246 research outputs found
Spontaneous radiation of a finite-size dipole emitter in hyperbolic media
We study the radiative decay rate and Purcell effect for a finite-size dipole
emitter placed in a homogeneous uniaxial medium. We demonstrate that the
radiative rate is strongly enhanced when the signs of the longitudinal and
transverse dielectric constants of the medium are opposite, and the
isofrequency contour has a hyperbolic shape. We reveal that the Purcell
enhancement factor remains finite even in the absence of losses, and it depends
on the emitter size.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Photoexcited transients in disordered semiconductors: Quantum coherence at very short to intermediate times
We study theoretically electron transients in semiconductor alloys excited by
light pulses shorter than 100 femtoseconds and tuned above the absorption edge
during and shortly after the pulse, when disorder scattering is dominant.
We use non-equilibrium Green functions employing the field-dependent
self-consistent Born approximation. The propagators and the particle
correlation function are obtained by a direct numerical solution of the Dyson
equations in differential form. For the purely elastic scattering in our model
system the solution procedures for the retarded propagator and for the
correlation function can be decoupled.The propagator is used as an input in
calculating the correlation function. Numerical results combined with a
cumulant expansion permit to separate in a consistent fashion the dark and the
induced parts of the self-energy. The dark behavior reduces to propagation of
strongly damped quasi-particles; the field induced self-energy leads to an
additional time non-local coherence. The particle correlation function is
formed by a coherent transient and an incoherent back-scattered component. The
particle number is conserved only if the field induced coherence is fully
incorporated. The transient polarization and the energy balance are also
obtained and interpreted.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. B; 37 pages,17 figure
Probing Interband Coulomb Interactions in Semiconductor Nanocrystals with 2D Double-Quantum Coherence Spectroscopy
Using previously developed exciton scattering model accounting for the
interband, i.e., exciton-biexciton, Coulomb interactions in semiconductor
nanocrystals (NCs), we derive a closed set of equations for 2D double-quantum
coherence signal. The signal depends on the Liouville space pathways which
include both the interband scattering processes and the inter- and intraband
optical transitions. These processes correspond to the formation of different
cross-peaks in the 2D spectra. We further report on our numerical calculations
of the 2D signal using reduced level scheme parameterized for PbSe NCs. Two
different NC excitation regimes considered and unique spectroscopic features
associated with the interband Coulomb interactions are identified.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Genetic heterogeneity of porcine enteric caliciviruses identified from diarrhoeic piglets
Enteric caliciviruses (noroviruses and sapoviruses) are responsible for the majority of non-bacterial gastroenteritis in humans of all age groups. Analysis of the polymerase and capsid genes has provided evidence for a huge genetic diversity, but the understanding of their ecology is limited. In this study, we investigated the presence of porcine enteric caliciviruses in the faeces of piglets with diarrhoea. A total of 209 samples from 118 herds were analyszd and calicivirus RNA was detected by RT-PCR in 68 sample (32.5%) and in 46 herds (38.9%), alone or in mixed infection with group A and C rotaviruses. Sequence and phylogenetic analysis of the calicivirus-positive samples characterized the majority as genogroup III (GGIII) sapoviruses. Unclassified caliciviruses, distantly related to the representatives of the other sapovirus genogroups, were identified in five herds, while one outbreak was associated with a porcine sapovirus related genetically to human GGII and GGIV sapovirus strains. By converse, norovirus strains were not detected. Altogether, these data suggest the epidemiological relevance of porcine enteric caliciviruses and suggest a role in the etiology of piglets diarrhoe
Multiexcitons confined within a sub-excitonic volume: Spectroscopic and dynamical signatures of neutral and charged biexcitons in ultrasmall semiconductor nanocrystals
The use of ultrafast gating techniques allows us to resolve both spectrally
and temporally the emission from short-lived neutral and negatively charged
biexcitons in ultrasmall (sub-10 nm) CdSe nanocrystals (nanocrystal quantum
dots). Because of forced overlap of electronic wave functions and reduced
dielectric screening, these states are characterized by giant interaction
energies of tens (neutral biexcitons) to hundreds (charged biexcitons) of meV.
Both types of biexcitons show extremely short lifetimes (from sub-100
picoseconds to sub-picosecond time scales) that rapidly shorten with decreasing
nanocrystal size. These ultrafast relaxation dynamics are explained in terms of
highly efficient nonradiative Auger recombination.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Space-time versus particle-hole symmetry in quantum Enskog equations
The non-local scattering-in and -out integrals of the Enskog equation have
reversed displacements of colliding particles reflecting that the -in and -out
processes are conjugated by the space and time inversions. Generalisations of
the Enskog equation to Fermi liquid systems are hindered by a request of the
particle-hole symmetry which contradicts the reversed displacements. We resolve
this problem with the help of the optical theorem. It is found that space-time
and particle-hole symmetry can only be fulfilled simultaneously for the
Bruckner-type of internal Pauli-blocking while the Feynman-Galitskii form
allows only for particle-hole symmetry but not for space-time symmetry due to a
stimulated emission of Bosons
The Role of Nonequilibrium Dynamical Screening in Carrier Thermalization
We investigate the role played by nonequilibrium dynamical screening in the
thermalization of carriers in a simplified two-component two-band model of a
semiconductor. The main feature of our approach is the theoretically sound
treatment of collisions. We abandon Fermi's Golden rule in favor of a
nonequilibrium field theoretic formalism as the former is applicable only in
the long-time regime. We also introduce the concept of nonequilibrium dynamical
screening. The dephasing of excitonic quantum beats as a result of
carrier-carrier scattering is brought out. At low densities it is found that
the dephasing times due to carrier-carrier scattering is in picoseconds and not
femtoseconds, in agreement with experiments. The polarization dephasing rates
are computed as a function of the excited carrier density and it is found that
the dephasing rate for carrier-carrier scattering is proportional to the
carrier density at ultralow densities. The scaling relation is sublinear at
higher densities, which enables a comparison with experiment.Comment: Revised version with additional refs. 12 pages, figs. available upon
request; Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Electric field and exciton structure in CdSe nanocrystals
Quantum Stark effect in semiconductor nanocrystals is theoretically
investigated, using the effective mass formalism within a
Baldereschi-Lipari Hamiltonian model for the hole states. General expressions
are reported for the hole eigenfunctions at zero electric field. Electron and
hole single particle energies as functions of the electric field
() are reported. Stark shift and binding energy of the
excitonic levels are obtained by full diagonalization of the correlated
electron-hole Hamiltonian in presence of the external field. Particularly, the
structure of the lower excitonic states and their symmetry properties in CdSe
nanocrystals are studied. It is found that the dependence of the exciton
binding energy upon the applied field is strongly reduced for small quantum dot
radius. Optical selection rules for absorption and luminescence are obtained.
The electric-field induced quenching of the optical spectra as a function of
is studied in terms of the exciton dipole matrix element. It
is predicted that photoluminescence spectra present anomalous field dependence
of the emission lines. These results agree in magnitude with experimental
observation and with the main features of photoluminescence experiments in
nanostructures.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl
Pion-Muon Asymmetry Revisited
Long ago an unexpected and unexplainable phenomena was observed. The
distribution of muons from positive pion decay at rest was anisotropic with an
excess in the backward direction relative to the direction of the proton beam
from which the pions were created. Although this effect was observed by several
different groups with pions produced by different means, the result was not
accepted by the physics community, because it is in direct conflict with a
large set of other experiments indicating that the pion is a pseudoscalar
particle. It is possible to satisfy both sets of experiments if helicity-zero
vector particles exist and the pion is such a particle. Helicity-zero vector
particles have direction but no net spin. For the neutral pion to be a vector
particle requires an additional modification to conventional theory as
discussed herein. An experiment is proposed which can prove that the asymmetry
in the distribution of muons from pion decay is a genuine physical effect
because the asymmetry can be modified in a controllable manner. A positive
result will also prove that the pion is NOT a pseudoscalar particle.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
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