188 research outputs found
Shallow impurity band in ZrNiSn
ZrNiSn and related half Heusler compounds are candidate materials for
efficient thermoelectric energy conversion with a reported thermoelectric
figure-of-merit of n-type ZrNiSn exceeding unity. Progress on p-type materials
has been more limited, which has been attributed to the presence of an impurity
band, possibly related to the presence of Ni interstitials in nominally vacant
4d position. The specific energetic position of this band, however, has not
been resolved. Here, we report results of a concerted theory-experiment
investigation for a nominally undoped ZrNiSn, based on measurements of
electrical resistivity, Hall coefficient, Seebeck coefficient and Nernst
coefficient, measured in a temperature range from 80 to 420 K. The results are
analyzed with a semi-analytical model combining a density functional theory
(DFT) description for ideal ZrNiSn, with a simple analytical correction for the
impurity band. The model provides a good quantitative agreement with
experiment, describing all salient features in the full temperature span for
the Hall, conductivity, and Seebeck measurements, while also reproducing key
trends in the Nernst results. This comparison pinpoints the impurity band edge
to 40 meV below the conduction band edge, which agrees well with a separate DFT
study of a supercell containing Ni interstitials. Moreover, we corroborate our
result with a separate study of ZrNiSn0.9Pb0.1 sample showing similar agreement
with an impurity band edge shifted to 32 meV below the conduction band
Time-dependent coupled oscillator model for charged particle motion in the presence of a time varyingmagnetic field
The dynamics of time-dependent coupled oscillator model for the charged
particle motion subjected to a time-dependent external magnetic field is
investigated. We used canonical transformation approach for the classical
treatment of the system, whereas unitary transformation approach is used when
managing the system in the framework of quantum mechanics. For both approaches,
the original system is transformed to a much more simple system that is the sum
of two independent harmonic oscillators which have time-dependent frequencies.
We therefore easily identified the wave functions in the transformed system
with the help of invariant operator of the system. The full wave functions in
the original system is derived from the inverse unitary transformation of the
wave functions associated to the transformed system.Comment: 16 page
Extended Gaussian wave packet dynamics
We examine an extension to the theory of Gaussian wave packet dynamics in a
one-dimensional potential by means of a sequence of time dependent displacement
and squeezing transformations. Exact expressions for the quantum dynamics are
found, and relationships are explored between the squeezed system, Gaussian
wave packet dynamics, the time dependent harmonic oscillator, and wave packet
dynamics in a Gauss-Hermite basis. Expressions are given for the matrix
elements of the potential in some simple cases. Several examples are given,
including the propagation of a non-Gaussian initial state in a Morse potential
Financing Maternal and Child Health—What Are the Limitations in Estimating Donor Flows and Resource Needs?
Marco Schäferhoff and colleagues critique funding estimates for the maternal and child health Millennium Development Goals, and make recommendations for improving the tracking of financing flows and estimating the costs of scaling up interventions for mothers and children
Floquet-Markov description of the parametrically driven, dissipative harmonic quantum oscillator
Using the parametrically driven harmonic oscillator as a working example, we
study two different Markovian approaches to the quantum dynamics of a
periodically driven system with dissipation. In the simpler approach, the
driving enters the master equation for the reduced density operator only in the
Hamiltonian term. An improved master equation is achieved by treating the
entire driven system within the Floquet formalism and coupling it to the
reservoir as a whole. The different ensuing evolution equations are compared in
various representations, particularly as Fokker-Planck equations for the Wigner
function. On all levels of approximation, these evolution equations retain the
periodicity of the driving, so that their solutions have Floquet form and
represent eigenfunctions of a non-unitary propagator over a single period of
the driving. We discuss asymptotic states in the long-time limit as well as the
conservative and the high-temperature limits. Numerical results obtained within
the different Markov approximations are compared with the exact path-integral
solution. The application of the improved Floquet-Markov scheme becomes
increasingly important when considering stronger driving and lower
temperatures.Comment: 29 pages, 7 figure
Magnetic operations: a little fuzzy physics?
We examine the behaviour of charged particles in homogeneous, constant and/or
oscillating magnetic fields in the non-relativistic approximation. A special
role of the geometric center of the particle trajectory is elucidated. In
quantum case it becomes a 'fuzzy point' with non-commuting coordinates, an
element of non-commutative geometry which enters into the traditional control
problems. We show that its application extends beyond the usually considered
time independent magnetic fields of the quantum Hall effect. Some simple cases
of magnetic control by oscillating fields lead to the stability maps differing
from the traditional Strutt diagram.Comment: 28 pages, 8 figure
Qubit portrait of the photon-number tomogram and separability of two-mode light states
In view of the photon-number tomograms of two-mode light states, using the
qubit-portrait method for studying the probability distributions with infinite
outputs, the separability and entanglement detection of the states are studied.
Examples of entangled Gaussian state and Schr\"{o}dinger cat state are
discussed.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures, TeX file, to appear in Journal of Russian Laser
Researc
Quantum singular oscillator as a model of two-ion trap: an amplification of transition probabilities due to small time variations of the binding potential
Following the paper by M. Combescure [Ann. Phys. (NY) 204, 113 (1990)], we
apply the quantum singular time dependent oscillator model to describe the
relative one dimensional motion of two ions in a trap. We argue that the model
can be justified for low energy excited states with the quantum numbers , provided that the dimensionless constant characterizing the
strength of the repulsive potential is large enough, . Time
dependent Gaussian-like wave packets generalizing odd coherent states of the
harmonic oscillator, and excitation number eigenstates are constructed. We show
that the relative motion of the ions, in contradistinction to its center of
mass counterpart, is extremely sensitive to the time dependence of the binding
harmonic potential, since the large value of results in a significant
amplification of the transition probabilities between energy eigenstate even
for slow time variations of the frequency.Comment: 19 pages, LaTeX, 5 eps-figures, to appear on Phys. Rev. A, one
reference correcte
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