33,630 research outputs found
Quantum critical behaviour of the plateau-insulator transition in the quantum Hall regime
High-field magnetotransport experiments provide an excellent tool to
investigate the plateau-insulator phase transition in the integral quantum Hall
effect. Here we review recent low-temperature high-field magnetotransport
studies carried out on several InGaAs/InP heterostructures and an InGaAs/GaAs
quantum well. We find that the longitudinal resistivity near the
critical filling factor ~ 0.5 follows the universal scaling law
, where . The critical exponent equals ,
which indicates that the plateau-insulator transition falls in a non-Fermi
liquid universality class.Comment: 8 pages, accepted for publication in Proceedings of the Yamada
Conference LX on Research in High Magnetic Fields (August 16-19, 2006,
Sendai
Inclusion of new LHC data in MMHT PDFs
I consider the effects of including a variety of new LHC data sets into the
MMHT approach for PDF determination. I consider the impact of fitting new LHC
and Tevatron data, which leads to clear improvements in some PDF uncertainties.
There are specific issues with ATLAS 7 TeV jet data and I include a discussion
of the treatment of correlated uncertainties and briefly the effects of NNLO
corrections. I also present preliminary results with the inclusion of the high
precison final ATLAS 7 TeV rapidity-dependent data.Comment: 6 pages. To appear in proceedings of DIS2017 Worksho
Alternative approach to computing transport coefficients: application to conductivity and Hall coefficient of hydrogenated amorphous silicon
We introduce a theoretical framework for computing transport coefficients for
complex materials. As a first example, we resolve long-standing inconsistencies
between experiment and theory pertaining to the conductivity and Hall mobility
for amorphous silicon and show that the Hall sign anomaly is a consequence of
localized states. Next, we compute the AC conductivity of amorphous
polyanaline. The formalism is applicable to complex materials involving defects
and band-tail states originating from static topological disorder and extended
states. The method may be readily integrated with current \textit{ab initio}
methods.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Green's and spectral functions of the small Frolich polaron
According to recent Quantum Monte Carlo simulations the small polaron theory
is practically exact in a wide range of the long-range (Frohlich)
electron-phonon coupling and adiabatic ratio. We apply the Lang-Firsov
transformation to convert the strong-coupling term in the Hamiltonian into the
form of an effective hopping integral and derive the single-particle Green's
function describing propagation of the small Frohlich polaron. One and two
dimensional spectral functions are studied by expanding the Green's function
perturbatively. Numerical calculations of the spectral functions are produced.
Remarkably, the coherent spectral weight (Z) and effective mass (Z')
renormalisation exponents are found to be different with Z'>>Z, which can
explain a small coherent spectral weight and a relatively moderate mass
enhancement in oxides.Comment: RevTeX, 5 pages, 2 postscript figures, LaTeX processing problems
correcte
Nuclear Dynamics at the Balance Energy
We study the mass dependence of various quantities (like the average and
maximum density, collision rate, participant-spectator matter, temperature as
well as time zones for higher density) by simulating the reactions at the
energy of vanishing flow. This study is carried out within the framework of
Quantum Molecular Dynamics model. Our findings clearly indicate an existence of
a power law in all the above quantities calculated at the balance energy. The
only significant mass dependence was obtained for the temperature reached in
the central sphere. All other quantities are rather either insensitive or
depend weakly on the system size at balance energy. The time zone for higher
density as well as the time of maximal density and collision rate follow a
power law inverse to the energy of vanishing flow.Comment: 9 figures, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
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