem of Bosonic particles interacting repulsively in a
strong magnetic field at the filling factor . We project the system in
the Lowest Landau Level and set up a formalism to map the dynamics into an
interacting Fermion system. Within a mean field approximation we find that the
composite Fermions behave as a gas of neutral dipoles and we expect that the
low energy limit also describes the physical Fermionic state.Comment: flatex t157_txt.tex, 1 file Submitted to: Nucl. Phys.
Efficient operation of a high-power X-band gyroklystron
Experimental studies of amplification in a two-cavity X-band gyroklystron are reported. The system utilizes a thermionic magnetron injection gun at voltages up to 440 kV and currents up to 190 A in 1-μs pulses. Optimum performance is achieved by tapering the magnetic-field profile. Peak powers of 20 MW in the TE01 mode at 9.87 GHz are measured with calibrated crystals and with methanol calorimetry. Resultant efficiencies are in excess of 31% and large-signal gains surpass 26 dB. The experimental results are in good agreement with simulated results from a partially self-consistent, nonlinear, steady-state code
Ground State Entropy of Potts Antiferromagnets on Cyclic Polygon Chain Graphs
We present exact calculations of chromatic polynomials for families of cyclic
graphs consisting of linked polygons, where the polygons may be adjacent or
separated by a given number of bonds. From these we calculate the (exponential
of the) ground state entropy, , for the q-state Potts model on these graphs
in the limit of infinitely many vertices. A number of properties are proved
concerning the continuous locus, , of nonanalyticities in . Our
results provide further evidence for a general rule concerning the maximal
region in the complex q plane to which one can analytically continue from the
physical interval where .Comment: 27 pages, Latex, 17 figs. J. Phys. A, in pres
Interaction between static holes in a quantum dimer model on the kagome lattice
A quantum dimer model (QDM) on the kagome lattice with an extensive
ground-state entropy was recently introduced [Phys. Rev. B 67, 214413 (2003)].
The ground-state energy of this QDM in presence of one and two static holes is
investigated by means of exact diagonalizations on lattices containing up to
144 kagome sites. The interaction energy between the holes (at distances up to
7 lattice spacings) is evaluated and the results show no indication of
confinement at large hole separations.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. IOP style files included. To appear in J. Phys.:
Condens. Matter, Proceedings of the HFM2003 conference, Grenobl
Extended sources in the XMM-Newton slew survey
The low background, good spatial resolution and great sensitivity of the
EPIC-pn camera on XMM-Newton give useful limits for the detection of extended
sources even during the short exposures made during slewing maneouvers. In this
paper we attempt to illustrate the potential of the XMM-Newton slew survey as a
tool for analysing flux-limited samples of clusters of galaxies and other
sources of spatially extended X-ray emission.Comment: 2 pages, 4 figures, to appear in the proceedings of "The X-ray
Universe 2005", San Lorenzo de El Escorial (Spain), 26-30 September 200
The XMM-Newton Slew Survey: towards the XMMSL1 catalogue
The XMM-Newton satellite is the most sensitive X-ray observatory flown to
date due to the great collecting area of its mirrors coupled with the high
quantum efficiency of the EPIC detectors. It performs slewing manoeuvers
between observation targets tracking almost circular orbits through the
ecliptic poles due to the Sun constraint. Slews are made with the EPIC cameras
open and the other instruments closed, operating with the observing mode set to
the one of the previous pointed observation and the medium filter in place.
Slew observations from the EPIC-pn camera in FF, eFF and LW modes provide
data, resulting in a maximum of 15 seconds of on-source time. These data can be
used to give a uniform survey of the X-ray sky, at great sensitivity in the
hard band compared with other X-ray all-sky surveys.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of "The X-ray
Universe 2005", San Lorenzo de El Escorial (Spain), 26-30 September 200
- …
