37,409 research outputs found
Herschel-ATLAS: Blazars in the science demonstration phase field
To investigate the poorly constrained sub-mm counts and spectral properties of blazars we searched for these in the Herschel-ATLAS (H-ATLAS) science demonstration phase (SDP) survey catalog.
We cross-matched 500 μm sources brighter than 50 mJy with the FIRST radio catalogue. We found two blazars, both previously known. Our study is among the first blind blazar searches at sub-mm wavelengths, i.e., in the spectral regime where little is still known about the blazar SEDs, but where the synchrotron peak of the most luminous blazars is expected to occur. Our early results are consistent with educated extrapolations of lower frequency counts and question indications of substantial spectral curvature downwards and of spectral upturns at mm wavelengths. One of the two blazars is identified with a Fermi/LAT γ-ray source and a WMAP source. The physical parameters of the two blazars are briefly discussed. These observations demonstrate that the H-ATLAS survey will provide key information about the physics of blazars and their contribution to sub-mm counts
Renormalization group approach to chiral symmetry breaking in graphene
We investigate the development of a gapped phase in the field theory of Dirac
fermions in graphene with long-range Coulomb interaction. In the large-N
approximation, we show that the chiral symmetry is only broken below a critical
number of two-component Dirac fermions , that is exactly half
the value found in quantum electrodynamics in 2+1 dimensions. Adopting
otherwise a ladder approximation, we give evidence of the existence of a
critical coupling at which the anomalous dimension of the order parameter of
the transition diverges. This result is consistent with the observation that
chiral symmetry breaking may be driven by the long-range Coulomb interaction in
the Dirac field theory, despite the divergent scaling of the Fermi velocity in
the low-energy limit.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, extended version with technical detail
InAs/InP single quantum wire formation and emission at 1.5 microns
Isolated InAs/InP self-assembled quantum wires have been grown using in situ
accumulated stress measurements to adjust the optimal InAs thickness. Atomic
force microscopy imaging shows highly asymmetric nanostructures with average
length exceeding more than ten times their width. High resolution optical
investigation of as-grown samples reveals strong photoluminescence from
individual quantum wires at 1.5 microns. Additional sharp features are related
to monolayer fluctuations of the two dimensional InAs layer present during the
early stages of the quantum wire self-assembling process.Comment: 4 pages and 3 figures submitted to Applied Physics Letter
Propagating, evanescent, and localized states in carbon nanotube-graphene junctions
We study the electronic structure of the junctions between a single graphene
layer and carbon nanotubes, using a tight-binding model and the continuum
theory based on Dirac fermion fields. The latter provides a unified description
of different lattice structures with curvature, which is always localized at
six heptagonal carbon rings around each junction. When these are evenly spaced,
we find that it is possible to curve the planar lattice into armchair (6n,6n)
as well as zig-zag (6n,0) nanotubes. We show that the junctions fall into two
different classes, regarding the low-energy electronic behavior. One of them,
constituted by the junctions made of the armchair nanotubes and the zig-zag
(6n,0) geometries when n is a multiple of 3, is characterized by the presence
of two quasi-bound states at the Fermi level, which are absent for the rest of
the zig-zag nanotubes. These states, localized at the junction, are shown to
arise from the effective gauge flux induced by the heptagonal carbon rings,
which has a direct reflection in the local density of states around the
junction. Furthermore, we also analyze the band structure of the arrays of
junctions, finding out that they can also be classified into two different
groups according to the low-energy behavior. In this regard, the arrays made of
armchair and (6n,0) nanotubes with n equal to a multiple of 3 are characterized
by the presence of a series of flat bands, whose number grows with the length
of the nanotubes. We show that such flat bands have their origin in the
formation of states confined to the nanotubes in the array. This is explained
in the continuum theory from the possibility of forming standing waves in the
mentioned nanotube geometries, as a superposition of modes with opposite
momenta and the same quantum numbers under the C_6v symmetry of the junction.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
Surface structure in simple liquid metals. An orbital free first principles study
Molecular dynamics simulations of the liquid-vapour interfaces in simple
sp-bonded liquid metals have been performed using first principles methods.
Results are presented for liquid Li, Na, K, Rb, Cs, Mg, Ba, Al, Tl, and Si at
thermodynamic conditions near their respective triple points, for samples of
2000 particles in a slab geometry. The longitudinal ionic density profiles
exhibit a pronounced stratification extending several atomic diameters into the
bulk, which is a feature already experimentally observed in liquid K, Ga, In,
Sn and Hg. The wavelength of the ionic oscillations shows a good scaling with
the radii of the associated Wigner-Seitz spheres. The structural rearrangements
at the interface are analyzed in terms of the transverse pair correlation
function, the coordination number and the bond-angle distribution between
nearest neighbors. The valence electronic density profile also shows (weaker)
oscillations whose phase, with respect to those of the ionic profile, changes
from opposite phase in the alkalis to almost in-phase for Si.Comment: 16 pages, 18 figures, 5 tables. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Electron-induced rippling in graphene
We show that the interaction between flexural phonons, when corrected by the
exchange of electron-hole excitations, may place the graphene sheet very close
to a quantum critical point characterized by the strong suppression of the
bending rigidity of the membrane. Ripples arise then due to spontaneous
symmetry breaking, following a mechanism similar to that responsible for the
condensation of the Higgs field in relativistic field theories. In the presence
of membrane tensions, ripple condensation may be reinforced or suppressed
depending on the sign of the tension, following a zero-temperature buckling
transition in which the order parameter is given essentially by the square of
the gradient of the flexural phonon field.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Confinement of electrons in layered metals
We analyze the out of plane hopping in models of layered systems where the
in--plane properties deviate from Landau's theory of a Fermi liquid. We show
that the hopping term acquires a non trivial energy dependence, due to the
coupling to in plane excitations, and can be either relevant or irrelevant at
low energies or temperatures. The latter is always the case if the Fermi level
lies close to a saddle point in the dispersion relation.Comment: 4 pages, 1 eps figur
Interplay of Coulomb and electron-phonon interactions in graphene
We consider mutual effect of the electron-phonon and strong Coulomb
interactions on each other by summing up leading logarithmic corrections via
the renormalization group approach. We find that the Coulomb interaction
enhances electron coupling to the intervalley A1 optical phonons, but not to
the intravalley E2 phonons
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