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Vibronic (vibrational-electronic) transition is one of the fundamental processes in molecular physics. Indeed, vibronic transition is essential both in radiative and nonradiative photophysical or photochemical properties of molecules such as absorption, emission, Raman scattering, circular dichroism, electron transfer, internal conversion, etc. A detailed understanding of these transitions in varying systems, especially for (large) biomolecules, is thus of particular interest. Describing vibronic transitions in polyatomic systems with hundreds of atoms is, however, a difficult task due to the large number of coupled degrees of freedom. Even within the relatively crude harmonic approximation, such as for Born-Oppenheimer harmonic potential energy surfaces, the brute-force evaluation of Franck-Condon intensity profiles in a time-independent sum-over-states approach is prohibitive for complex systems owing to the vast number of multi-dimensional Franck-Condon integrals. The main goal of this thesis is to describe a variety of molecular vibronic transitions, with special focus on the development of approaches that are applicable to extended molecular systems. We use various representations of Fermi’s golden rule in frequency, time and phase spaces via coherent states to reduce the computational complexity. Although each representation has benefits and shortcomings in its evaluation, they complement each other. Peak assignment of a spectrum can be made directly after calculation in the frequency domain but this sum-over-states route is usually slow. In contrast, computation is considerably faster in the time domain with Fourier transformation but the peak assignment is not directly available. The representation in phase space does not immediately provide physically-meaningful quantities but it can link frequency and time domains. This has been applied to, herein, for example (non-Condon) absorption spectra of benzene and electron transfer of bacteriochlorophyll in the photosynthetic reaction center at finite temperature. This work is a significant step in the treatment of vibronic structure, allowing for the accurate and efficient treatment of complex systems, and provides a new analysis tool for molecular science.
This thesis investigates the development of early cognition in infancy using neural network models. Fundamental events in visual perception such as caused motion, occlusion, object permanence, tracking of moving objects behind occluders, object unity perception and sequence learning are modeled in a unifying computational framework while staying close to experimental data in developmental psychology of infancy. In the first project, the development of causality and occlusion perception in infancy is modeled using a simple, three-layered, recurrent network trained with error backpropagation to predict future inputs (Elman network). The model unifies two infant studies on causality and occlusion perception. Subsequently, in the second project, the established framework is extended to a larger prediction network that models the development of object unity, object permanence and occlusion perception in infancy. It is shown that these different phenomena can be unified into a single theoretical framework thereby explaining experimental data from 14 infant studies. The framework shows that these developmental phenomena can be explained by accurately representing and predicting statistical regularities in the visual environment. The models assume (1) different neuronal populations processing different motion directions of visual stimuli in the visual cortex of the newborn infant which are supported by neuroscientific evidence and (2) available learning algorithms that are guided by the goal of predicting future events. Specifically, the models demonstrate that no innate force notions, motion analysis modules, common motion detectors, specific perceptual rules or abilities to "reason" about entities which have been widely postulated in the developmental literature are necessary for the explanation of the discussed phenomena. Since the prediction of future events turned out to be fruitful for theoretical explanation of various developmental phenomena and a guideline for learning in infancy, the third model addresses the development of visual expectations themselves. A self-organising, fully recurrent neural network model that forms internal representations of input sequences and maps them onto eye movements is proposed. The reinforcement learning architecture (RLA) of the model learns to perform anticipatory eye movements as observed in a range of infant studies. The model suggests that the goal of maximizing the looking time at interesting stimuli guides infants' looking behavior thereby explaining the occurrence and development of anticipatory eye movements and reaction times. In contrast to classical neural network modelling approaches in the developmental literature, the model uses local learning rules and contains several biologically plausible elements like excitatory and inhibitory spiking neurons, spike-timing dependent plasticity (STDP), intrinsic plasticity (IP) and synaptic scaling. It is also novel from the technical point of view as it uses a dynamic recurrent reservoir shaped by various plasticity mechanisms and combines it with reinforcement learning. The model accounts for twelve experimental studies and predicts among others anticipatory behavior for arbitrary sequences and facilitated reacquisition of already learned sequences. All models emphasize the development of the perception of the discussed phenomena thereby addressing the questions of how and why this developmental change takes place - questions that are difficult to be assessed experimentally. Despite the diversity of the discussed phenomena all three projects rely on the same principle: the prediction of future events. This principle suggests that cognitive development in infancy may largely be guided by building internal models and representations of the visual environment and using those models to predict its future development.
Magnetic characteristics of metal organic low-dimensional quantum spin systems at low temperatures
(2010)
In dieser Arbeit wurden neue Klassen von niedrigdimensionalen metallisch-organischen Materialien untersucht, die es ermöglichen interessante quantenkritische Phänomene (quantum critical phenomena, QCP) wie die Bose-Einstein-Kondensation (Bose-Einstein condensation, BEC) der magnetischen Anregung in gekoppelten Spin-Dimer-Systemen, den Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless Übergang (Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless transition, BKT) und die Divergenz des magnetokalorischen Effekts (magnetocaloric effect, MCE) in Quanten-Spinsystemen beim Anlegen eines magnetischen Feldes zu beobachten. Die Niedrigdimensionalität der untersuchten Systeme war sowohl für die theoretische Beschreibung, als auch für die experimentelle Beobachtung der Phänomene von großer Bedeutung. Aus theoretischer Sicht eröffnet die Beschäftigung mit diesen Systemen die Möglichkeit, einfache Modelle zu entwickeln, die exakt lösbar sind und erlaubt somit ein qualitatives Verständnis der magnetischen Phänomene. Von experimenteller Seite ist es von größtem Interesse, dass durch das Zusammenspiel von Niedrigdimensionalität, konkurrierenden Wechselwirkungen und starker Quantenfluktuation exotische und aufregende magnetische Phänomene (quantenkritische Phänomene) entstehen, die mit verschiedenen experimentellen Methoden untersucht werden können. Um die intrinsischen Eigenschaften der quantenkritischen Phänomene zu verstehen ist es wichtig, die Phänomene an einfachen und gut kontrollierbaren niedrigdimensionalen Modellsystemen wie ein- oder zweidimensionalen Systemen zu untersuchen. ...
This dissertation is devoted to the study of thermodynamics for quantum gauge theories.The poor convergence of quantum field theory at finite temperature has been the main obstacle in the practical applications of thermal QCD for decades. In this dissertation I apply hard-thermal-loop perturbation theory, which is a gauge-invariant reorganization of the conventional perturbative expansion for quantum gauge theories to the thermodynamics of QED and Yang-Mills theory to three-loop order. For the Abelian case, I present a calculation of the free energy of a hot gas of electrons and photons by expanding in a power series in mD/T, mf /T and e2, where mD and mf are the photon and electron thermal masses, respectively, and e is the coupling constant.I demonstrate that the hard-thermal-loop perturbation reorganization improves the convergence of the successive approximations to the QED free energy at large coupling, e ~ 2. For the non-Abelian case, I present a calculation of the free energy of a hot gas of gluons by expanding in a power series in mD/T and g2, where mD is the gluon thermal mass and g is the coupling constant. I show that at three-loop order hard-thermal-loop perturbation theory is compatible with lattice results for the pressure, energy density, and entropy down to temperatures T ~ 2 - 3 Tc. The results suggest that HTLpt provides a systematic framework that can be used to calculate static and dynamic quantities for temperatures relevant at LHC.
Direct photon emission from heavy-ion collisions has been calculated and compared to available experimental data. Three different models have been combined to extract direct photons from different environments in a heavy-ion collision: Thermal photons from partonic and hadronic matter have been extracted from relativistic, non-viscous 3+1-dimensional hydrodynamic calculations. Thermal and non-thermal photons from hadronic interactions have been calculated from relativistic transport theory. The impact of different physics assumptions about the thermalized matter has been studied. In pure transport calculations, a viscous hadron gas is present. This is juxtaposed with ideal gases of hadrons with vacuum properties, hadrons which undergo a chiral and deconfinement phase transition and with a system that has a strong first-order phase transition to a deconfined ideal gas of quarks and gluons in the hybrid model calculations with the various Equations of State. The models used for the determination of photons from both hydrodynamic and transport calculations have been elucidated and their numerical properties tested. The origin of direct photons, itemised by emission stage, emission time, channel and baryon number density, has been investigated for various systems, as have the transverse momentum spectra and elliptic flow patterns of direct photons. The differences of photon emission rates from a thermalized transport box and the hadronic photon emission rates that are used in hydrodynamic calculations are found to be very similar, as are the spectra from calculations of heavy-ion collisions with transport model and hybrid model with hadronic Equation of State. Taking into account the full (vacuum) spectral function of the rho-meson decreases the direct photon emission by approximately 10% at low photon transverse momentum. The numerical investigations show that the parameter with the largest impact on the direct photon spectra is the time at which the hydrodynamic description is started. Its variation shows deviations of one to two orders of magnitude. In the regime that can be considered physical, however, the variation is less than a factor of 3. Other parameters change the direct photon yield by up to approximately 20%. In all systems that have been considered -- heavy-ion collisions at E_lab = 35 AGeV and 158 AGeV, (s_NN)**1/2 = 62.4 GeV, 130 GeV and 200 GeV -- thermal emission from a system with partonic degrees of freedom is greatly enhanced over that from hadronic systems, while the difference between the direct photon yields from a viscous and a non-viscous hadronic system (transport vs. hydrodynamics) is found to be very small. Predictions for direct photon emission in central U+U-collisions at 35 AGeV have been made. Since non-soft photon sources are very much suppressed at this energy, experimental results should very easily be able to distinguish between a medium that is entirely hadronic and a system that undergoes a phase transition from partonic to hadronic matter. In the case of lead-lead collisions at 158 AGeV, the situation is not so clear. In central collisions, the complete direct photon spectra including prompt photons seem to favour hadronic emission sources, while the partonic calculations only slightly overpredict the data. In peripheral collisions at the same energy, the hadronic contribution is more than one order of magnitude smaller than the prompt photon contribution, which fits the available experimental data. A similar picture presents itself at higher energies. At RHIC energies, however, the difference between transport calculations and hadronic hybrid model calculations is largest. Hybrid model calculations with partonic degrees of freedom can describe the experimental results in gold-gold collisions at 200 GeV. The elliptic flow component of direct photon emission is found to be consistently positive at small transverse momenta. This means that the initial photon emission from a non-flowing medium does not completely overshine the emission patterns from later stages. High-pt photons dominantly come from the beginning of a heavy-ion collision and therefore do not carry the directed information of an evolving medium.
A basic introduction to RFQs has been given in the first part of this thesis. The principle and the main ideas of the RFQ have been described and a small summary of different resonator concepts has been given. Two different strategies of designing RFQs have been introduced. The analytic description of the electric fields inside the quadrupole channel has been derived and the limitation of these approaches were shown. The main work of this thesis was the implementation and analysis of a Multigrid Poisson solver to describe the potential and electric field of RFQs which are needed to simulate the particle dynamics accurately. The main two ingredients of a Multigrid Poisson solver are the ability of a Gauß-Seidel iteration method to smooth the error of an approximation within a few iteration steps and the coarse grid principle. The smoothing corresponds to a damping of the high frequency components of the error. After the smoothing, the error term can well be approximated on a coarser grid in which the low frequency components of the error on the fine grid are converted to high frequency errors on the coarse grid which can be damped further with the same Gauß-Seidel method. After implementation, the multigrid Poisson solver was analyzed using two different type of test problems: with and without a charge density. After illustrating the results of the multigrid Poisson solver, a comparison to the field of the old multipole expansion method was made. The multipole expansion method is an accurate representation of the field within the minimum aperture, as limited by cylindrical symmetry. Within these limitations the multigrid Poisson solver and the multipole expansion method agree well. Beyond the limitation the two method give different fields. It was shown that particles leave the region in which the multipole expansion method gives correct fields and that the transmission is affected therefrom as well as the single particle dynamic. The multigridPoisson solver also gives a more realistic description of the field in the beginning of the RFQ, because it takes the tank wall into account, and this effect is shown as well. Closing the analysis of the external field, the transmission and fraction of accelerated particles of the set of 12 RFQs for the two different methods were shown. For RFQs with small apertures and big modulations the two different method give different values for the transmission due to the limitation of the multipole expansion method. The internal space charge fields without images was analyzed at the level of single particle dynamic and compared to the well known SCHEFF routine from LANL, showing major differences for the analyzed particle. For comparing influences on the transmissions of the set of 12 RFQs a third space charge routine (PICNIC) was considered as well. The basic shape of the transmission curve was the same independent of space charge routines, but the absolute values differ a little from routine to routine, with SCHEFF about 2% lower than the other routines. The multigrid Poisson solver and PICNIC agree quite well (less than 1%), but PICNIC has an extremely long running time. The major advantage of the multigrid Poisson solver in calculating space charge effects compared to the other two routines used here is that the Poisson solver can take the effect of image charges on the electrodes into account by just changing the boundaries to have the shape of the vanes whereas all other settings remain unchanged. It was demonstrated that the effect of image charges on the vanes on the space charge field is very big in the region close to the electrodes. Particles in that region will see a stronger transversely defocusing force than without images. The result is that the transmission decreases by as much as 10% which is considerably more than determined by other (inexact) routines before. This is an important result, because knowing about the big effect of image charges on the electrodes it allows it to taken into account while designing the RFQ to increase the performance of the machine. It is also an important factor in resolving the traditional difference observed between the transmission of actual RFQs and the transmission predicted by earlier simulations. In the last chapter of this thesis some experimental work on the MAFF (Munich Accelerator for Fission Fragments) IH-RFQ is described. The machine was assembled in Frankfurt and a beam test stand was built. The shunt impedance of the structure was measured using different techniques, the output energy of the structure were measured and finally its transmission was determined and compared to the beam dynamics simulations of the RFQ. Unfortunately, the transmission measurements were done without exact knowledge of the beam’s emittance. So the comparison to the simulation is somewhat rough, but with a reasonable guess of the emittance a good comparison between the measurement and simulation was obtained.
In order to fully understand the new state of matter formed in heavy ion collisions, it is vital to isolate the always present final state hadronic contributions within the primary Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP) experimental signatures. Previously, the hadronic contributions were determined using the properties of the known mesons and baryons. However, according to Hagedorn, hadrons should follow an exponential mass spectrum, which the known hadrons follow only up to masses of M = 2 GeV. Beyond this point the mass spectrum is flat, which indicates that there are "missing" hadrons, that could potentially contribute significantly to experimental observables. In this thesis I investigate the influence of these "missing" Hagedorn states on various experimental signatures of QGP. Strangeness enhancement is considered a signal for QGP because hadronic interactions (even including multi-mesonic reactions) underpredict the hadronic yields (especially for strange particles) at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, RHIC. One can conclude that the time scales to produce the required amount of hadronic yields are too long to allow for the hadrons to reach chemical equilibrium within the lifetime of a cooling hadronic fireball. Because gluon fusion can quickly produce strange quarks, it has been suggested that the hadrons are born into chemical equilibrium following the Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) phase transition. However, we show here that the missing Hagedorn states provide extra degrees of freedom that can contribute to fast chemical equilibration times for a hadron gas. We develop a dynamical scheme in which possible Hagedorn states contribute to fast chemical equilibration times of X X pairs (where X = p, K, Lambda, or Omega) inside a hadron gas and just below the critical temperature. Within this scheme, we use master equations and derive various analytical estimates for the chemical equilibration times. Applying a Bjorken picture to the expanding fireball, the hadrons can, indeed, quickly chemically equilibrate for both an initial overpopulation or underpopulation of Hagedorn resonances. We compare the thermodynamic properties of our model to recent lattice results and find that for both critical temperatures, Tc = 176 MeV and Tc = 196 MeV, the hadrons can reach chemical equilibrium on very short time scales. Furthermore the ratios p/pi, K/pi , Lambda/pi, and Omega/pi match experimental values well in our dynamical scenario. The effects of the "missing" Hagedorn states are not limited to the chemical equilibration time. Many believe that the new state of matter formed at RHIC is the closet to a perfect fluid found in nature, which implies that it has a small shear viscosity to entropy density ratio close to the bound derived using the uncertainty principle. Our hadron resonance gas model, including the additional Hagedorn states, is used to obtain an upper bound on the shear viscosity to entropy density ratio, eta/s, of hadronic matter near Tc that is close to 1/(4pi). Furthermore, the large trace anomaly and the small speed of sound near Tc computed within this model agree well with recent lattice calculations. We also comment on the behavior of the bulk viscosity to entropy density ratio of hadronic matter close to the phase transition, which qualitatively has a different behavior close to Tc than a hadron gas model with only the known resonances. We show how the measured particle ratios can be used to provide non-trivial information about Tc of the QCD phase transition. This is obtained by including the effects of highly massive Hagedorn resonances on statistical models, which are generally used to describe hadronic yields. The inclusion of the "missing" Hagedorn states creates a dependence of the thermal fits on the Hagedorn temperature, TH , and leads to a slight overall improvement of thermal fits. We find that for Au+Au collisions at RHIC at sqrt{sN N} = 200 GeV the best square fit measure, chi^2 , occurs at TH = Tc = 176 MeV and produces a chemical freeze-out temperature of 172.6 MeV and a baryon chemical potential of 39.7 MeV.
Within this thesis, an experimental study of the photo double ionization (PDI) and the simultaneous ionization-excitation is performed for lithium in different initial states Li (1s22l) (l = s, p). The excess energy of the linearly polarized VUV-light is between 4 and 12 eV above the PDI-threshold. Three forefront technologies are combined: a magneto-optical trap (MOT) for lithium generating an ultra-cold and, by means of optical pumping, a state-prepared target; a reaction microscope (ReMi), enabling the momentum resolved detection of all reaction fragments with high-resolution and the free-electron laser in Hamburg (FLASH), providing an unprecedented brilliant photon beam at favourable time structure to access small cross sections. Close to threshold the total as well as differential PDI cross sections are observed to critically depend on the excitation level and the symmetry of the initial state. For the excited state Li (1s22p) the PDI dynamics strongly depends on the alignment of the 2p-orbital with respect to the VUV-light polarization and, thus, from the population of the magnetic substates (mp = 0, ±1). This alignment sensitivity decreases for increasing excess energy and is completely absent for ionization-excitation. Time-dependent close-coupling calculations are able to reproduce the experimental total cross sections with deviations of at most 30%. All the experimental observations can be consistently understood in terms of the long range electron correlation among the continuum electrons which gives rise to their preferential back-to-back emission. This alignment effect, which is observed here for the first time, allows controlling the PDI dynamics through a purely geometrical modification of the target initial state without changing its internal energy.
Lattice Yang-Mills theories at finite temperature can be mapped onto effective 3d spin systems, thus facilitating their numerical investigation. Using strong-coupling expansions we derive effective actions for Polyakov loops in the SU(2) and SU(3) cases and investigate the effect of higher order corrections. Once a formulation is obtained which allows for Monte Carlo analysis, the nature of the phase transition in both classes of models is investigated numerically, and the results are then used to predict – with an accuracy within a few percent – the deconfinement point in the original 4d Yang-Mills pure gauge theories, for a series of values of Nt at once.
To investigate the formation and the propagation of relativistic shock waves in viscous gluon matter we solve the relativistic Riemann problem using a microscopic parton cascade. We demonstrate the transition from ideal to viscous shock waves by varying the shear viscosity to entropy density ratio n/s. Furthermore we compare our results with those obtained by solving the relativistic causal dissipative fluid equations of Israel and Stewart (IS), in order to show the validity of the IS hydrodynamics. Employing the parton cascade we also investigate the formation of Mach shocks induced by a high-energy gluon traversing viscous gluon matter. For n/s = 0.08 a Mach cone structure is observed, whereas the signal smears out for n/s >=0.32.