1,370,332 research outputs found
Reflection high-energy electron diffraction studies of the growth of lnAs/Ga_(1-x)In_xSb strained-layer superlattices
We have used reflection highâenergy electron diffraction to study the surface periodicity of the growth front of InAs/GaInSb strainedâlayer superlattices (SLSs). We found that the apparent surface lattice spacing reproducibly changed during layers which subsequent xâray measurements indicated were coherently strained. Abrupt changes in the measured streak spacings were found to be correlated to changes in the growth flux. The profile of the dynamic streak spacing was found to be reproducible when comparing consecutive periods of a SLSs or different SLSs employing the same shuttering scheme at the InAs/GaInSb interface. Finally, when the interface shuttering scheme was changed, it was found that the dynamic streak separation profile also changed. Large changes in the shuttering scheme led to dramatic differences in the streak separation profile, and small changes in the shuttering scheme led to minor changes in the profile. In both cases, the differences in the surface periodicity profile occurred during the parts of the growth where the incident fluxes differed
Cooperative emission of a pulse train in an optically thick scattering medium
An optically thick cold atomic cloud emits a coherent flash of light in the
forward direction when the phase of an incident probe field is abruptly
changed. Because of cooperativity, the duration of this phenomena can be much
shorter than the excited lifetime of a single atom. Repeating periodically the
abrupt phase jump, we generate a train of pulses with short repetition time,
high intensity contrast and high efficiency. In this regime, the emission is
fully governed by cooperativity even if the cloud is dilute.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Dynamics of a spherical minority game
We present an exact dynamical solution of a spherical version of the batch
minority game (MG) with random external information. The control parameters in
this model are the ratio of the number of possible values for the public
information over the number of agents, and the radius of the spherical
constraint on the microscopic degrees of freedom. We find a phase diagram with
three phases: two without anomalous response (an oscillating versus a frozen
state), and a further frozen phase with divergent integrated response. In
contrast to standard MG versions, we can also calculate the volatility exactly.
Our study reveals similarities between the spherical and the conventional MG,
but also intriguing differences. Numerical simulations confirm our analytical
results.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures; submitted to J. Phys.
Negative Specific Heat in a Quasi-2D Generalized Vorticity Model
Negative specific heat is a dramatic phenomenon where processes decrease in
temperature when adding energy. It has been observed in gravo-thermal collapse
of globular clusters. We now report finding this phenomenon in bundles of
nearly parallel, periodic, single-sign generalized vortex filaments in the
electron magnetohydrodynamic (EMH) model for the unbounded plane under strong
magnetic confinement. We derive the specific heat using a steepest descent
method and a mean field property. Our derivations show that as temperature
increases, the overall size of the system increases exponentially and the
energy drops. The implication of negative specific heat is a runaway reaction,
resulting in a collapsing inner core surrounded by an expanding halo of
filaments.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures; updated with revision
A microfabricated ion trap with integrated microwave circuitry
We describe the design, fabrication and testing of a surface-electrode ion
trap, which incorporates microwave waveguides, resonators and coupling elements
for the manipulation of trapped ion qubits using near-field microwaves. The
trap is optimised to give a large microwave field gradient to allow
state-dependent manipulation of the ions' motional degrees of freedom, the key
to multiqubit entanglement. The microwave field near the centre of the trap is
characterised by driving hyperfine transitions in a single laser-cooled 43Ca+
ion.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Transport characteristics of L-point and Đ-point electrons through GaAs-Ga_(1-x)Ai_xAs-GaAs(111} double heterojunctions
We present here a study on the transport characteristics of Lâpoint and Îâpoint derived electrons through abrupt GaAsâGa_(1âx)Al_xAsâGaAs(111) double heterojunctions. The use of complexâk band structures in the tightâbinding approximation and transfer matrices provide a reasonably accurate description of the wave function at the GaAsâGa_(1âx)Al_xAs interface. A representation of the wave function in terms of bulk complexâk Bloch states is used in the GaAs regions where the potential is bulklike. A representation of the wave function in terms of planar orbitals is used in the central Ga_(1âx)Al_xAs region where the potential deviates from its bulk value (i.e., interfacial region). Within this theoretical framework, realistic band structure effects are taken into account and no artificial rules regarding the connection of the wave function across the interface are introduced. The tenâband tightâbinding model includes admixture in the total wave function of states derived from different extrema of the GaAs conduction band. States derived from the same extremum of the conduction band appear to couple strongly to each other, whereas states derived from different extrema are found to couple weakly. Transport characteristics of incoming Lâpoint and Îâpoint Bloch states are examined as a function of the energy of the incoming state, thickness of the Ga_(1âx)Al_xAs barrier, and alloy composition x. Transmission through the Ga_(1âx)Al_xAs barrier is either tunneling or propagating depending on the nature of the Bloch states available for strong coupling in the alloy. Since Bloch states derived from different extrema of the conduction band appear to couple weakly to each other, it seems possible to reflect the low velocity Lâpoint component of the current while transmitting the high velocity Îâpoint component
Air-atomizing splash-cone fuel nozzle reduces pollutant emissions from turbojet engines
Advantages of fuel nozzle over conventional pressure-atomizing fuel nozzles: simplicity of construction, ability to distribute fuel-air mixture uniformly across full height of combustor without using auxiliary air supply, reliability when using contaminated fuels, and durability of nozzle at high operating temperatures
Indirect search for supersymmetry in rare B decays
QCD corrections to the gluino induced contribution to b --> s gamma are shown
to be important in order to extract reliable bounds on the off-diagonal
elements of the squark mass matrices.Comment: 4 pages including 2 postscript figure
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