Search results for "Space telescope"

showing 10 items of 123 documents

Universality of Many-Body States in Rotating Bose and Fermi Systems

2008

We propose a universal transformation from a many-boson state to a corresponding many-fermion state in the lowest Landau level approximation of rotating many-body systems, inspired by the Laughlin wave function and by the Jain composite-fermion construction. We employ the exact-diagonalization technique for finding the many-body states. The overlap between the transformed boson ground state and the true fermion ground state is calculated in order to measure the quality of the transformation. For very small and high angular momenta, the overlap is typically above 90%. For intermediate angular momenta, mixing between states complicates the picture and leads to small ground-state overlaps at s…

PhysicsCondensed Matter::Quantum GasesCondensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale PhysicsFOS: Physical sciencesFermionAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsMany bodyUniversality (dynamical systems)Condensed Matter - Other Condensed MatterQuantum mechanicsMesoscale and Nanoscale Physics (cond-mat.mes-hall)Mathematics::Metric GeometryWave functionGround stateOther Condensed Matter (cond-mat.other)BosonFermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope
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Scissors modes of two-component degenerate gases: Bose-Bose and Bose-Fermi mixtures

2003

We investigate the scissors modes in binary mixtures of degenerate dilute quantum gases, for both Bose-Bose and Bose-Fermi mixtures. For the latter we consider both the superfluid and normal hydrodynamic and collisionless regimes. We analyze the dependence of the frequencies of the scissors modes and their character as a function of the Bose-Fermi coupling and the trap geometry. We show that the scissors mode can reveal a clear trace of the hydrodynamic behavior of the Fermi gas.

PhysicsCondensed Matter::Quantum GasesCondensed matter physicsComponent (thermodynamics)Condensed Matter::OtherDegenerate energy levelsFOS: Physical sciencesFermionCondensed Matter - Soft Condensed MatterAtomic and Molecular Physics and Opticslaw.inventionSuperfluidityCoupling (physics)lawSoft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft)Fermi gasBose–Einstein condensateFermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope
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Free-fall expansion of finite-temperature Bose-Einstein condensed gas in the non Thomas-Fermi regime

2008

We report on our study of the free-fall expansion of a finite-temperature Bose-Einstein condensed cloud of 87Rb. The experiments are performed with a variable total number of atoms while keeping constant the number of atoms in the condensate. The results provide evidence that the BEC dynamics depends on the interaction with thermal fraction. In particular, they provide experimental evidence that thermal cloud compresses the condensate.

PhysicsCondensed Matter::Quantum GasesCondensed matter physicsCondensed Matter::OtherFOS: Physical sciencesFraction (chemistry)Condensed Matter PhysicsAtomic and Molecular Physics and Opticslaw.inventionCondensed Matter - Other Condensed MatterlawThermalConstant (mathematics)Bose–Einstein condensateOther Condensed Matter (cond-mat.other)Fermi Gamma-ray Space TelescopeVariable (mathematics)
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Coherence and clock shifts in ultracold fermi gases with resonant interactions.

2007

Using arguments based on sum rules, we derive a general result for the average shifts of rf lines in Fermi gases in terms of interatomic interaction strengths and two-particle correlation functions. We show that near an interaction resonance shifts vary inversely with the atomic scattering length, rather than linearly as in dilute gases, thus accounting for the experimental observation that clock shifts remain finite at Feshbach resonances.

PhysicsCondensed Matter::Quantum GasesStrongly Correlated Electrons (cond-mat.str-el)Condensed Matter - SuperconductivityGeneral Physics and AstronomyResonanceFOS: Physical sciencesScattering lengthSuperconductivity (cond-mat.supr-con)Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated ElectronsAtomic physicsFermi gasFeshbach resonanceFermi Gamma-ray Space TelescopeCoherence (physics)Physical review letters
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Strongly correlated one-dimensional Bose–Fermi quantum mixtures: symmetry and correlations

2017

We consider multi-component quantum mixtures (bosonic, fermionic, or mixed) with strongly repulsive contact interactions in a one-dimensional harmonic trap. In the limit of infinitely strong repulsion and zero temperature, using the class-sum method, we study the symmetries of the spatial wave function of the mixture. We find that the ground state of the system has the most symmetric spatial wave function allowed by the type of mixture. This provides an example of the generalized Lieb-Mattis theorem. Furthermore, we show that the symmetry properties of the mixture are embedded in the large-momentum tails of the momentum distribution, which we evaluate both at infinite repulsion by an exact …

PhysicsCondensed Matter::Quantum Gases[PHYS]Physics [physics][PHYS.COND.GAS]Physics [physics]/Condensed Matter [cond-mat]/Quantum Gases [cond-mat.quant-gas]FOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and Astronomy01 natural sciencesSymmetry (physics)010305 fluids & plasmasQuantum Gases (cond-mat.quant-gas)Quantum mechanics0103 physical sciences[PHYS.COND]Physics [physics]/Condensed Matter [cond-mat]010306 general physicsCondensed Matter - Quantum GasesQuantumComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSFermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope
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Experimental Manifestations of Fermion Condensation in Strongly Correlated Fermi Systems

2019

Many strongly correlated Fermi systems including heavy-fermion (HF) metals and high-Tc superconductors belong to that class of quantum many-body systems for which the Landau–Fermi liquid theory fails. Instead, these systems exhibit non-Fermi-liquid properties that arise from violation of time-reversal (T) and particle– hole (C) invariance. Here we consider two most recent experimental puzzles, which cannot be explained neither within the Landau–Fermi liquid picture nor can they be made intelligible by the approaches like the Hubbard model and/or the Kondo effect, which are commonly used to spell out the typical non-Fermi-liquid behavior. The first experimental puzzle is the asymmetric (with…

PhysicsCondensed matter physicsCondensationGeneral Physics and AstronomyFermionFermi Gamma-ray Space TelescopeActa Physica Polonica A
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Fermion Condensation in Strongly Interacting Fermi Liquids

2017

This article discusses the construction of a theory which is capable to explain so-called non-Fermi liquid behavior of strongly correlated Fermi systems. We show that such explanation can be done within the framework of a so-called fermion condensation approach. In this approach, as a result of fermion condensation quantum phase transition, ordinary Landau quasiparticles do not decay, but reborn, gaining new properties, as Phoenix from the ashes. The physical reason for that is altering of Fermi surface topology. To be more specific, in contrast to standard Landau paradigm stating that the quasiparticle effective mass does not depend on external stimuli like magnetic field and/or temperatur…

PhysicsCondensed matter physicsHeavy fermionCondensationheavy-fermion compoundsFermionFermi liquid theoryquantum phase transitionfermion condensationNon-Fermi liquid behaviorFermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope
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Dark matter scattering on electrons: Accurate calculations of atomic excitations and implications for the DAMA signal

2016

We revisit the WIMP-type dark matter scattering on electrons that results in atomic ionization and can manifest itself in a variety of existing direct-detection experiments. Unlike the WIMP-nucleon scattering, where current experiments probe typical interaction strengths much smaller than the Fermi constant, the scattering on electrons requires a much stronger interaction to be detectable, which in turn requires new light force carriers. We account for such new forces explicitly, by introducing a mediator particle with scalar or vector couplings to dark matter and to electrons. We then perform state-of-the-art numerical calculations of atomic ionization relevant to the existing experiments.…

PhysicsCosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)Atomic Physics (physics.atom-ph)010308 nuclear & particles physicsScatteringPhysics beyond the Standard ModelDark matterScalar (mathematics)FOS: Physical sciencesElectron01 natural sciencesHigh Energy Physics - ExperimentPhysics - Atomic PhysicsComputational physicsHigh Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex)High Energy Physics - PhenomenologyHigh Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph)Ionization0103 physical sciencesAtomic physics010306 general physicsRelativistic quantum chemistryAstrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic AstrophysicsFermi Gamma-ray Space TelescopePhysical Review D
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A measurement of the tau lifetime

1993

The tau lepton lifetime is measured using four different methods with the DELPHI detector. Three measurements using one prong decays are combined, accounting for correlations, resulting in tau(tau) = 298 +/- 7 (stat.) +/- 4 (syst.) fs while the decay length distribution of three prong decays gives tau(tau) = 298 +/- 13 (stat.) +/- 5 (syst.) fs. The combined result is tau(tau) = 298 +/- 7 fs. The ratio of the Fermi coupling constant from tau decay relative to that from muon decay is found to be 0.985 +/- 0.013, compatible with lepton universality.

PhysicsCoupling constantParticle physicsArgusNuclear and High Energy PhysicsMuonPhysics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)010308 nuclear & particles physicsElectron–positron annihilation01 natural sciences7. Clean energyNuclear physics0103 physical sciencesDecay lengthLEPTONS[PHYS.HEXP]Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex]High Energy Physics::ExperimentFísica nuclearCombined result010306 general physicscomputerParticle Physics - ExperimentFermi Gamma-ray Space TelescopeLeptoncomputer.programming_language
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CONSTRUCTION OF METASTABLE STATES IN QUANTUM ELECTRODYNAMICS

2004

In this paper, we construct metastable states of atoms interacting with the quantized radiation field. These states emerge from the excited bound states of the non-interacting system. We prove that these states obey an exponential time-decay law. In detail, we show that their decay is given by an exponential function in time, predicted by Fermi's Golden Rule, plus a small remainder term. The latter is proportional to the (4+β)th power of the coupling constant and decays algebraically in time. As a result, though it is small, it dominates the decay for large times. A central point of the paper is that our remainder term is significantly smaller than the one previously obtained in [1] and as…

PhysicsCoupling constantStatistical and Nonlinear PhysicsExponential functionsymbols.namesakeQuantum mechanicsQuantum electrodynamicsMetastabilityExcited stateBound statesymbolsFermi's golden ruleRemainderMathematical PhysicsFermi Gamma-ray Space TelescopeReviews in Mathematical Physics
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