198 research outputs found

    Nonequilibrium Dynamic Conductivity of Superconductors: An Exploitable Basis for High Energy Resolution X-Ray Detectors

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    A new design for high‐energy radiation/particle detectors is presented. The nonequilibrium response of a superconductor to the absorption of the incident quanta is sensed by electromagnetic measurements of the altered dynamic conductivity. Microwave absorption may be used to amplify the signal. Such a detector will provide better energy resolution than semiconducting charge‐collection devices once the statistical resolution limit is reached

    THE TIGHT-BINDING APPROACH TO THE DIELECTRIC RESPONSE IN THE MULTIBAND SYSTEMS

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    Starting from the random phase approximation for the weakly coupled multiband tightly-bounded electron systems, we calculate the dielectric matrix in terms of intraband and interband transitions. The advantages of this representation with respect to the usual plane-wave decomposition are pointed out. The analysis becomes particularly transparent in the long wavelength limit, after performing the multipole expansion of bare Coulomb matrix elements. For illustration, the collective modes and the macroscopic dielectric function for a general cubic lattice are derived. It is shown that the dielectric instability in conducting narrow band systems proceeds by a common softening of one transverse and one longitudinal mode. Furthermore, the self-polarization corrections which appear in the macroscopic dielectric function for finite band systems, are identified as a combined effect of intra-atomic exchange interactions between electrons sitting in different orbitals and a finite inter-atomic tunneling.Comment: 20 pages, LaTeX, no figure

    Thermoelectric Single-Photon Detectors for X-Ray/UV Radiation

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    A feasibility study of megapixel microcalorimeter arrays, based on thermoelectric energy to voltage conversion and digital superconducting readout, is presented. The design concept originated from the philosophy of employing the simplest principles at the single-pixel level to enable large arrays without sacrificing energy resolution, fast operation speed, and quantum efficiency. Initial experimental tests confirm the basic predictions of theory, and show no major obstacle in achieving the desired characteristics

    Sensor Development for Single-Photon Thermoelectric Detectors

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    As we reported earlier [1], thermoelectric detectors can be competitive as nondispersive energy resolving focal-plane instruments in X-ray/UV spectrum. The first generations of prototype devices demonstrated the viability of detector design and provided good agreement between theoretical expectations and experimental data. These devices exploited sensors made of gold with a small fraction of iron impurity. To get the projected high resolution one needs another type of material, namely, lanthanum-cerium hexaborides. We report on the first experimental tests of the feasibility of lanthanum-cerium films as sensor materials. Progress with thin films of these materials argues for the success of these thermoelectric detectors

    Voltage Responses to Optical Pulses of Unbiased Normal and Superconducting Samples

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    The direct transformation of the energy of an incident high-energy photon into a measurable potential difference within an absorbing metal is investigated. Experimental evidence is presented that the effect arises from the inherent energy dependence of the electronic density of states, rather than from a simple temperature excursion. The similarities between the results on Al and YBa2Cu3O7 samples indicate that the effect is universal in nature. We assert it may be used as the basis of a fast, energy resolving, individual photon detector for the ultraviolet radiation and x-rays

    Stability of the Wurtzite Structure

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    An analysis of available data for 20 wurtzite compounds of the ANB8-N type shows that the stability as compared with zinc blende is closely connected with deviations of the c / a ratio from the ideal value of 1.633. A simple qualitative model is proposed to account for this feature. The variation in c / a is then correlated with the charge parameter ZC / ℏωp, where Z is the (effective) valence, C Phillips's electronegativity difference, and ℏωp the plasma energy of the free-valence-electron gas. The results indicate that c / a may be predicted with an uncertainty of 0.1%
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