3,184 research outputs found
Confined magnetic guiding orbit states
We show how snake-orbit states which run along a magnetic edge can be
confined electrically. We consider a two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG)
confined into a quantum wire, subjected to a strong perpendicular and steplike
magnetic field . Close to this magnetic step new, spatially confined
bound states arise as a result of the lateral confinement and the magnetic
field step. The number of states, with energy below the first Landau level,
increases as becomes stronger or as the wire width becomes larger. These
bound states can be understood as an interference between two
counter-propagating one-dimensional snake-orbit states.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Absolute calibration of the LOPES antenna system
Radio emission in extensive air showers arises from an interaction with the
geomagnetic field and is subject of theoretical studies. This radio emission
has advantages for the detection of high energy cosmic rays compared to
secondary particle or fluorescence measurement methods. Radio antennas like the
LOPES30 antenna system are suited to investigate this emission process by
detecting the radio pulses. The characteristic observable parameters like
electric field strength and pulse length require a calibration which was done
with a reference radio source resulting in an amplification factor representing
the system behavior in the environment of the KASCADE-Grande experiment.
Knowing the amplification factor and the gain of the LOPES antennas LOPES30 is
calibrated absolutely for systematic analyses of the radio emission.Comment: 5 pages, Proceedings of International Workshop on Acoustic and Radio
EeV Neutrino detection Activities: ARENA, May 17-19, 2005, DESY Zeuthe
On the Non-invasive Measurement of the Intrinsic Quantum Hall Effect
With a model calculation, we demonstrate that a non-invasive measurement of
intrinsic quantum Hall effect defined by the local chemical potential in a
ballistic quantum wire can be achieved with the aid of a pair of voltage leads
which are separated by potential barriers from the wire. B\"uttiker's formula
is used to determine the chemical potential being measured and is shown to
reduce exactly to the local chemical potential in the limit of strong potential
confinement in the voltage leads. Conditions for quantisation of Hall
resistance and measuring local chemical potential are given.Comment: 16 pages LaTex, 2 post-script figures available on reques
Nonlinear optical response and spin-charge separation in one-dimensional Mott insulators
We theoretically study the nonlinear optical response and photoexcited states
of the Mott insulators. The nonlinear optical susceptibility \chi^(3) is
calculated by using the exact diagonalization technique on small clusters. From
the systematic study of the dependence of \chi^(3) on dimensionality, we find
that the spin-charge separation plays a crucial role in enhancing \chi^(3) in
the one-dimensional (1D) Mott insulators. Based on this result, we propose a
holon-doublon model, which describes the nonlinear response in the 1D Mott
insulators. These findings show that the spin-charge separation will become a
key concept of optoelectronic devices.Comment: 5 pages with 3 figures, to appear in PRB RC, 15 August 200
An algebraic Birkhoff decomposition for the continuous renormalization group
This paper aims at presenting the first steps towards a formulation of the
Exact Renormalization Group Equation in the Hopf algebra setting of Connes and
Kreimer. It mostly deals with some algebraic preliminaries allowing to
formulate perturbative renormalization within the theory of differential
equations. The relation between renormalization, formulated as a change of
boundary condition for a differential equation, and an algebraic Birkhoff
decomposition for rooted trees is explicited
Fluctuations in the diffuse X-ray background observed with Ginga
We present Ginga measurements of the spatial fluctuations in the diffuse
X-ray background. When combined with earlier results, the new data constrain
the extragalactic log N - log S relation in the 2-10 keV energy band to a form
close to the Euclidean prediction over the flux range 1E-10 - 5E-13 erg/cm2/s.
The normalisation of the 2-10 keV source counts is a factor 2-3 above that
derived in the softer 0.3-3.5 keV band from the Einstein Extended Medium
Sensitivity Survey if a spectral conversion is assumed which ignores X-ray
absorption intrinsic to the sources. Both this result and the spectral
characteristics of the spatial fluctuations are consistent with relatively
low-luminosity active galaxies (i.e. L_X < 1E44 erg/s) dominating the 2-10 keV
source counts at intermediate flux levels. We also use the `excess variance' of
the fluctuations to constrain possible clustering of the underlying discrete
sources.Comment: 16 pages, LateX and 9 jpeg figures. Accepted in MNRAS. Also at
http://www.ifca.unican.es/~barcons/preprints.htm
Detection and imaging of atmospheric radio flashes from cosmic ray air showers
The nature of ultrahigh-energy cosmic rays (UHECRs) at energies >10^20 eV
remains a mystery. They are likely to be of extragalactic origin, but should be
absorbed within ~50 Mpc through interactions with the cosmic microwave
background. As there are no sufficient powerful accelerators within this
distance from the Galaxy, explanations for UHECRs range from unusual
astrophysical sources to exotic string physics. Also unclear is whether UHECRs
consist of protons, heavy nuclei, neutrinos or gamma-rays. To resolve these
questions, larger detectors with higher duty cycles and which combine multiple
detection techniques are needed. Radio emission from UHECRs, on the other hand,
is unaffected by attenuation, has a high duty cycle, gives calorimetric
measurements and provides high directional accuracy. Here we report the
detection of radio flashes from cosmic-ray air showers using low-cost digital
radio receivers. We show that the radiation can be understood in terms of the
geosynchrotron effect. Our results show that it should be possible to determine
the nature and composition of UHECRs with combined radio and particle
detectors, and to detect the ultrahigh-energy neutrinos expected from flavour
mixing.Comment: Nature, May 19, 2005 issue (PDF, 14 pages),
http://www.astro.ru.nl/lopes/?loc=publication
Variable X-ray Absorption in the Seyfert 2 Galaxy Mrk 348
We present RXTE monitoring observations of the Seyfert 2 galaxy Mrk 348
spanning a 6 month period. The time-averaged spectrum in the 3-20 keV band
shows many features characteristic of a Compton-thin Seyfert 2 galaxy, namely a
hard underlying power-law continuum (photon index = 1.8) with heavy soft X-ray
absorption (N_h ~ 10^23 cm^-2) plus measureable iron line emission (equivalent
width ~ 100 eV) and, at high energy, evidence for a reflection component (R <
1). During the first half of the monitoring period the X-ray continuum flux
from Mrk 348 remained relatively steady. However this was followed by a
significant brightening of the source (by roughly a factor of 4) with the
fastest change corresponding to a doubling of its X-ray flux on a timescale of
about 20 days. The flux increase was accompanied by a marked softening of X-ray
spectrum most likely attributable to a factor 3 decline in the intrinsic
line-of-sight column density. In contrast the iron line and the reflection
components showed no evidence of variability. These observations suggest a
scenario in which the central X-ray source is surrounded by a patchy
distribution of absorbing material located within about a light-week of the
nucleus of Mrk 348. The random movement of individual clouds within the
absorbing screen, across our line of sight, produces substantial temporal
variations in the measured column density on timescales of weeks to months and
gives rise to the observed X-ray spectral variability. However, as viewed from
the nucleus the global coverage and typical thickness of the cloud layer
remains relatively constant.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Progress in Air Shower Radio Measurements: Detection of Distant Events
Data taken during half a year of operation of 10 LOPES antennas (LOPES-10),
triggered by EAS observed with KASCADE-Grande have been analysed. We report
about the analysis of correlations of radio signals measured by LOPES-10 with
extensive air shower events reconstructed by KASCADE-Grande, including shower
cores at large distances. The efficiency of detecting radio signals induced by
air showers up to distances of 700 m from the shower axis has been
investigated. The results are discussed with special emphasis on the effects of
the reconstruction accuracy for shower core and arrival direction on the
coherence of the measured radio signal. In addition, the correlations of the
radio pulse amplitude with the primary cosmic ray energy and with the lateral
distance from the shower core are studied.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astroparticle Physic
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