472 research outputs found
Determination of Exchange Integrals J_1 and J_2 and Magnetic Surface-Anisotropy Energy in EuS from Standing-Spin-Wave Resonance(Physics)
The standing-spin-wave absorption spectrum in thin EuS films has been measured in the temperature interval 1.3-4.2 K. The dependence of the magnetization on temperature has been determined from the ferromagnetic-resonance field and compared with spin-wave theory. The results are well described by the exchange-parameter combination (J_1+J_2)/k_B=(0.096±0.003) K. The temperature dependence of the exchange stiffness parameter D(T) has been calculated including the contribution of a nonzero internal field. The experimental results have been analyzed taking the surface boundary conditions into account and correcting for the temperature and field dependence of H_1. The results show that the apparent temperature dependence of D(T) arises almost entirely from the surface-anisotropy energy. The small observed variation ΔD(T)/D_0 has been analyzed yielding J_2/J_1=-0.57±0.05. The results, expressed as J_1/K_B=(0.214±0.026) K, J_2/k_B=-(0.122±0.025) K are in essential agreement with the inelastic-neutron-scattering determination of Passell et al. but in marked disagreement with Swendsen\u27s Green\u27s-function theory and its application to the calculation of the ferromagnetic and paramagnetic Curie temperature. A comparison with other experimental determinations of J_1 and J_2 is made
Electrical properties of silicon-implanted furnace-annealed silicon-on-sapphire devices
The crystalline quality of s.o.s. layers can be improved near the silicon-sapphire interface by silicon implantation followed by recrystallisation. Device performance on such layers is markedly improved as to n-channel m.o.s.t. noise and leakage current, reverse diode current and lateral bipolar transistor gain. Minority-carrier lifetimes up to 50 ns are deduced
Laser annealing of silicon on sapphire
Silicon-implanted silicon-on-sapphire wafers have been annealed by 50-ns pulses from a Q-switched Nd : YAG laser. The samples have been analyzed by channeling and by omega-scan x-ray double diffraction. After irradiation with pulses of a fluence of about 5 J cm^–2 the crystalline quality of the silicon layer is found to be better than in the as-grown state
Electronic structure of wurtzite and zinc-blende AlN
The electronic structure of AlN in wurtzite and zinc-blende phases is studied
experimentally and theoretically. By using x-ray emission spectroscopy, the Al
3p, Al 3s and N 2p spectral densities are obtained. The corresponding local and
partial theoretical densities of states (DOS), as well as the total DOS and the
band structure, are calculated by using the full potential linearized augmented
plane wave method, within the framework of the density functional theory. There
is a relatively good agreement between the experimental spectra and the
theoretical DOS, showing a large hybridization of the valence states all along
the valence band. The discrepancies between the experimental and theoretical
DOS, appearing towards the high binding energies, are ascribed to an
underestimation of the valence band width in the calculations. Differences
between the wurtzite and zinc-blende phases are small and reflect the slight
variations between the atomic arrangements of both phases
Baryon Charge Radii and Quadrupole Moments in the 1/N_c Expansion: The 3-Flavor Case
We develop a straightforward method to compute charge radii and quadrupole
moments for baryons both with and without strangeness, when the number of QCD
color charges is N_c. The minimal assumption of the single-photon exchange
ansatz implies that only two operators are required to describe these baryon
observables. Our results are presented so that SU(3) flavor and isospin
symmetry breaking can be introduced according to any desired specification,
although we also present results obtained from two patterns suggested by the
quark model with gluon exchange interactions. The method also permits to
extract a number of model-independent relations; a sample is r^2_Lambda / r_n^2
= 3/(N_c+3), independent of SU(3) symmetry breaking.Comment: 30 pages, no figures, REVTeX
From START to FINISH : the influence of osmotic stress on the cell cycle
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
A constraint on antigravity of antimatter from precision spectroscopy of simple atoms
Consideration of antigravity for antiparticles is an attractive target for
various experimental projects. There are a number of theoretical arguments
against it but it is not quite clear what kind of experimental data and
theoretical suggestions are involved. In this paper we present straightforward
arguments against a possibility of antigravity based on a few simple
theoretical suggestions and some experimental data. The data are: astrophysical
data on rotation of the Solar System in respect to the center of our galaxy and
precision spectroscopy data on hydrogen and positronium. The theoretical
suggestions for the case of absence of the gravitational field are: equality of
electron and positron mass and equality of proton and positron charge. We also
assume that QED is correct at the level of accuracy where it is clearly
confirmed experimentally
Can spacetime curvature induced corrections to Lamb shift be observable?
The Lamb shift results from the coupling of an atom to vacuum fluctuations of
quantum fields, so corrections are expected to arise when the spacetime is
curved since the vacuum fluctuations are modified by the presence of spacetime
curvature. Here, we calculate the curvature-induced correction to the Lamb
shift outside a spherically symmetric object and demonstrate that this
correction can be remarkably significant outside a compact massive
astrophysical body. For instance, for a neutron star or a stellar mass black
hole, the correction is 25% at a radial distance of ,
16% at and as large as 1.6% even at , where is
the mass of the object, the Newtonian constant, and the speed of light.
In principle, we can look at the spectra from a distant compact super-massive
body to find such corrections. Therefore, our results suggest a possible way of
detecting fundamental quantum effects in astronomical observations.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, slight title change, clarifications and more
discussions added, version to be published in JHE
Muonic hydrogen cascade time and lifetime of the short-lived state
Metastable muonic-hydrogen atoms undergo collisional -quenching,
with rates which depend strongly on whether the kinetic energy is above
or below the energy threshold. Above threshold, collisional
excitation followed by fast radiative
deexcitation is allowed. The corresponding short-lived component
was measured at 0.6 hPa room temperature gas pressure, with
lifetime ns (i.e.,
at liquid-hydrogen density) and population
% (per atom). In
addition, a value of the cascade time, ns, was found.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
The proton radius puzzle
High-precision measurements of the proton radius from laser spectroscopy of
muonic hydrogen demonstrated up to six standard deviations smaller values than
obtained from electron-proton scattering and hydrogen spectroscopy. The status
of this discrepancy, which is known as the proton radius puzzle will be
discussed in this paper, complemented with the new insights obtained from
spectroscopy of muonic deuterium.Comment: Moriond 2017 conference, 8 pages, 4 figure
- …