6,687 research outputs found
Cloud cover effects on signal attenuation at DSN sites Final report
Statistical analysis of electromagnetic wave attenuation by cloud covers at Deep Space Network site
Electron tomography at 2.4 {\AA} resolution
Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) is a powerful imaging tool that has
found broad application in materials science, nanoscience and biology(1-3).
With the introduction of aberration-corrected electron lenses, both the spatial
resolution and image quality in TEM have been significantly improved(4,5) and
resolution below 0.5 {\AA} has been demonstrated(6). To reveal the 3D structure
of thin samples, electron tomography is the method of choice(7-11), with
resolutions of ~1 nm^3 currently achievable(10,11). Recently, discrete
tomography has been used to generate a 3D atomic reconstruction of a silver
nanoparticle 2-3 nm in diameter(12), but this statistical method assumes prior
knowledge of the particle's lattice structure and requires that the atoms fit
rigidly on that lattice. Here we report the experimental demonstration of a
general electron tomography method that achieves atomic scale resolution
without initial assumptions about the sample structure. By combining a novel
projection alignment and tomographic reconstruction method with scanning
transmission electron microscopy, we have determined the 3D structure of a ~10
nm gold nanoparticle at 2.4 {\AA} resolution. While we cannot definitively
locate all of the atoms inside the nanoparticle, individual atoms are observed
in some regions of the particle and several grains are identified at three
dimensions. The 3D surface morphology and internal lattice structure revealed
are consistent with a distorted icosahedral multiply-twinned particle. We
anticipate that this general method can be applied not only to determine the 3D
structure of nanomaterials at atomic scale resolution(13-15), but also to
improve the spatial resolution and image quality in other tomography
fields(7,9,16-20).Comment: 27 pages, 17 figure
Dynamical mean-field equations for strongly interacting fermionic atoms in a potential trap
We derive a set of dynamical mean-field equations for strongly interacting
fermionic atoms in a potential trap across a Feshbach resonance. Our derivation
is based on a variational ansatz, which generalizes the crossover wavefunction
to the inhomogeneous case, and the assumption that the order parameter is
slowly varying over the size of the Cooper pairs. The equations reduce to a
generalized time-dependent Gross-Pitaevskii equation on the BEC side of the
resonance. We discuss an iterative method to solve these mean-field equations,
and present the solution for a harmonic trap as an illustrating example to
self-consistently verify the approximations made in our derivation.Comment: replaced with the published versio
Translational Invariance and the Anisotropy of the Cosmic Microwave Background
Primordial quantum fluctuations produced by inflation are conventionally
assumed to be statistically homogeneous, a consequence of translational
invariance. In this paper we quantify the potentially observable effects of a
small violation of translational invariance during inflation, as characterized
by the presence of a preferred point, line, or plane. We explore the imprint
such a violation would leave on the cosmic microwave background anisotropy, and
provide explicit formulas for the expected amplitudes of
the spherical-harmonic coefficients.Comment: Notation improve
UCLA Space-Time Area Law Model: A Persuasive Foundation for Hadronization
From the studies of rates and distributions of heavy quark mesons we have
developed additional evidence that hadron formation is dominantly controlled by
a Space-Time Area Law, an approach suggested by both non-perturbative QCD and
Relativistic String Models.Comment: 37 pages, 12 figures, 2 tables, Accepted for publication in Eur.
Phys. J.
Current-induced spin-wave excitations in a single ferromagnetic layer
A new current induced spin-torque transfer effect has been observed in a
single ferromagnetic layer without resorting to multilayers. At a specific
current density of one polarity injected from a point contact, abrupt
resistance changes due to current-induced spin wave excitations have been
observed. The critical current at the onset of spin-wave excitations depends
linearly on the external field applied perpendicular to the layer. The observed
effect is due to current-driven heterogeneity in an otherwise uniform
ferromagnetic layer.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
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