6,441 research outputs found
The consequences of SU(3) colorsingletness, Polyakov Loop and Z(3) symmetry on a quark-gluon gas
Based on quantum statistical mechanics we show that the color singlet
ensemble of a quark-gluon gas exhibits a symmetry through the normaized
character in fundamental representation and also becomes equivalent, within a
stationary point approximation, to the ensemble given by Polyakov Loop. Also
Polyakov Loop gauge potential is obtained by considering spatial gluons along
with the invariant Haar measure at each space point. The probability of the
normalized character in vis-a-vis Polyakov Loop is found to be maximum
at a particular value exhibiting a strong color correlation. This clearly
indicates a transition from a color correlated to uncorrelated phase or
vise-versa. When quarks are included to the gauge fields, a metastable state
appears in the temperature range due to the
explicit symmetry breaking in the quark-gluon system. Beyond
MeV the metastable state disappears and stable domains appear. At low
temperature a dynamical recombination of ionized color charges to a
color singlet confined phase is evident along with a confining
background that originates due to circulation of two virtual spatial gluons but
with conjugate phases in a closed loop. We also discuss other possible
consequences of the center domains in the color deconfined phase at high
temperature.Comment: Version published in J. Phys.
Size distribution of sputtered particles from Au nanoislands due to MeV self-ion bombardment
Nanoisland gold films, deposited by vacuum evaporation of gold onto Si(100)
substrates, were irradiated with 1.5 MeV Au ions up to a fluence of
ions cm and at incidence angles up to
with respect to the surface normal. The sputtered particles were collected on
carbon coated grids (catcher grid) during ion irradiation and were analyzed
with transmission electron microscopy and Rutherford backscattering
spectrometry. The average sputtered particle size and the areal coverage are
determined from transmission electron microscopy measurements, whereas the
amount of gold on the substrate is found by Rutherford backscattering
spectrometry. The size distributions of larger particles (number of
atoms/particle, 1,000) show an inverse power-law with an exponent of
-1 in broad agreement with a molecular dynamics simulation of ion impact
on cluster targets.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, Submitted for publication in JA
Four Zero Texture Fermion Mass Matrices in SO(10) GUT
We attempt the integration of the phenomenologically successful four zero
texture of fermion mass matrices with the renormalizable SO(10) GUT. The
resulting scenario is found to be highly predictive. Firstly, we examine the
phenomenological implications of a class of the lepton mass matrices with
parallel texture structures and obtain interesting constraints on the
parameters of the charged lepton and the neutrino mass matrices. We combine
these phenomenological constraints with the constraints obtained from SO(10)
GUT to reduce the number of the free parameters and to further constrain the
allowed ranges of the free parameters. The solar/atmospheric mixing angles
obtained in this analysis are in fairly good agreement with the data.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Band Structure of the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect
The eigenstates of interacting electrons in the fractional quantum Hall phase
typically form fairly well defined bands in the energy space. We show that the
composite fermion theory gives insight into the origin of these bands and
provides an accurate and complete microscopic description of the strongly
correlated many-body states in the low-energy bands. Thus, somewhat like in
Landau's fermi liquid theory, there is a one-to-one correspondence between the
low energy Hilbert space of strongly interacting electrons in the fractinal
quantum Hall regime and that of weakly interacting electrons in the integer
quantum Hall regime.Comment: 10 page
Replicating Nanostructures on Silicon by Low Energy Ion Beams
We report on a nanoscale patterning method on Si substrates using
self-assembled metal islands and low-energy ion-beam irradiation. The Si
nanostructures produced on the Si substrate have a one-to-one correspondence
with the self-assembled metal (Ag, Au, Pt) nanoislands initially grown on the
substrate. The surface morphology and the structure of the irradiated surface
were studied by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM). TEM
images of ion-beam irradiated samples show the formation of sawtooth-like
structures on Si. Removing metal islands and the ion-beam induced amorphous Si
by etching, we obtain a crystalline nanostructure of Si. The smallest
structures emit red light when exposed to a UV light. The size of the
nanostructures on Si is governed by the size of the self-assembled metal
nanoparticles grown on the substrate for this replica nanopatterning. The
method can easily be extended for tuning the size of the Si nanostructures by
the proper choice of the metal nanoparticles and the ion energy in
ion-irradiation. It is suggested that off-normal irradiation can also be used
for tuning the size of the nanostructures.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, regular paper submitted to Nanotechnolog
School-based Understanding of Human Rights in Four Countries: A Commonwealth Study
Teaching/Communication/Extension/Profession,
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