576 research outputs found
Dissociative electron attachment to formamide
Formamide (HCONH2) is the smallest molecule with a peptide bond and has recently been observed in the interstellar medium (ISM), suggesting that it may be ubiquitous in star-forming regions. There is therefore considerable interest in the mechanisms by which this molecule may form. One method is electron induced chemistry within the icy mantles on the surface of dust grains. In particular it has been recently shown that functional group dependence exists in electron attachment processes giving rise to site selective fragmentation of molecules at the C-H, O-H and N-H bonds at energies well beyond the threshold for the breaking of any of these bonds allowing novel forms of chemistry that have little or no activation barriers, such as are necessary in the ISM.
In this poster we present the results of resent studies on dissociative electron attachment (DEA) to formamide DEA using an improved version of a Velocity Map Imaging (VMI) spectrometer comprised of a magnetically collimated and low energy pulsed electron gun, a Faraday cup (to measure the incident current), an effusive molecular beam, a pulsed field ion extraction, a time of flight analyzer and a two-dimensional position sensitive detector consisting of microchannel plate and a phosphor screen.
The VMI spectrometer measures the kinetic energy and angular distribution of the fragment anions produced in the dissociative electron attachment process. The kinetic energy measurements provide information on the internal energies of the fragment anions and determine the dissociation limits of the parent negative ion resonant states responsible for the dissociative electron attachment process. The angular distribution measurements provide the information about the symmetry of these negative ion resonant states.
We shall present the details, results and conclusions of these measurements during the conference
Dynamics of the BCS-BEC crossover in a degenerate Fermi gas
We study the short-time dynamics of a degenerate Fermi gas positioned near a
Feshbach resonance following an abrupt jump in the atomic interaction resulting
from a change of external magnetic field. We investigate the dynamics of the
condensate order parameter and pair wavefunction for a range of field
strengths. When the abrupt jump is sufficient to span the BCS to BEC crossover,
we show that the rigidity of the momentum distribution precludes any
atom-molecule oscillations in the entrance channel dominated resonances
observed in the 40K and 6Li. Focusing on material parameters tailored to the
40K Feshbach resonance system at 202.1 gauss, we comment on the integrity of
the fast sweet projection technique as a vehicle to explore the condensed phase
in the crossover regionComment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Overhauser effect in individual InP/GaInP dots
Sizable nuclear spin polarization is pumped in individual InP/GaInP dots in a
wide range of external magnetic fields B_ext=0-5T by circularly polarized
optical excitation. We observe nuclear polarization of up to ~40% at Bext=1.5T
and corresponding to an Overhauser field of ~1.2T. We find a strong feedback of
the nuclear spin on the spin pumping efficiency. This feedback, produced by the
Overhauser field, leads to nuclear spin bi-stability at low magnetic fields of
Bext=0.5-1.5T. We find that the exciton Zeeman energy increases markedly, when
the Overhauser field cancels the external field. This counter-intuitive result
is shown to arise from the opposite contribution of the electron and hole
Zeeman splittings to the total exciton Zeeman energy
Overhauser effect in individual InP/GaInP dots
Sizable nuclear spin polarization is pumped in individual InP/GaInP dots in a
wide range of external magnetic fields B_ext=0-5T by circularly polarized
optical excitation. We observe nuclear polarization of up to ~40% at Bext=1.5T
and corresponding to an Overhauser field of ~1.2T. We find a strong feedback of
the nuclear spin on the spin pumping efficiency. This feedback, produced by the
Overhauser field, leads to nuclear spin bi-stability at low magnetic fields of
Bext=0.5-1.5T. We find that the exciton Zeeman energy increases markedly, when
the Overhauser field cancels the external field. This counter-intuitive result
is shown to arise from the opposite contribution of the electron and hole
Zeeman splittings to the total exciton Zeeman energy
Giant Stark effect in the emission of single semiconductor quantum dots
We study the quantum-confined Stark effect in single InAs/GaAs quantum dots
embedded within a AlGaAs/GaAs/AlGaAs quantum well. By significantly increasing
the barrier height we can observe emission from a dot at electric fields of
-500 kV/cm, leading to Stark shifts of up to 25 meV. Our results suggest this
technique may enable future applications that require self-assembled dots with
transitions at the same energy
Fast optical preparation, control, and readout of a single quantum dot spin
We propose and demonstrate the sequential initialization, optical control, and readout of a single spin trapped in a semiconductor quantum dot. Hole spin preparation is achieved through ionization of a resonantly excited electron-hole pair. Optical control is observed as a coherent Rabi rotation between the hole and charged-exciton states, which is conditional on the initial hole spin state. The spin-selective creation of the charged exciton provides a photocurrent readout of the hole spin state. © 2008 The American Physical Society
Polariton condensation with localised excitons and propagating photons
We estimate the condensation temperature for microcavity polaritons, allowing
for their internal structure. We consider polaritons formed from localised
excitons in a planar microcavity, using a generalised Dicke model. At low
densities, we find a condensation temperature T_c \propto \rho, as expected for
a gas of structureless polaritons. However, as T_c becomes of the order of the
Rabi splitting, the structure of the polaritons becomes relevant, and the
condensation temperature is that of a B.C.S.-like mean field theory. We also
calculate the excitation spectrum, which is related to observable quantities
such as the luminescence and absorption spectra.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, Corrected typos, replaced figure
Excitons in T-shaped quantum wires
We calculate energies, oscillator strengths for radiative recombination, and
two-particle wave functions for the ground state exciton and around 100 excited
states in a T-shaped quantum wire. We include the single-particle potential and
the Coulomb interaction between the electron and hole on an equal footing, and
perform exact diagonalisation of the two-particle problem within a finite basis
set. We calculate spectra for all of the experimentally studied cases of
T-shaped wires including symmetric and asymmetric GaAs/AlGaAs and
InGaAs/AlGaAs structures. We study in detail the
shape of the wave functions to gain insight into the nature of the various
states for selected symmetric and asymmetric wires in which laser emission has
been experimentally observed. We also calculate the binding energy of the
ground state exciton and the confinement energy of the 1D quantum-wire-exciton
state with respect to the 2D quantum-well exciton for a wide range of
structures, varying the well width and the Al molar fraction . We find that
the largest binding energy of any wire constructed to date is 16.5 meV. We also
notice that in asymmetric structures, the confinement energy is enhanced with
respect to the symmetric forms with comparable parameters but the binding
energy of the exciton is then lower than in the symmetric structures. For
GaAs/AlGaAs wires we obtain an upper limit for the binding energy
of around 25 meV in a 10 {\AA} wide GaAs/AlAs structure which suggests that
other materials must be explored in order to achieve room temperature
applications. There are some indications that
InGaAs/AlGaAs might be a good candidate.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures, uses RevTeX and psfig, submitted to Physical
Review
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