14,436 research outputs found
Electron reflectivity measurements of Ag adatom concentrations on W(110)
The density of two-dimensional Ag adatom gases on W(110) is determined by
monitoring local electron reflectivity using low energy electron microscopy
(LEEM). This method of adatom concentration measurement can detect changes in
adatom density at least as small as 10 ML for a m size region of
the surface. Using this technique at high temperatures, we measure the
sublimation rates of Ag adatoms on W(110). At lower temperatures, where Ag
adatoms condense into monolayer islands, we determine the temperature
dependence of the density of adatoms coexisting with this condensed phase and
compare it with previous estimates.Comment: Presented at the ECOSS 23 Conference (Berlin 2005
Nanoscale periodicity in stripe-forming systems at high temperature: Au/W(110)
We observe using low-energy electron microscopy the self-assembly of
monolayer-thick stripes of Au on W(110) near the transition temperature between
stripes and the non-patterned (homogeneous) phase. We demonstrate that the
amplitude of this Au stripe phase decreases with increasing temperature and
vanishes at the order-disorder transition (ODT). The wavelength varies much
more slowly with temperature and coverage than theories of stress-domain
patterns with sharp phase boundaries would predict, and maintains a finite
value of about 100 nm at the ODT. We argue that such nanometer-scale stripes
should often appear near the ODT.Comment: 5 page
Metallic Ferromagnetism in the Kondo Lattice
Metallic magnetism is both ancient and modern, occurring in such familiar
settings as the lodestone in compass needles and the hard drive in computers.
Surprisingly, a rigorous theoretical basis for metallic ferromagnetism is still
largely missing. The Stoner approach perturbatively treates Coulomb
interactions when the latter need to be large, while the Nagaoka approach
incorporates thermodynamically negligible electrons into a half-filled band.
Here, we show that the ferromagnetic order of the Kondo lattice is amenable to
an asymptotically exact analysis over a range of interaction parameters. In
this ferromagnetic phase, the conduction electrons and local moments are
strongly coupled but the Fermi surface does not enclose the latter (i.e. it is
small). Moreover, non-Fermi liquid behavior appears over a range of frequencies
and temperatures. Our results provide the basis to understand some
long-standing puzzles in the ferromagnetic heavy fermion metals, and raises the
prospect for a new class of ferromagnetic quantum phase transitions.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, including Supporting Informatio
Determining the structure of Ru(0001) from low-energy electron diffraction of a single terrace
While a perfect hcp (0001) surface has three-fold symmetry, the diffraction
patterns commonly obtained are six-fold symmetric. This apparent change in
symmetry occurs because on a stepped surface, the atomic layers on adjacent
terraces are rotated by 180 degrees. Here we use a Low-Energy Electron
Microscope to acquire the three-fold diffraction pattern from a single hcp Ru
terrace and measure the intensity-vs-energy curves for several diffracted
beams. By means of multiple scattering calculations fitted to the experimental
data with a Pendry R-factor of 0.077, we find that the surface is contracted by
3.5(+-0.9) at 456 K.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures. Corrected some typos, added more details.
Accepted for publication in Surface Science (Letters
Algebras of Toeplitz operators on the n-dimensional unit ball
We study -algebras generated by Toeplitz operators acting on the standard weighted Bergman space over the unit ball in . The symbols of generating operators are assumed to be of a certain product type, see (\ref{Introduction_form_of_the_symbol}). By choosing and in different function algebras and over lower dimensional unit balls and , respectively, and by assuming the invariance of under some torus action we obtain -algebras whose structural properties can be described. In the case of -quasi-radial functions and bounded uniformly continuous
or vanishing oscillation symbols we describe the structure of elements from the algebra , derive a list of irreducible
representations of , and prove completeness of this list in some cases. Some of these representations originate from a ``quantization effect'', induced
by the representation of as the direct sum of Bergman spaces over a lower dimensional unit ball with growing weight parameter. As an application we derive the
essential spectrum and index formulas for matrix-valued operators
Bulk-to-boundary anyon fusion from microscopic models
Topological quantum error correction based on the manipulation of the anyonic defects constitutes one of the most promising frameworks towards realizing fault-tolerant quantum devices. Hence, it is crucial to understand how these defects interact with external defects such as boundaries or domain walls. Motivated by this line of thought, in this work, we study the fusion events between anyons in the bulk and at the boundary in fixed-point models of 2 + 1-dimensional non-chiral topological order defined by arbitrary fusion categories. Our construction uses generalized tube algebra techniques to construct a bi-representation of bulk and boundary defects. We explicitly derive a formula to calculate the fusion multiplicities of a bulk-to-boundary fusion event for twisted quantum double models and calculate some exemplary fusion events for Abelian models and the (twisted) quantum double model of S3, the simplest non-Abelian group-theoretical model. Moreover, we use the folding trick to study the anyonic behavior at non-trivial domain walls between twisted S3 and twisted as well as models. A recurring theme in our construction is an isomorphism relating twisted cohomology groups to untwisted ones. The results of this work can directly be applied to study logical operators in two-dimensional topological error correcting codes with boundaries described by a twisted gauge theory of a finite group
Sequentializing Parameterized Programs
We exhibit assertion-preserving (reachability preserving) transformations
from parameterized concurrent shared-memory programs, under a k-round
scheduling of processes, to sequential programs. The salient feature of the
sequential program is that it tracks the local variables of only one thread at
any point, and uses only O(k) copies of shared variables (it does not use extra
counters, not even one counter to keep track of the number of threads).
Sequentialization is achieved using the concept of a linear interface that
captures the effect an unbounded block of processes have on the shared state in
a k-round schedule. Our transformation utilizes linear interfaces to
sequentialize the program, and to ensure the sequential program explores only
reachable states and preserves local invariants.Comment: In Proceedings FIT 2012, arXiv:1207.348
Safety and tolerability of seasonal ultra-rush, high-dose sublingual-swallow immunotherapy in allergic rhinitis to grass and tree pollens: an observational study in 193 children and adolescents
We conducted a large observational study in 193 children and adolescents with allergic rhinitis due to grass or tree pollens to evaluate the safety and tolerability of an ultrarush high-dose sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) regimen reaching a maintenance dose of 300 index of reactivity within 90 minutes
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