4,867 research outputs found

    The density and pressure of helium nano-bubbles encapsulated in silicon

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    The 1s2>1s2p(1P)1s^2->1s2p(^1P) excitation in confined and compressed helium atoms in either the bulk material or encapsulated in a bubble is shifted to energies higher than that in the free atom. For bulk helium, the energy shifts predicted from non-empirical electronic structure computations are in excellent agreement with the experimentally determined values. However, there are significant discrepancies both between the results of experiments on different bubbles and between these and the well established descriptions of the bulk. A critique is presented of previous attempts to determine the densities in bubbles by measuring the intensities of the electrons inelastically scattered in STEM experiments. The reported densities are untrustworthy because it was assumed that the cross section for inelastic electron scattering was the same as that of a free atom whilst it is now known that this property is greatly enhanced for atoms confined at significant pressures. It is shown how experimental measurements of bubbles can be combined with data on the bulk using a graphical method to determine whether the behavior of an encapsulated guest differs from that in the bulk material. Experimental electron energy loss data from an earlier study of helium encapsulated in silicon is reanalyzed using this new method to show that the properties of the helium in these bubbles do not differ significantly from those in the bulk thereby enabling the densities in the bubbles to be determined. These enable the bubble pressures to be deduced from a well established experimentally derived equation of state. It is shown that the errors of up to 80% in the incorrectly determined densities are greatly magnified in the predicted pressures which can be too large by factors of over seven. This has major practical implications for the study of radiation damage of materials exposed to α\alpha particle bombardment

    Models of helically symmetric binary systems

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    Results from helically symmetric scalar field models and first results from a convergent helically symmetric binary neutron star code are reported here; these are models stationary in the rotating frame of a source with constant angular velocity omega. In the scalar field models and the neutron star code, helical symmetry leads to a system of mixed elliptic-hyperbolic character. The scalar field models involve nonlinear terms that mimic nonlinear terms of the Einstein equation. Convergence is strikingly different for different signs of each nonlinear term; it is typically insensitive to the iterative method used; and it improves with an outer boundary in the near zone. In the neutron star code, one has no control on the sign of the source, and convergence has been achieved only for an outer boundary less than approximately 1 wavelength from the source or for a code that imposes helical symmetry only inside a near zone of that size. The inaccuracy of helically symmetric solutions with appropriate boundary conditions should be comparable to the inaccuracy of a waveless formalism that neglects gravitational waves; and the (near zone) solutions we obtain for waveless and helically symmetric BNS codes with the same boundary conditions nearly coincide.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures. Expanded version of article to be published in Class. Quantum Grav. special issue on Numerical Relativit

    Quasistationary binary inspiral. I. Einstein equations for the two Killing vector spacetime

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    The geometry of two infinitely long lines of mass moving in a fixed circular orbit is considered as a toy model for the inspiral of a binary system of compact objects due to gravitational radiation. The two Killing fields in the toy model are used, according to a formalism introduced by Geroch, to describe the geometry entirely in terms of a set of tensor fields on the two-manifold of Killing vector orbits. Geroch's derivation of the Einstein equations in this formalism is streamlined and generalized. The explicit Einstein equations for the toy model spacetime are derived in terms of the degrees of freedom which remain after a particular choice of gauge.Comment: 37 pages, REVTeX, one PostScript Figure included with epsfig; minor formatting changes and copyright notice added for journal publicatio

    Electron-impact ionization of atomic hydrogen at 2 eV above threshold

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    The convergent close-coupling method is applied to the calculation of fully differential cross sections for ionization of atomic hydrogen by 15.6 eV electrons. We find that even at this low energy the method is able to yield predictive results with small uncertainty. As a consequence we suspect that the experimental normalization at this energy is approximately a factor of two too high.Comment: 10 page

    Stochastic Background Search Correlating ALLEGRO with LIGO Engineering Data

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    We describe the role of correlation measurements between the LIGO interferometer in Livingston, LA, and the ALLEGRO resonant bar detector in Baton Rouge, LA, in searches for a stochastic background of gravitational waves. Such measurements provide a valuable complement to correlations between interferometers at the two LIGO sites, since they are sensitive in a different, higher, frequency band. Additionally, the variable orientation of the ALLEGRO detector provides a means to distinguish gravitational wave correlations from correlated environmental noise. We describe the analysis underway to set a limit on the strength of a stochastic background at frequencies near 900 Hz using ALLEGRO data and data from LIGO's E7 Engineering Run.Comment: 8 pages, 2 encapsulated PostScript figures, uses IOP class files, submitted to the proceedings of the 7th Gravitational Wave Data Analysis Workshop (which will be published in Classical and Quantum Gravity

    Surface Enhanced Second Harmonic Generation from Macrocycle, Catenane, and Rotaxane Thin Films: Experiments and Theory

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    Surface enhanced second harmonic generation (SE SHG) experiments on molecular structures, macrocycles, catenanes, and rotaxanes, deposited as monolayers and multilayers by vacuum sublimation on silver, are reported. The measurements show that the molecules form ordered thin films, where the highest degree of order is observed in the case of macrocycle monolayers and the lowest in the case of rotaxane multilayers. The second harmonic generation activity is interpreted in terms of electric field induced second harmonic (EFISH) generation where the electric field is created by the substrate silver atoms. The measured second order nonlinear optical susceptibility for a rotaxane thin film is compared with that obtained by considering only EFISH contribution to SHG intensity. The electric field on the surface of a silver layer is calculated by using the Delphi4 program for structures obtained with TINKER molecular mechanics/dynamics simulations. An excellent agreement is observed between the calculated and the measured SHG susceptibilities.

    Targeted search for continuous gravitational waves: Bayesian versus maximum-likelihood statistics

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    We investigate the Bayesian framework for detection of continuous gravitational waves (GWs) in the context of targeted searches, where the phase evolution of the GW signal is assumed to be known, while the four amplitude parameters are unknown. We show that the orthodox maximum-likelihood statistic (known as F-statistic) can be rediscovered as a Bayes factor with an unphysical prior in amplitude parameter space. We introduce an alternative detection statistic ("B-statistic") using the Bayes factor with a more natural amplitude prior, namely an isotropic probability distribution for the orientation of GW sources. Monte-Carlo simulations of targeted searches show that the resulting Bayesian B-statistic is more powerful in the Neyman-Pearson sense (i.e. has a higher expected detection probability at equal false-alarm probability) than the frequentist F-statistic.Comment: 12 pages, presented at GWDAW13, to appear in CQ

    First upper limit analysis and results from LIGO science data: stochastic background

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    I describe analysis of correlations in the outputs of the three LIGO interferometers from LIGO's first science run, held over 17 days in August and September of 2002, and the resulting upper limit set on a stochastic background of gravitational waves. By searching for cross-correlations between the LIGO detectors in Livingston, LA and Hanford, WA, we are able to set a 90% confidence level upper limit of h_{100}^2 Omega_0 < 23 +/- 4.6.Comment: 7 pages; 1 eps figures; proceeding from 2003 Edoardo Amaldi Meeting on Gravitational Wave

    Tidal interaction in binary black hole inspiral

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    In rotating viscous fluid stars, tidal torque leads to an exchange of spin and orbital angular momentum. The horizon of a black hole has an effective viscosity that is large compared to that of stellar fluids, and an effective tidal torque may lead to important effects in the strong field interaction at the endpoint of the inspiral of two rapidly rotating holes. In the most interesting case both holes are maximally rotating and all angular momenta (orbital and spins) are aligned. We point out here that in such a case (i) the transfer of angular momentum may have an important effect in modifying the gravitational wave ``chirp'' at the endpoint of inspiral. (ii) The tidal transfer of spin energy to orbital energy may increase the amount of energy being radiated. (iii) Tidal transfer in such systems may provide a mechanism for shedding excess angular momentum. We argue that numerical relativity, the only tool for determining the importance of tidal torque, should be more specifically focused on binary configurations with aligned, large, angular momenta.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
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