7,870 research outputs found
Confinement of two-dimensional excitons in a non-homogeneous magnetic field
The effective Hamiltonian describing the motion of an exciton in an external
non-homogeneous magnetic field is derived. The magnetic field plays the role of
an effective potential for the exciton motion, results into an increment of the
exciton mass and modifies the exciton kinetic energy operator. In contrast to
the homogeneous field case, the exciton in a non-homogeneous magnetic field can
also be trapped in the low field region and the field gradient increases the
exciton confinement. The trapping energy and wave function of the exciton in a
GaAs two-dimensional electron gas for specific circular magnetic field
configurations are calculated. The results show than excitons can be trapped by
non-homogeneous magnetic fields, and that the trapping energy is strongly
correlated with the shape and strength of the non-homogeneous magnetic field
profile.Comment: 9 pages, 12 figure
Exciton trapping in magnetic wire structures
The lateral magnetic confinement of quasi two-dimensional excitons into wire
like structures is studied. Spin effects are take into account and two
different magnetic field profiles are considered, which experimentally can be
created by the deposition of a ferromagnetic stripe on a semiconductor quantum
well with magnetization parallel or perpendicular to the grown direction of the
well. We find that it is possible to confine excitons into one-dimensional (1D)
traps. We show that the dependence of the confinement energy on the exciton
wave vector, which is related to its free direction of motion along the wire
direction, is very small. Through the application of a background magnetic
field it is possible to move the position of the trapping region towards the
edge of the ferromagnetic stripe or even underneath the stripe. The exact
position of this 1D exciton channel depends on the strength of the background
magnetic field and on the magnetic polarisation direction of the ferromagnetic
film.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, to be published in J. Phys: Condens. Matte
Young Radio Pulsars in Galactic Globular Clusters
Currently three isolated radio pulsars and one binary radio pulsar with no
evidence of any previous recycling are known in 97 surveyed Galactic globular
clusters. As pointed out by Lyne et al., the presence of these pulsars cannot
be explained by core-collapse supernovae, as is commonly assumed for their
counterparts in the Galactic disk. We apply a Bayesian analysis to the results
from surveys for radio pulsars in globular clusters and find the number of
potentially observable non-recycled radio pulsars present in all clusters to be
< 3600. Accounting for beaming and retention considerations, the implied birth
rate for any formation scenario for all 97 clusters is < 0.25 pulsars per
century assuming a Maxwellian distribution of velocities with a dispersion of
10 km s^{-1}. The implied birth rates for higher velocity dispersions are
substantially higher than inferred for such pulsars in the Galactic disk. This
suggests that the velocity dispersion of young pulsars in globular clusters is
significantly lower than those of disk pulsars. These numbers may be
substantial overestimates due to the fact that the currently known sample of
young pulsars is observed only in metal-rich clusters. We propose that young
pulsars may only be formed in globular clusters with metallicities with
log[Fe/H] > -0.6. In this case, the potentially observable population of such
young pulsars is 447^{+1420}_{-399} (the error bars give the 95% confidence
interval) and their birth rate is 0.012^{+0.037}_{-0.010} pulsars per century.
The mostly likely creation scenario to explain these pulsars is the electron
capture supernova of a OMgNe white dwarf.Comment: 13 Pages, 6 Figures, 4 Tables, to appear in Ap
Friedel oscillations in one-dimensional metals: from Luttinger's theorem to the Luttinger liquid
Charge density and magnetization density profiles of one-dimensional metals
are investigated by two complementary many-body methods: numerically exact
(Lanczos) diagonalization, and the Bethe-Ansatz local-density approximation
with and without a simple self-interaction correction. Depending on the
magnetization of the system, local approximations reproduce different Fourier
components of the exact Friedel oscillations.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures, Manuscript accepted by Journal of Magnetism and
Magnetic Materials, special issue for LAWMMM 2007 conferenc
Public geographies II: being organic
This second report on ‘public geographies' considers the diverse, emergent and shifting spaces of engaging with and in public/s. Taking as its focus the more ‘organic’ rather than ‘traditional’ approach to doing public geography, as discussed in the first report, it explores the multiple and unorthodox ways in which engagements across academic-public spheres play out, and what such engagements may mean for geography/ers. The report first explores the role of the internet in ‘enabling conversations', generating a range of opportunities for public geography through websites, wikis, blogs, file-sharing sites, discussion forums and more, thinking critically about how technologies may enable/disable certain kinds of publically engaged activities. It then considers issues of process and praxis: how collaborations with groups/communities/organizations beyond academia are often unplanned, serendipitous encounters that evolve organically into research/learning/teaching endeavours; but also that personal politics/positionality bring an agency to bear upon whether we, as academics, follow the leads we may stumble upon. The report concludes with a provocative question – given that many non-academics appear to be doing some amazing and inspiring projects and activities, thoughtful, critical and (arguably) examples of organic public geographies, what then is academia’s role
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A culture of silence: modes of objectification and the silencing of disabled bodies
Throughout history different practices have attempted to silence the experiences of disabled people. In this paper we explore some of these practices including the medical, familial, and self-subjugating practices English-speaking Canadian polio survivors experienced throughout their lives. We analyze participant’s experiences of silence and silencing through a Foucauldian lens, drawing on the three modes of objectification to explain the institutional and cultural discourses around polio subjects that acted upon and through the polio body to silence it. Participants’ oral history accounts demonstrate how sociocultural and medical practices effectively silenced survivors from speaking about their polio experiences. However, the trope of silence is also uprooted within oral history traditions. We will demonstrate how participants broke their silence and shifted their perspectives on polio and disability, and how this process contributed to their resistance of hegemonic conceptualizations of disability as defective
Can we see pulsars around Sgr A*? - The latest searches with the Effelsberg telescope
Radio pulsars in relativistic binary systems are unique tools to study the
curved space-time around massive compact objects. The discovery of a pulsar
closely orbiting the super-massive black hole at the centre of our Galaxy, Sgr
A*, would provide a superb test-bed for gravitational physics. To date, the
absence of any radio pulsar discoveries within a few arc minutes of Sgr A* has
been explained by one principal factor: extreme scattering of radio waves
caused by inhomogeneities in the ionized component of the interstellar medium
in the central 100 pc around Sgr A*. Scattering, which causes temporal
broadening of pulses, can only be mitigated by observing at higher frequencies.
Here we describe recent searches of the Galactic centre region performed at a
frequency of 18.95 GHz with the Effelsberg radio telescope.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, Proceedings of IAUS 291 "Neutron Stars and
Pulsars: Challenges and Opportunities after 80 years", 201
Quark-hadron phase transition in a neutron star under strong magnetic fields
We study the effect of a strong magnetic field on the properties of neutron
stars with a quark-hadron phase transition. It is shown that the magnetic field
prevents the appearance of a quark phase, enhances the leptonic fraction,
decreases the baryonic density extension of the mixed phase and stiffens the
total equation of state, including both the stellar matter and the magnetic
field contributions. Two parametrisations of a density dependent static
magnetic field, increasing, respectively, fast and slowly with the density and
reaching G in the center of the star, are considered. The
compact stars with strong magnetic fields have maximum mass configurations with
larger masses and radius and smaller quark fractions. The parametrisation of
the magnetic field with density has a strong influence on the star properties.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, 8 tables, accepted for publication in J. Phys.
Goals, Strategies and First Discoveries of AO327, the Arecibo All-Sky 327 MHz Drift Pulsar Survey
We report initial results from AO327, a drift survey for pulsars with the
Arecibo telescope at 327 MHz. The first phase of AO327 will cover the sky at
declinations of -1 to 28 degrees, excluding the region within 5 degrees of the
Galactic plane, where high scattering and dispersion make low-frequency surveys
sub-optimal. We record data from a 57 MHz bandwidth with 1024 channels and 125
us sampling time. The 60 s transit time through the AO327 beam means that the
survey is sensitive to very tight relativistic binaries even with no
acceleration searches. To date we have detected 44 known pulsars with periods
ranging from 3 ms to 2.21 s and discovered 24 new pulsars. The new discoveries
include three millisecond pulsars, three objects with periods of a few tens of
milliseconds typical of young as well as mildly recycled pulsars, a nuller, and
a rotating radio transient. Five of the new discoveries are in binary systems.
The second phase of AO327 will cover the sky at declinations of 28 to 38
degrees. We compare the sensitivity and search volume of AO327 to the Green
Bank North Celestial Cap survey and the GBT350 drift survey, both of which
operate at 350 MHz.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
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