7,073 research outputs found

    Persistent current noise

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    We demonstrate that persistent current in meso- and nanorings may fluctuate down to zero temperature provided the current operator does not commute with the total Hamiltonian of the system. For a model of a quantum particle on a ring we explicitly evaluate PC noise power which has a form of sharp peaks which become broadened for multi-channel rings or in the presence of dissipation. PC noise can be tuned by an external magnetic flux which is a fundamental manifestation of quantum coherence in the system.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur

    Weak localization, Aharonov-Bohm oscillations and decoherence in arrays of quantum dots

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    Combining scattering matrix theory with non-linear σ\sigma-model and Keldysh technique we develop a unified theoretical approach enabling one to non-perturbatively study the effect of electron-electron interactions on weak localization and Aharonov-Bohm oscillations in arbitrary arrays of quantum dots. Our model embraces (i) weakly disordered conductors (ii) strongly disordered conductors and (iii) metallic quantum dots. In all these cases at T0T \to 0 the electron decoherence time is found to saturate to a finite value determined by the universal formula which agrees quantitatively with numerous experimental results. Our analysis provides overwhelming evidence in favor of electron-electron interactions as a universal mechanism for zero temperature electron decoherence in disordered conductors.Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures, invited paper, published in a special issue of Fiz. Nizk. Temp. (Kharkov) dedicated to Prof. Igor Kuli

    Mixed Quantum/Classical Approach for Description of Molecular Collisions in Astrophysical Environments

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    An efficient and accurate mixed quantum/classical theory approach for computational treatment of inelastic scattering is extended to describe collision of an atom with a general asymmetric-top rotor polyatomic molecule. Quantum mechanics, employed to describe transitions between the internal states of the molecule, and classical mechanics, employed for description of scattering of the atom, are used in a self-consistent manner. Such calculations for rotational excitation of HCOOCH3 in collisions with He produce accurate results at scattering energies above 15 cm–1, although resonances near threshold, below 5 cm–1, cannot be reproduced. Importantly, the method remains computationally affordable at high scattering energies (here up to 1000 cm–1), which enables calculations for larger molecules and at higher collision energies than was possible previously with the standard full-quantum approach. Theoretical prediction of inelastic cross sections for a number of complex organic molecules observed in space becomes feasible using this new computational tool

    Magnetic reconnection during collisionless, stressed, X-point collapse using Particle-in-Cell simulation

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    Two cases of weakly and strongly stressed X-point collapse were considered. Here descriptors weakly and strongly refer to 20 % and 124 % unidirectional spatial compression of the X-point, respectively. In the weakly stressed case, the reconnection rate, defined as the out-of-plane electric field in the X-point (the magnetic null) normalised by the product of external magnetic field and Alfv\'en speeds, peaks at 0.11, with its average over 1.25 Alfv\'en times being 0.04. Electron energy distribution in the current sheet, at the high energy end of the spectrum, shows a power law distribution with the index varying in time, attaining a maximal value of -4.1 at the final simulation time step (1.25 Alfv\'en times). In the strongly stressed case, magnetic reconnection peak occurs 3.4 times faster and is more efficient. The peak reconnection rate now attains value 2.5, with the average reconnection rate over 1.25 Alfv\'en times being 0.5. The power law energy spectrum for the electrons in the current sheet attains now a steeper index of -5.5, a value close to the ones observed in the vicinity of X-type region in the Earth's magneto-tail. Within about one Alfv\'en time, 2% and 20% of the initial magnteic energy is converted into heat and accelerated particle energy in the case of weak and strong stress, respectively. In the both cases, during the peak of the reconnection, the quadruple out-of-plane magnetic field is generated, hinting possibly to the Hall regime of the reconnection. These results strongly suggest the importance of the collionless, stressed X-point collapse as a possible contributing factor to the solution of the solar coronal heating problem or more generally, as an efficient mechanism of converting magnetic energy into heat and super-thermal particle energy.Comment: Final Accepted Version (Physics of Plasmas in Press 2007

    Tolerance то frustration personality of the professional in the modern megalopolis

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    Examined the factors of frustration individual in the modern megalopolis. Emphasizes the need to develop and improve tolerance to frustration personality in a professional work in the modem megalopolis. It is noted that the formation of tolerance to frustration is a condition for mental health individual, social stability, predictability of the processes taking place in modern society.Рассмотрены факторы фрустрации индивида в современном мегаполисе. Сделан акцент на необходимости развития и повышения уровня фрустрационной толерантности личности в условиях профессиональной деятельности в современном мегаполисе. Отмечено, что формирование фрустрационной толерантности является условием психологического здоровья индивида, социальной стабильности, прогнозируемоети процессов, происходящих в современном обществе

    On the methanol emission detection in the TW Hya disc: the role of grain surface chemistry and non-LTE excitation

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    The recent detection of gas-phase methanol (CH3_3OH) lines in the disc of TW Hya by Walsh et al. provided the first observational constraints on the complex O-bearing organic content in protoplanetary discs. The emission has a ring-like morphology, with a peak at 3050\sim 30-50 au and an inferred column density of 36×1012\sim 3-6\times10^{12} cm2^{-2}. A low CH3_3OH fractional abundance of 0.34×1011\sim 0.3-4\times 10^{-11} (with respect to H2_2) is derived, depending on the assumed vertical location of the CH3_3OH molecular layer. In this study, we use a thermo-chemical model of the TW Hya disc, coupled with the ALCHEMIC gas-grain chemical model, assuming laboratory-motivated, fast diffusivities of the surface molecules to interpret the CH3_3OH detection. Based on this disc model, we performed radiative transfer calculations with the LIME code and simulations of the observations with the CASA simulator. We found that our model allows to reproduce the observations well. The CH3_3OH emission in our model appears as a ring with radius of 60\sim60 au. Synthetic and observed line flux densities are equal within the rms noise level of observations. The synthetic CH3_3OH spectra calculated assuming local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) can differ by up to a factor of 3.5 from the non-LTE spectra. For the strongest lines, the differences between LTE and non-LTE flux densities are very small and practically negligible. Variations in the diffusivity of the surface molecules can lead to variations of the CH3_3OH abundance and, therefore, line flux densities by an order of magnitude.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 8 pages, 8 figure
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