16,027 research outputs found

    The role of excitons and trions on electron spin polarization in quantum wells

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    We have studied the time evolution of the electron spin polarization under continuous photoexcitation in remotely n-doped semiconductor quantum wells. The doped region allows us to get the necessary excess of free electrons to form trions. We have considered electron resonant photoexcitation at free, exciton and trion electron energy levels. Also, we have studied the relative effect of photoexcitation energy density and doping concentration. In order to obtain the two-dimensional density evolution of the different species, we have performed dynamic calculations through the matrix density formalism. Our results indicate that photoexcitation of free electron level leads to a higher spin polarization. Also, we have found that increasing the photoexcitation energy or diminishing the doping enhances spin polarization.Comment: 30 pages, 11 figures, 1 tabl

    Evaluation of the ππ\pi\pi scattering amplitude in the σ\sigma-channel at finite density

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    The ππ\pi\pi scattering amplitude in the σ\sigma-channel is studied at finite baryonic density in the framework of a chiral unitary approach which successfully reproduces the meson meson phase shifts and generates the f0f_0 and σ\sigma resonances in vacuum. We address here a new variety of mechanisms recently suggested to modify the ππ\pi\pi interaction in the medium, as well as the role of the s−s-wave selfenergy, in addition to the p−p-wave, in the dressing of the pion propagators.Comment: 26 pages, 17 figure

    Nonlinear spin-polarized transport through a ferromagnetic domain wall

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    A domain wall separating two oppositely magnetized regions in a ferromagnetic semiconductor exhibits, under appropriate conditions, strongly nonlinear I-V characteristics similar to those of a p-n diode. We study these characteristics as functions of wall width and temperature. As the width increases or the temperature decreases, direct tunneling between the majority spin bands decreases the effectiveness of the diode. This has important implications for the zero-field quenched resistance of magnetic semiconductors and for the design of a recently proposed spin transistor.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Quasiparticle Breakdown and Spin Hamiltonian of the Frustrated Quantum Pyrochlore Yb2_2Ti2_2O7_7 in Magnetic Field

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    The frustrated pyrochlore magnet Yb2_2Ti2_2O7_7 has the remarkable property that it orders magnetically, but has no propagating magnons over wide regions of the Brillouin zone. Here we use inelastic neutron scattering to follow how the spectrum evolves in cubic-axis magnetic fields. At high fields we observe in addition to dispersive magnons also a two-magnon continuum, which grows in intensity upon reducing the field and overlaps with the one-magnon states at intermediate fields leading to strong renormalization of the dispersion relations, and magnon decays. Using heat capacity measurements we find that the low and high field regions are smoothly connected with no sharp phase transition, with the spin gap increasing monotonically in field. Through fits to an extensive data set we re-evaluate the spin Hamiltonian finding dominant quantum exchange terms, which we propose are responsible for the anomalously strong fluctuations and quasiparticle breakdown effects observed at low fields.Comment: 5 pages main text + 19 pages supplemental materia

    S-PRAC: Fast Partial Packet Recovery with Network Coding in Very Noisy Wireless Channels

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    Well-known error detection and correction solutions in wireless communications are slow or incur high transmission overhead. Recently, notable solutions like PRAC and DAPRAC, implementing partial packet recovery with network coding, could address these problems. However, they perform slowly when there are many errors. We propose S-PRAC, a fast scheme for partial packet recovery, particularly designed for very noisy wireless channels. S-PRAC improves on DAPRAC. It divides each packet into segments consisting of a fixed number of small RLNC encoded symbols and then attaches a CRC code to each segment and one to each coded packet. Extensive simulations show that S-PRAC can detect and correct errors quickly. It also outperforms DAPRAC significantly when the number of errors is high
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