
Superfluid Helium 3: Link between Condensed Matter Physics and
... Soon after the discovery of the phase transitions by Osheroff et al.12 it was possible to identify altogether three distinct stable superfluid phases of bulk 3 He ; these are referred to as the A, B and A1 phases. In zero magnetic field only the A and B phases are stable. In particular, in zero fiel ...
... Soon after the discovery of the phase transitions by Osheroff et al.12 it was possible to identify altogether three distinct stable superfluid phases of bulk 3 He ; these are referred to as the A, B and A1 phases. In zero magnetic field only the A and B phases are stable. In particular, in zero fiel ...
Periodic orbit analysis of molecular vibrational spectra: Spectral
... localization.12 Periodic orbits and their bifurcations also form the basis of Kellman’s approach to the analysis of resonantly coupled modes, in which a systematic study is made of bifurcations on the polyad phase sphere.10 A key to the more systematic application of po theory to vibrational spectra ...
... localization.12 Periodic orbits and their bifurcations also form the basis of Kellman’s approach to the analysis of resonantly coupled modes, in which a systematic study is made of bifurcations on the polyad phase sphere.10 A key to the more systematic application of po theory to vibrational spectra ...
Charge Rearrangement and Screening in a Quantum Point Contact S. Lu¨scher,
... pinch-off relative to those for higher modes in the experiment [Fig. 2(b)] is thus evidence of the importance of exchange-correlation effects to charge distribution in a QPC. For higher modes, kinetic energy plays an important role: lowering kinetic energy by doubling effective mass [dashed curve, F ...
... pinch-off relative to those for higher modes in the experiment [Fig. 2(b)] is thus evidence of the importance of exchange-correlation effects to charge distribution in a QPC. For higher modes, kinetic energy plays an important role: lowering kinetic energy by doubling effective mass [dashed curve, F ...
litera_1
... cattle guards refuse to cross them. This is evidence of the effects of morphic resonance.) The evolution of biological forms involves not merely the evolution of gene pools within the species but also the evolution of the morphic fields characterizing that species. And because of this, evolutionary ...
... cattle guards refuse to cross them. This is evidence of the effects of morphic resonance.) The evolution of biological forms involves not merely the evolution of gene pools within the species but also the evolution of the morphic fields characterizing that species. And because of this, evolutionary ...
Quantum connection and Poincare19 e-
... The present paper is aimed at analysing some aspects of the general relativistic classical and quantum mechanics on a curved spacetime with absolute time, in terms of recent formulations of a finite order Lagrangian bicomplex [Kru90, Kru95] and of a covariant approach to classical and quantum mechan ...
... The present paper is aimed at analysing some aspects of the general relativistic classical and quantum mechanics on a curved spacetime with absolute time, in terms of recent formulations of a finite order Lagrangian bicomplex [Kru90, Kru95] and of a covariant approach to classical and quantum mechan ...
Louis de Broglie
... photoelectric effect and corpuscular spectra. I published, with him or separately, a series of notes on the quantum theory of these phenomena which, although classical now, was not well established then.” In 1923 de Broglie brilliantly brought together the concepts of the particle and the wave. He w ...
... photoelectric effect and corpuscular spectra. I published, with him or separately, a series of notes on the quantum theory of these phenomena which, although classical now, was not well established then.” In 1923 de Broglie brilliantly brought together the concepts of the particle and the wave. He w ...
THE TRIANGLE INEQUALITY AND THE DUAL GROMOV
... Inspired by the groundbreaking work of Connes [2, 3] in noncommutative geometry and its metric aspects, Rieffel introduced the notion of a compact quantum metric space [14,16–19] and the quantum Gromov-Hausdorff distance [20,23–25,27], a fascinating generalization of Gromov-Hausdorff distance to non ...
... Inspired by the groundbreaking work of Connes [2, 3] in noncommutative geometry and its metric aspects, Rieffel introduced the notion of a compact quantum metric space [14,16–19] and the quantum Gromov-Hausdorff distance [20,23–25,27], a fascinating generalization of Gromov-Hausdorff distance to non ...
University of London Physics MSci STUDENT HANDBOOK
... Each course has a code number used by the Intercollegiate MSci board, shown at the left hand side. Colleges use local codes for the courses they teach. The number is usually the same as the MSci code, but some are different; beware! All courses are a half course unit (15 credits). In QMUL language, ...
... Each course has a code number used by the Intercollegiate MSci board, shown at the left hand side. Colleges use local codes for the courses they teach. The number is usually the same as the MSci code, but some are different; beware! All courses are a half course unit (15 credits). In QMUL language, ...
Bell's theorem
Bell's theorem is a ‘no-go theorem’ that draws an important distinction between quantum mechanics (QM) and the world as described by classical mechanics. This theorem is named after John Stewart Bell.In its simplest form, Bell's theorem states:Cornell solid-state physicist David Mermin has described the appraisals of the importance of Bell's theorem in the physics community as ranging from ""indifference"" to ""wild extravagance"". Lawrence Berkeley particle physicist Henry Stapp declared: ""Bell's theorem is the most profound discovery of science.""Bell's theorem rules out local hidden variables as a viable explanation of quantum mechanics (though it still leaves the door open for non-local hidden variables). Bell concluded:Bell summarized one of the least popular ways to address the theorem, superdeterminism, in a 1985 BBC Radio interview: