637 research outputs found
Calculations of the A_1 phonon frequency in photoexcited Tellurium
Calculations of the A_1 phonon frequency in photoexcited tellurium are
presented. The phonon frequency as a function of photoexcited carrier density
and phonon amplitude is determined. Recent pump probe experiments are
interpreted in the light of these calculatons. It is proposed that, in
conjunction with measurements of the phonon period in ultra-fast pump-probe
reflectivity experiments, the calculated frequency shifts can be used to infer
the evolution of the density of photoexcited carriers on a sub-picosecond
time-scale.Comment: 15 pages Latex, 3 postscript figure
Theory for the ultrafast ablation of graphite films
The physical mechanisms for damage formation in graphite films induced by
femtosecond laser pulses are analyzed using a microscopic electronic theory. We
describe the nonequilibrium dynamics of electrons and lattice by performing
molecular dynamics simulations on time-dependent potential energy surfaces. We
show that graphite has the unique property of exhibiting two distinct laser
induced structural instabilities. For high absorbed energies (> 3.3 eV/atom) we
find nonequilibrium melting followed by fast evaporation. For low intensities
above the damage threshold (> 2.0 eV/atom) ablation occurs via removal of
intact graphite sheets.Comment: 5 pages RevTeX, 3 PostScript figures, submitted to Phys. Re
Formation of dodecagonal quasicrystals in two-dimensional systems of patchy particles
The behaviour of two-dimensional patchy particles with 5 and 7
regularly-arranged patches is investigated by computer simulation. For higher
pressures and wider patch widths, hexagonal crystals have the lowest enthalpy,
whereas at lower pressures and for narrower patches, lower-density crystals
with five nearest neighbours and that are based on the (3^2,4,3,4) tiling of
squares and triangles become lower in enthalpy. Interestingly, in regions of
parameter space near to that where the hexagonal crystals become stable,
quasicrystalline structures with dodecagonal symmetry form on cooling from high
temperature. These quasicrystals can be considered as tilings of squares and
triangles, and are probably stabilized by the large configurational entropy
associated with all the different possible such tilings. The potential for
experimentally realizing such structures using DNA multi-arm motifs are
discussed.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure
Leibniz Seminorms and Best Approximation from C*-subalgebras
We show that if B is a C*-subalgebra of a C*-algebra A such that B contains a
bounded approximate identity for A, and if L is the pull-back to A of the
quotient norm on A/B, then L is strongly Leibniz. In connection with this
situation we study certain aspects of best approximation of elements of a
unital C*-algebra by elements of a unital C*-subalgebra.Comment: 24 pages. Intended for the proceedings of the conference "Operator
Algebras and Related Topics". v2: added a corollary to the main theorem, plus
several minor improvements v3: much simplified proof of a key lemma,
corollary to main theorem added v4: Many minor improvements. Section numbers
increased by
The Overlap of Lung Tissue Transcriptome of Smoke Exposed Mice with Human Smoking and COPD
© 2018, The Author(s). Genome-wide mRNA profiling in lung tissue from human and animal models can provide novel insights into the pathogenesis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). While 6 months of smoke exposure are widely used, shorter durations were also reported. The overlap of short term and long-term smoke exposure in mice is currently not well understood, and their representation of the human condition is uncertain. Lung tissue gene expression profiles of six murine smoking experiments (n = 48) were obtained from the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) and analyzed to identify the murine smoking signature. The “human smoking” gene signature containing 386 genes was previously published in the lung eQTL study (n = 1,111). A signature of mild COPD containing 7 genes was also identified in the same study. The lung tissue gene signature of “severe COPD” (n = 70) contained 4,071 genes and was previously published. We detected 3,723 differentially expressed genes in the 6 month-exposure mice datasets (FDR <0.1). Of those, 184 genes (representing 48% of human smoking) and 1,003 (representing 27% of human COPD) were shared with the human smoking-related genes and the COPD severity-related genes, respectively. There was 4-fold over-representation of human and murine smoking-related genes (P = 6.7 × 10−26) and a 1.4 fold in the severe COPD -related genes (P = 2.3 × 10−12). There was no significant enrichment of the mice and human smoking-related genes in mild COPD signature. These data suggest that murine smoke models are strongly representative of molecular processes of human smoking but less of COPD
The effect of layer number and substrate on the stability of graphene under MeV proton beam irradiation
The use of graphene electronics in space will depend on the radiation
hardness of graphene. The damage threshold of graphene samples, subjected to 2
MeV proton irradiation, was found to increase with layer number and also when
the graphene layer was supported by a substrate. The thermal properties of
graphene as a function of the number of layers or as influenced by the
substrate argue against a thermal model for the production of damage by the ion
beam. We propose a model of intense electronically-stimulated surface
desorption of the atoms as the most likely process for this damage mechanism.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figure
On the 3n+l Quantum Number in the Cluster Problem
It has recently been suggested that an exactly solvable problem characterized
by a new quantum number may underlie the electronic shell structure observed in
the mass spectra of medium-sized sodium clusters. We investigate whether the
conjectured quantum number 3n+l bears a similarity to the quantum numbers n+l
and 2n+l, which characterize the hydrogen problem and the isotropic harmonic
oscillator in three dimensions.Comment: 8 pages, revtex, 4 eps figures included, to be published in
Phys.Rev.A, additional material available at
http://radix2.mpi-stuttgart.mpg.de/koch/Diss
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