1,425 research outputs found

    A supersymmetric model for triggering Supernova Ia in isolated white dwarfs

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    We propose a model for supernovae Ia explosions based on a phase transition to a supersymmetric state which becomes the active trigger for the deflagration starting the explosion in an isolated sub-Chandrasekhar white dwarf star. With two free parameters we fit the rate and several properties of type Ia supernovae and address the gap in the supermassive black hole mass distribution. One parameter is a critical density fit to about 3⋅1073 \cdot 10^7 g/cc while the other has the units of a space time volume and is found to be of order 0.05 0.05\, Gyr RE3R_E^3 where RER_E is the earth radius. The model involves a phase transition to an exact supersymmetry in a small core of a dense star.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, expanded version to be published in Physical Review

    Quantum confinement corrections to the capacitance of gated one-dimensional nanostructures

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    With the help of a multi-configurational Green's function approach we simulate single-electron Coulomb charging effects in gated ultimately scaled nanostructures which are beyond the scope of a selfconsistent mean-field description. From the simulated Coulomb-blockade characteristics we derive effective system capacitances and demonstrate how quantum confinement effects give rise to corrections. Such deviations are crucial for the interpretation of experimentally determined capacitances and the extraction of application-relevant system parameters

    Direct and Heterodyne Detection of Microwaves in a Metallic Single Wall Carbon Nanotube

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    This letter reports measurements of microwave (up to 4.5 GHz) detection in metallic single-walled carbon nanotubes. The measured voltage responsivity was found to be 114 V/W at 77K. We also demonstrated heterodyne detection at 1 GHz. The detection mechanism can be explained based on standard microwave detector theory and the nonlinearity of the DC IV-curve. We discuss the possible causes of this nonlinearity. While the frequency response is limited by circuit parasitics in this measurement, we discuss evidence that indicates that the effect is much faster and that applications of carbon nanotubes as terahertz detectors are feasible

    Lateral scaling in carbon nanotube field-effect transistors

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    We have fabricated carbon nanotube (CN) field-effect transistors with multiple, individually addressable gate segments. The devices exhibit markedly different transistor characteristics when switched using gate segments controlling the device interior versus those near the source and drain. We ascribe this difference to a change from Schottky barrier modulation at the contacts to bulk switching. We also find that the current through the bulk portion is independent of gate length for any gate voltage, offering direct evidence for ballistic transport in semiconducting CNs over at least a few hundred nanometers, even for relatively small carrier velocities.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    On the Performance of Single-Gated Ultrathin-Body SOI Schottky-Barrier MOSFETs

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    The authors study the dependence of the performance of silicon-on-insulator (SOI) Schottky-barrier (SB) MOSFETs on the SOI body thickness and show a performance improvement for decreasing SOI thickness. The inverse subthreshold slopes S extracted from the experiments are compared with simulations and an analytical approximation. Excellent agreement between experiment, simulation, and analytical approximation is found, which shows that S scales approximately as the square root of the gate oxide and the SOI thickness. In addition, the authors study the impact of the SOI thickness on the variation of the threshold voltage V-th of SOI SB-MOSFETs and find a non-monotonic behavior of V-th. The results show that to avoid large threshold voltage variations and achieve high-performance devices, the gate oxide thickness should be as small as possible, and the SOI thickness should be similar to 3 nm

    A Fully Tunable Single-Walled Carbon Nanotube Diode

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    We demonstrate a fully tunable diode structure utilizing a fully suspended single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT). The diode's turn-on voltage under forward bias can be continuously tuned up to 4.3 V by controlling gate voltages, which is ~6 times the nanotube bandgap energy. Furthermore, the same device design can be configured into a backward diode by tuning the band-to-band tunneling current with gate voltages. A nanotube backward diode is demonstrated for the first time with nonlinearity exceeding the ideal diode. These results suggest that a tunable nanotube diode can be a unique building block for developing next generation programmable nanoelectronic logic and integrated circuits.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure

    A comparative study of satellite and ground-based phenology

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    Long time series of ground-based plant phenology, as well as more than two decades of satellite-derived phenological metrics, are currently available to assess the impacts of climate variability and trends on terrestrial vegetation. Traditional plant phenology provides very accurate information on individual plant species, but with limited spatial coverage. Satellite phenology allows monitoring of terrestrial vegetation on a global scale and provides an integrative view at the landscape level. Linking the strengths of both methodologies has high potential value for climate impact studies. We compared a multispecies index from ground-observed spring phases with two types (maximum slope and threshold approach) of satellite-derived start-of-season (SOS) metrics. We focus on Switzerland from 1982 to 2001 and show that temporal and spatial variability of the multispecies index correspond well with the satellite-derived metrics. All phenological metrics correlate with temperature anomalies as expected. The slope approach proved to deviate strongly from the temporal development of the ground observations as well as from the threshold-defined SOS satellite measure. The slope spring indicator is considered to indicate a different stage in vegetation development and is therefore less suited as a SOS parameter for comparative studies in relation to ground-observed phenology. Satellite-derived metrics are, however, very susceptible to snow cover, and it is suggested that this snow cover should be better accounted for by the use of newer satellite sensor
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