49,734 research outputs found
Theoretical analysis of STM-derived lifetimes of excitations in the Shockley surface state band of Ag(111)
We present a quantitative many-body analysis using the GW approximation of
the decay rate due to electron-electron scattering of excitations in
the Shockley surface state band of Ag(111), as measured using the scanning
tunnelling microscope (STM). The calculations include the perturbing influence
of the STM, which causes a Stark-shift of the surface state energy and
concomitant increase in . We find varies more rapidly with
than recently found for image potential states, where the STM has been shown to
significantly affect measured lifetimes. For the Shockley states, the
Stark-shifts that occur under normal tunnelling conditions are relatively small
and previous STM-derived lifetimes need not be corrected.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Integration of Nondestructive Examination Reliability and Fracture Mechanics
In evaluating the integrity of a system using fracture mechanics analysis, it is necessary to know the maximum size of flaws which are likely to be present. The effectiveness in reliability of nondestructive examination techniques are used to establish the probability of detection curves for different types of flaws and for different flaw characteristics, i.e., size, shape, orientation, tightness, roughness and location. This information on flaws must be known in order to ensure the systems integrity. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission has instituted a research program to establish the effectiveness and reliability of ultrasonic in-service inspections performed on light water reactor primary typing systems. This paper describes the results obtained to date and proposed methods of evaluating inspection reliability. A method has been developed for evaluating inspection reliability based on the measured variability of the inspection process. Estimates of the current level of inspection reliability have been made. Efforts are currently in progress to verify the results of these predictions and the effectiveness of the predictive model
Integral field spectroscopy of QSO host galaxies
We describe a project to study the state of the ISM in ~20 low redshift
(z<0.3) QSO host galaxies observed with the PMAS integral field spectrograph.
We describe method developement to access the stellar and gas component of the
spectrum without the strong nuclear emission to access the host galaxy
properties also in the central region. It shows that integral field
spectroscopy promises to be very efficient to study the gas distribution and
its velocity field, and also spatially resolved stellar population in the host
galaxies also of luminous AGN.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, Euro3D Science Workshop, Cambridge, May 2003, AN,
accepte
Relativistic linear stability equations for the nonlinear Dirac equation in Bose-Einstein condensates
We present relativistic linear stability equations (RLSE) for
quasi-relativistic cold atoms in a honeycomb optical lattice. These equations
are derived from first principles and provide a method for computing
stabilities of arbitrary localized solutions of the nonlinear Dirac equation
(NLDE), a relativistic generalization of the nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation.
We present a variety of such localized solutions: skyrmions, solitons,
vortices, and half-quantum vortices, and study their stabilities via the RLSE.
When applied to a uniform background, our calculations reveal an experimentally
observable effect in the form of Cherenkov radiation. Remarkably, the Berry
phase from the bipartite structure of the honeycomb lattice induces a
boson-fermion transmutation in the quasi-particle operator statistics.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Pristine CNO abundances from Magellanic Cloud B stars II. Fast rotators in the LMC cluster NGC 2004
We present spectroscopic abundance analyses of three main-sequence B stars in
the young Large Magellanic Cloud cluster NGC 2004. All three targets have
projected rotational velocities around 130 km/s. Techniques are presented that
allow the derivation of stellar parameters and chemical abundances in spite of
these high v sin i values. Together with previous analyses of stars in this
cluster, we find no evidence among the main-sequence stars for effects due to
rotational mixing up to v sin i around 130 km/s. Unless the equatorial
rotational velocities are significantly larger than the v sin i values, this
finding is probably in line with theoretical expectations. NGC 2004/B30, a star
of uncertain evolutionary status located in the Blue Hertzsprung Gap, clearly
shows signs of mixing in its atmosphere. To verify the effects due to
rotational mixing will therefore require homogeneous analysis of statistically
significant samples of low-metallicity main-sequence B stars over a wide range
of rotational velocities.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables; accepted for publication in ApJ (vol.
633, p. 899
Direct versus Delayed pathways in Strong-Field Non-Sequential Double Ionization
We report full-dimensionality quantum and classical calculations for double
ionization of laser-driven helium at 390 nm. Good qualitative agreement is
observed. We show that the classical double ionization trajectories can be
divided into two distinct pathways: direct and delayed. The direct pathway,
with an almost simultaneous ejection of both electrons, emerges from small
laser intensities. With increasing intensity its relative importance, compared
to the delayed ionization pathway, increases until it becomes the predominant
pathway for total electron escape energy below around 5.25 . However the
delayed pathway is the predominant one for double ionization above a certain
cut-off energy at all laser intensities
On the Bekenstein-Hawking Entropy, Non-Commutative Branes and Logarithmic Corrections
We extend earlier work on the origin of the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy to
higher-dimensional spacetimes. The mechanism of counting states is shown to
work for all spacetimes associated with a Euclidean doublet
of electric-magnetic dual brane pairs of type II
string-theory or M-theory wrapping the spacetime's event horizon plus the
complete internal compactification space. Non-Commutativity on the brane
worldvolume enters the derivation of the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy in a
natural way. Moreover, a logarithmic entropy correction with prefactor 1/2 is
derived.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures; refs. adde
Compactification with Flux on K3 and Tori
We study compactifications of Type IIB string theory on a K3 \times T^2/Z_2
orientifold in the presence of RR and NS flux. We find the most general
supersymmetry preserving, Poincare invariant, vacua in this model. All the
complex structure moduli and some of the Kahler moduli are stabilised in these
vacua. We obtain in an explicit fashion the restrictions imposed by
supersymmetry on the flux, and the values of the fixed moduli. Some T-duals and
Heterotic duals are also discussed, these are non-Calabi-Yau spaces. A
superpotential is constructed describing these duals.Comment: Discussion of susy breaking vacua significantly altere
String vacua with flux from freely-acting obifolds
A precise correspondence between freely-acting orbifolds (Scherk-Schwarz
compactifications) and string vacua with NSNS flux turned on is established
using T-duality.
We focus our attention to a certain non-compact Z_2 heterotic freely-acting
orbifold with N=2 supersymmetry (SUSY). The geometric properties of the T-dual
background are studied. As expected, the space is non-Kahler with the most
generic torsion compatible with SUSY. All equations of motion are satisfied,
except the Bianchi identity for the NSNS field, that is satisfied only at
leading order in derivatives, i.e. without the curvature term. We point out
that this is due to unknown corrections to the standard heterotic T-duality
rules.Comment: 13 pages, no figures; v2: references added and rearranged, version to
appear in JHE
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