972 research outputs found
Size dependent tunneling and optical spectroscopy of CdSe quantum rods
Photoluminescence excitation spectroscopy and scanning tunneling spectroscopy
are used to study the electronic states in CdSe quantum rods that manifest a
transition from a zero dimensional to a one dimensional quantum confined
structure. Both optical and tunneling spectra show that the level structure
depends primarily on the rod diameter and not on length. With increasing
diameter, the band-gap and the excited state level spacings shift to the red.
The level structure was assigned using a multi-band effective-mass model,
showing a similar dependence on rod dimensions.Comment: Accepted to PRL (nearly final version). 4 pages in revtex, 4 figure
Higher order contributions to the effective action of N=2 super Yang-Mills
We apply heat kernel techniques in N=1 superspace to compute the one-loop
effective action to order for chiral superfields coupled to a non-Abelian
super Yang-Mills background. The results, when combined with those of
hep-th/0210146, yield the one-loop effective action to order for any N=2
super Yang-Mills theory coupled to matter hypermultiplets.Comment: 23 pages, references adde
The Effect of Cone Opsin Mutations on Retinal Structure and the Integrity of the Photoreceptor Mosaic
Purpose.
To evaluate retinal structure and photoreceptor mosaic integrity in subjects with OPN1LW and OPN1MW mutations.
Methods.
Eleven subjects were recruited, eight of whom have been previously described. Cone and rod density was measured using images of the photoreceptor mosaic obtained from an adaptive optics scanning light ophthalmoscope (AOSLO). Total retinal thickness, inner retinal thickness, and outer nuclear layer plus Henle fiber layer (ONL+HFL) thickness were measured using cross-sectional spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) images. Molecular genetic analyses were performed to characterize the OPN1LW/OPN1MW gene array.
Results.
While disruptions in retinal lamination and cone mosaic structure were observed in all subjects, genotype-specific differences were also observed. For example, subjects with “L/M interchange” mutations resulting from intermixing of ancestral OPN1LW and OPN1MW genes had significant residual cone structure in the parafovea (∼25% of normal), despite widespread retinal disruption that included a large foveal lesion and thinning of the parafoveal inner retina. These subjects also reported a later-onset, progressive loss of visual function. In contrast, subjects with the C203R missense mutation presented with congenital blue cone monochromacy, with retinal lamination defects being restricted to the ONL+HFL and the degree of residual cone structure (8% of normal) being consistent with that expected for the S-cone submosaic.
Conclusions.
The photoreceptor phenotype associated with OPN1LW and OPN1MW mutations is highly variable. These findings have implications for the potential restoration of visual function in subjects with opsin mutations. Our study highlights the importance of high-resolution phenotyping to characterize cellular structure in inherited retinal disease; such information will be critical for selecting patients most likely to respond to therapeutic intervention and for establishing a baseline for evaluating treatment efficacy
Height-diameter allometry of tropical forest trees
Tropical tree height-diameter (H:D) relationships may vary by forest type and region making large-scale estimates of above-ground biomass subject to bias if they ignore these differences in stem allometry. We have therefore developed a new global tropical forest database consisting of 39 955 concurrent H and D measurements encompassing 283 sites in 22 tropical countries. Utilising this database, our objectives were:
1. to determine if H:D relationships differ by geographic region and forest type (wet to dry forests, including zones of tension where forest and savanna overlap).
2. to ascertain if the H:D relationship is modulated by climate and/or forest structural characteristics (e.g. stand-level basal area, A).
3. to develop H:D allometric equations and evaluate biases to reduce error in future local-to-global estimates of tropical forest biomass.
Annual precipitation coefficient of variation (PV), dry season length (SD), and mean annual air temperature (TA) emerged as key drivers of variation in H:D relationships at the pantropical and region scales. Vegetation structure also played a role with trees in forests of a high A being, on average, taller at any given D. After the effects of environment and forest structure are taken into account, two main regional groups can be identified. Forests in Asia, Africa and the Guyana Shield all have, on average, similar H:D relationships, but with trees in the forests of much of the Amazon Basin and tropical Australia typically being shorter at any given D than their counterparts elsewhere. The region-environment-structure model with the lowest Akaike\u27s information criterion and lowest deviation estimated stand-level H across all plots to within amedian −2.7 to 0.9% of the true value. Some of the plot-to-plot variability in H:D relationships not accounted for by this model could be attributed to variations in soil physical conditions. Other things being equal, trees tend to be more slender in the absence of soil physical constraints, especially at smaller D. Pantropical and continental-level models provided less robust estimates of H, especially when the roles of climate and stand structure in modulating H:D allometry were not simultaneously taken into account
Non(anti)commutative SYM theory: Renormalization in superspace
We present a systematic investigation of one-loop renormalizability for
nonanticommutative N=1/2, U(N) SYM theory in superspace. We first discuss
classical gauge invariance of the pure gauge theory and show that in
contradistinction to the ordinary anticommutative case, different
representations of supercovariant derivatives and field strengths do not lead
to equivalent descriptions of the theory. Subsequently we develop background
field methods which allow us to compute a manifestly covariant gauge effective
action. One-loop evaluation of divergent contributions reveals that the theory
simply obtained from the ordinary one by trading products for star products is
not renormalizable. In the case of SYM with no matter we present a N=1/2
improved action which we show to be one-loop renormalizable and which is
perfectly compatible with the algebraic structure of the star product. For this
action we compute the beta functions. A brief discussion on the inclusion of
chiral matter is also presented.Comment: Latex file, 59 pages, 10 figures, One reference adde
Spin-based all-optical quantum computation with quantum dots: understanding and suppressing decoherence
We present an all-optical implementation of quantum computation using
semiconductor quantum dots. Quantum memory is represented by the spin of an
excess electron stored in each dot. Two-qubit gates are realized by switching
on trion-trion interactions between different dots. State selectivity is
achieved via conditional laser excitation exploiting Pauli exclusion principle.
Read-out is performed via a quantum-jump technique. We analyze the effect on
our scheme's performance of the main imperfections present in real quantum
dots: exciton decay, hole mixing and phonon decoherence. We introduce an
adiabatic gate procedure that allows one to circumvent these effects, and
evaluate quantitatively its fidelity
Optimizing the photoassociation of cold atoms by use of chirped laser pulses
Photoassociation of ultracold atoms induced by chirped picosecond pulses is
analyzed in a non-perturbative treatment by following the wavepackets dynamics
on the ground and excited surfaces. The initial state is described by a
Boltzmann distribution of continuum scattering states. The chosen example is
photoassociation of cesium atoms at temperature T=54 from the continuum to bound levels in the external well of the
potential. We study how the modification of the pulse
characteristics (carrier frequency, duration, linear chirp rate and intensity)
can enhance the number of photoassociated molecules and suggest ways of
optimizing the production of stable molecules.Comment: 40 pages, 12 figures, submitted to Eur. Phys. J.
Non(anti)commutative N=(1,1/2) Supersymmetric U(1) Gauge Theory
We study a reduction of deformation parameters in non(anti)commutative N=2
harmonic superspace to those in non(anti)commutative N=1 superspace. By this
reduction we obtain the exact gauge and supersymmetry transformations in the
Wess-Zumino gauge of non(anti)commutative N=2 supersymmetric U(1) gauge theory
defined in the deformed harmonic superspace. We also find that the action with
the first order correction in the deformation parameter reduces to the one in
the N=1 superspace by some field redefinition. We construct deformed N=(1,1/2)
supersymmetry in N=2 supersymmetric U(1) gauge theory in non(anti)commutative
N=1 superspace.Comment: 30 pages, LaTeX, V2: a reference adde
Effect of the Surface on the Electron Quantum Size Levels and Electron g-Factor in Spherical Semiconductor Nanocrystals
The structure of the electron quantum size levels in spherical nanocrystals
is studied in the framework of an eight--band effective mass model at zero and
weak magnetic fields. The effect of the nanocrystal surface is modeled through
the boundary condition imposed on the envelope wave function at the surface. We
show that the spin--orbit splitting of the valence band leads to the
surface--induced spin--orbit splitting of the excited conduction band states
and to the additional surface--induced magnetic moment for electrons in bare
nanocrystals. This additional magnetic moment manifests itself in a nonzero
surface contribution to the linear Zeeman splitting of all quantum size energy
levels including the ground 1S electron state. The fitting of the size
dependence of the ground state electron g factor in CdSe nanocrystals has
allowed us to determine the appropriate surface parameter of the boundary
conditions. The structure of the excited electron states is considered in the
limits of weak and strong magnetic fields.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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