836 research outputs found
Proximity effect between two superconductors spatially resolved by scanning tunneling spectroscopy
We present a combined experimental and theoretical study of the proximity
effect in an atomic-scale controlled junction between two different
superconductors. Elaborated on a Si(111) surface, the junction comprises a Pb
nanocrystal with an energy gap of 1.2 meV, connected to a crystalline atomic
monolayer of lead with a gap of 0.23 meV. Using in situ scanning tunneling
spectroscopy we probe the local density of states of this hybrid system both in
space and in energy, at temperatures below and above the critical temperature
of the superconducting monolayer. Direct and inverse proximity effects are
revealed with high resolution. Our observations are precisely explained with
the help of a self-consistent solution of the Usadel equations. In particular,
our results demonstrate that in the vicinity of the Pb islands, the Pb
monolayer locally develops a finite proximity-induced superconducting order
parameter, well above its own bulk critical temperature. This leads to a giant
proximity effect where the superconducting correlations penetrate inside the
monolayer a distance much larger than in a non-superconducting metal.Comment: 13 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Analysis of airplane boarding via space-time geometry and random matrix theory
We show that airplane boarding can be asymptotically modeled by 2-dimensional
Lorentzian geometry. Boarding time is given by the maximal proper time among
curves in the model. Discrepancies between the model and simulation results are
closely related to random matrix theory. We then show how such models can be
used to explain why some commonly practiced airline boarding policies are
ineffective and even detrimental.Comment: 4 page
Double Fe-impurity charge state in the topological insulator BiSe
The influence of individual impurities of Fe on the electronic properties of
topological insulator BiSe is studied by Scanning Tunneling Microscopy.
The microscope tip is used in order to remotely charge/discharge Fe impurities.
The charging process is shown to depend on the impurity location in the
crystallographic unit cell, on the presence of other Fe impurities in the close
vicinity, as well as on the overall doping level of the crystal. We present a
qualitative explanation of the observed phenomena in terms of tip-induced local
band bending. Our observations evidence that the specific impurity neighborhood
and the position of the Fermi energy with respect to the Dirac point and bulk
bands have both to be taken into account when considering the electron
scattering on the disorder in topological insulators.Comment: 10 pages, accepted for publication in Applied Physics Letters, minor
bugs were correcte
Observations of the bright radio sources in the North Celestial Pole region at the RATAN-600 radio telescope
A survey of the North Celestial Pole region using the RATAN-600 radio
telescope at five frequencies in the range 2.3 to 21.7 GHz is described.
Sources were chosen from the NVSS catalogue. The flux densities of 171 sources
in the Declination range +75 to +88 are presented; typical flux density errors
are 5-10 percent including calibration errors. About 20 percent of the sources
have flat spectra or a flat component.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures; to be published in Astronomy and Astrophysics
(without last figure with the spectra of the observed sources
CMB component separation by parameter estimation
We propose a solution to the CMB component separation problem based on
standard parameter estimation techniques. We assume a parametric spectral model
for each signal component, and fit the corresponding parameters pixel by pixel
in a two-stage process. First we fit for the full parameter set (e.g.,
component amplitudes and spectral indices) in low-resolution and high
signal-to-noise ratio maps using MCMC, obtaining both best-fit values for each
parameter, and the associated uncertainty. The goodness-of-fit is evaluated by
a chi^2 statistic. Then we fix all non-linear parameters at their
low-resolution best-fit values, and solve analytically for high-resolution
component amplitude maps. This likelihood approach has many advantages: The
fitted model may be chosen freely, and the method is therefore completely
general; all assumptions are transparent; no restrictions on spatial variations
of foreground properties are imposed; the results may be rigorously monitored
by goodness-of-fit tests; and, most importantly, we obtain reliable error
estimates on all estimated quantities. We apply the method to simulated Planck
and six-year WMAP data based on realistic models, and show that separation at
the muK level is indeed possible in these cases. We also outline how the
foreground uncertainties may be rigorously propagated through to the CMB power
spectrum and cosmological parameters using a Gibbs sampling technique.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures, submitted to ApJ. For a high-resolution
version, see http://www.astro.uio.no/~hke/docs/eriksen_et_al_fgfit.p
Multimaterial Piezoelectric Fibres
Fibre materials span a broad range of applications ranging from simple textile yarns to complex modern fibre-optic communication systems. Throughout their history, a key premise has remained essentially unchanged: fibres are static devices, incapable of controllably changing their properties over a wide range of frequencies. A number of approaches to realizing time-dependent variations in fibres have emerged, including refractive index modulation1, 2, 3, 4, nonlinear optical mechanisms in silica glass fibres5, 6, 7, 8 and electroactively modulated polymer fibres9. These approaches have been limited primarily because of the inert nature of traditional glassy fibre materials. Here we report the composition of a phase internal to a composite fibre structure that is simultaneously crystalline and non-centrosymmetric. A ferroelectric polymer layer of 30 μm thickness is spatially confined and electrically contacted by internal viscous electrodes and encapsulated in an insulating polymer cladding hundreds of micrometres in diameter. The structure is thermally drawn in its entirety from a macroscopic preform, yielding tens of metres of piezoelectric fibre. The fibres show a piezoelectric response and acoustic transduction from kilohertz to megahertz frequencies. A single-fibre electrically driven device containing a high-quality-factor Fabry–Perot optical resonator and a piezoelectric transducer is fabricated and measured.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers Program, award number DMR-0819762)United States. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Griggs)United States. Army Research Office (Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies, contract no. W911NF-07-D-0004
Fourier transform spectroscopy and coupled-channel deperturbation treatment of the A1Sigma+ ~ b3Pi complex of KCs molecule
The laser induced fluorescence (LIF) spectra A1Sigma ~ b3Pi --> X1Sigma+ of
KCs dimer were recorded in near infrared region by Fourier Transform
Spectrometer with a resolution of 0.03 cm-1. Overall more than 200 LIF spectra
were rotationally assigned to 39K133Cs and 41K133Cs isotopomers yielding with
the uncertainty of 0.003-0.01 cm-1 more than 3400 rovibronic term values of the
strongly mixed singlet A1Sigma+ and triplet b3Pi states. Experimental data
massive starts from the lowest vibrational level v_A=0 of the singlet and
nonuniformly cover the energy range from 10040 to 13250 cm-1 with rotational
quantum numbers J from 7 to 225. Besides of the dominating regular A1Sigma+ ~
b3P Omega=0 interactions the weak and local heterogenous A1S+ ~ b3P Omega=1
perturbations have been discovered and analyzed. Coupled-channel deperturbation
analysis of the experimental 39K133Cs e-parity termvalues of the A1S+ ~ b3P
complex was accomplished in the framework of the phenomenological 4 x 4
Hamiltonian accounting implicitly for regular interactions with the remote
states manifold. The resulting diabatic potential energy curves of the
interacting states and relevant spin-orbit coupling matrix elements defined
analytically by Expanded Morse Oscillators model reproduce 95% of experimental
data field of the 39K133Cs isotopomer with a standard deviation of 0.004 cm-1
which is consistent with the uncertainty of the experiment. Reliability of the
derived parameters was additionally confirmed by a good agreement between the
predicted and experimental termvalues of 41K133Cs isotopomer. Calculated
intensity distributions in the A ~ b --> X LIF progressions are also consistent
with their experimental counterparts.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figure
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