59,452 research outputs found

    Efficiency of Nonlinear Particle Acceleration at Cosmic Structure Shocks

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    We have calculated the evolution of cosmic ray (CR) modified astrophysical shocks for a wide range of shock Mach numbers and shock speeds through numerical simulations of diffusive shock acceleration (DSA) in 1D quasi- parallel plane shocks. The simulations include thermal leakage injection of seed CRs, as well as pre-existing, upstream CR populations. Bohm-like diffusion is assumed. We model shocks similar to those expected around cosmic structure pancakes as well as other accretion shocks driven by flows with upstream gas temperatures in the range T0=104107.6T_0=10^4-10^{7.6}K and shock Mach numbers spanning Ms=2.4133M_s=2.4-133. We show that CR modified shocks evolve to time-asymptotic states by the time injected particles are accelerated to moderately relativistic energies (p/mc \gsim 1), and that two shocks with the same Mach number, but with different shock speeds, evolve qualitatively similarly when the results are presented in terms of a characteristic diffusion length and diffusion time. For these models the time asymptotic value for the CR acceleration efficiency is controlled mainly by shock Mach number. The modeled high Mach number shocks all evolve towards efficiencies 50\sim 50%, regardless of the upstream CR pressure. On the other hand, the upstream CR pressure increases the overall CR energy in moderate strength shocks (MsafewM_s \sim {\rm a few}). (abridged)Comment: 23 pages, 12 ps figures, accepted for Astrophysical Journal (Feb. 10, 2005

    Schottky barrier and contact resistance of InSb nanowire field effect transistors

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    Understanding of the electrical contact properties of semiconductor nanowire (NW) field effect transistors (FETs) plays a crucial role in employing semiconducting NWs as building blocks for future nanoelectronic devices and in the study of fundamental physics problems. Here, we report on a study of the contact properties of Ti/Au, a widely used contact metal combination, to individual InSb NWs via both two-probe and four-probe transport measurements. We show that a Schottky barrier of height ΦSB20 meV\Phi_{\rm{SB}}\sim20\ \rm{meV} is present at the metal-InSb NW interfaces and its effective height is gate tunable. The contact resistance (RcR_{\rm{c}}) in the InSb NWFETs is also analyzed by magnetotransport measurements at low temperatures. It is found that RcR_{\rm{c}} at on-state exhibits a pronounced magnetic field dependent feature, namely it is increased strongly with increasing magnetic field after an onset field BcB_{\rm{c}}. A qualitative picture that takes into account magnetic depopulation of subbands in the NWs is provided to explain the observation. Our results provide a solid experimental evidence for the presence of a Schottky barrier at Ti/Au-InSb NW interfaces and can be used as a basis for design and fabrication of novel InSb NW based nanoelectronic devices and quantum devices.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure

    Asymptotic behavior of A + B --> inert for particles with a drift

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    We consider the asymptotic behavior of the (one dimensional) two-species annihilation reaction A + B --> 0, where both species have a uniform drift in the same direction and like species have a hard core exclusion. Extensive numerical simulations show that starting with an initially random distribution of A's and B's at equal concentration the density decays like t^{-1/3} for long times. This process is thus in a different universality class from the cases without drift or with drift in different directions for the different species.Comment: LaTeX, 6pp including 3 figures in LaTeX picture mod

    Spatial Organization in the Reaction A + B --> inert for Particles with a Drift

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    We describe the spatial structure of particles in the (one dimensional) two-species annihilation reaction A + B --> 0, where both species have a uniform drift in the same direction and like species have a hard core exclusion. For the case of equal initial concentration, at long times, there are three relevant length scales: the typical distance between similar (neighboring) particles, the typical distance between dissimilar (neighboring) particles, and the typical size of a cluster of one type of particles. These length scales are found to be generically different than that found for particles without a drift.Comment: 10 pp of gzipped uuencoded postscrip

    An alternative formulation of classical electromagnetic duality

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    By introducing a doublet of electromagnetic four dimensional vector potentials, we set up a manifestly Lorentz covariant and SO(2) duality invariant classical field theory of electric and magnetic charges. In our formulation one does not need to introduce the concept of Dirac string.Comment: 14 pages, no figures, Latex, minor corrections, references and acknowledgements adde
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