1,600 research outputs found
Bulk and contact-sensitized photocarrier generation in single layer TPD devices
In this paper, we report on the photoelectronic properties of TPD studied in
sandwich geometry. In particular, we have obtained from both forward and
reverse bias measurements the "mew-tau" product for holes in TPD. "mew" is the
hole mobility and "tau" the carrier trapping time. The "mew-tau" product is a
measure of the electronic quality of the material and allows a quantitative
comparison of different samples. We have carried out numerical simulations to
understand the photocurrent in these structures. We show that in reverse bias,
the photocurrent (PC) is due to bulk. The carrier generation is governed by
field assisted exciton dissociation at electric fields greater than 10^6 V/cm.
At lower fields the generation of carriers occurs spontaneously in the bulk of
the sample. In forward bias, the photocurrent is due to exciton dissociation at
the ITO contact. We also obtain a "mew-tau" product for holes from forward bias
PC measurements which is in agreement with the value obtained from reverse bias
measurements. Based on our experiments, we demonstrate that TPD in a sandwich
structure is a good candidate for cheap large area solar blind UV detector
arrays.Comment: Submitted to J. Appl. Phy
Aharonov-Casher oscillations of spin current through a multichannel mesoscopic ring
The Aharonov-Casher (AC) oscillations of spin current through a 2D ballistic
ring in the presence of Rashba spin-orbit interaction and external magnetic
field has been calculated using the semiclassical path integral method. For
classically chaotic trajectories the Fokker-Planck equation determining
dynamics of the particle spin polarization has been derived. On the basis of
this equation an analytic expression for the spin conductance has been obtained
taking into account a finite width of the ring arms carrying large number of
conducting channels. It was shown that the finite width results in a broadening
and damping of spin current AC oscillations. We found that an external magnetic
field leads to appearance of new nondiagonal components of the spin
conductance, allowing thus by applying a rather weak magnetic field to change a
direction of the transmitted spin current polarization.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure
Quantum Mechanical Properties of Bessel Beams
Bessel beams are studied within the general framework of quantum optics. The
two modes of the electromagnetic field are quantized and the basic dynamical
operators are identified. The algebra of these operators is analyzed in detail;
it is shown that the operators that are usually associated to linear momentum,
orbital angular momentum and spin do not satisfy the algebra of the translation
and rotation group. In particular, what seems to be the spin is more similar to
the helicity. Some physical consequences of these results are examined.Comment: 17 pages, no figures. New versio
Analysis of measurement errors for a superconducting phase qubit
We analyze several mechanisms leading to errors in a course of measurement of
a superconducting flux-biased phase qubit. Insufficiently long measurement
pulse may lead to nonadiabatic transitions between qubit states and
, before tunneling through a reduced barrier is supposed to distinguish
the qubit states. Finite (though large) ratio of tunneling rates for these
states leads to incomplete discrimination between and .
Insufficiently fast energy relaxation after the tunneling of state may
cause the repopulation of the quantum well in which only the state is
supposed to remain. We analyze these types of measurement errors using
analytical approaches as well as numerical solution of the time-dependent
Schr\"{o}dinger equation.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figure
A study of Feshbach resonances and the unitary limit in a model of strongly correlated nucleons
A model of strongly interacting and correlated hadrons is developed. The
interaction used contains a long range attraction and short range repulsive
hard core. Using this interaction and various limiting situations of it, a
study of the effect of bound states and Feshbach resonances is given. The
limiting situations are a pure square well interaction, a delta-shell potential
and a pure hard core potential. The limit of a pure hard core potential are
compared with results for a spinless Bose and Fermi gas. The limit of many
partial waves for a pure hard core interaction is also considered and result in
expressions involving the hard core volume. This feature arises from a scaling
relation similar to that for hard sphere scattering with diffractive
corrections. The role of underlying isospin symmetries associated with the
strong interaction of protons and neutrons in this two component model is
investigated. Properties are studied with varying proton fraction. An analytic
expression for the Beth Uhlenbeck continuum integral is developed which closely
approximates exact results based on the potential model considered. An analysis
of features associated with a unitary limit is given. In the unitary limit of
very large scattering length, the ratio of effective range to thermal
wavelength appears as a limiting scale. Thermodynamic quantities such as the
entropy and compressibility are also developed. The effective range corrections
to the entropy vary as the cube of this ratio for low temperatures and are
therefore considerably reduced compared to the corrections to the interaction
energy which varies linearly with this ratio. Effective range corrections to
the compressibility are also linear in the ratio.Comment: 39 pages, 15 figures, 2 table
Rotational Effects of Twisted Light on Atoms Beyond the Paraxial Approximation
The transition probability for the emission of a Bessel photon by an atomic
system is calculated within first order perturbation theory. We derive a closed
expression for the electromagnetic potentials beyond the paraxial approximation
that permits a systematic multipole approximation . The matrix elements between
center of mass and internal states are evaluated for some specially relevant
cases. This permits to clarify the feasibility of observing the rotational
effects of twisted light on atoms predicted by the calculations. It is shown
that the probability that the internal state of an atom acquires orbital
angular momentum from light is, in general, maximum for an atom located at the
axis of a Bessel mode. For a Gaussian packet, the relevant parameter is the
ratio of the spread of the atomic center of mass wave packet to the transversal
wavelength of the photon.Comment: 10 pages, no figure
Bound and resonance states of the nonlinear Schroedinger equation in simple model systems
The stationary nonlinear Schroedinger equation, or Gross-Pitaevskii equation,
is studied for the cases of a single delta potential and a delta-shell
potential. These model systems allow analytical solutions, and thus provide
useful insight into the features of stationary bound, scattering and resonance
states of the nonlinear Schroedinger equation. For the single delta potential,
the influence of the potential strength and the nonlinearity is studied as well
as the transition from bound to scattering states. Furthermore, the properties
of resonance states for a repulsive delta-shell potential are discussed.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figure
Cooling Torsional Nanomechanical Vibration by Spin-Orbit Interactions
We propose and study a spin-orbit interaction based mechanism to actively
cool down the torsional vibration of a nanomechanical resonator made by
semiconductor materials. We show that the spin-orbit interactions of electrons
can induce a coherent coupling between the electron spins and the torsional
modes of nanomechanical vibration. This coherent coupling leads to an active
cooling for the torsional modes via the dynamical thermalization of the
resonator and the spin ensemble.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
The Balian-Br\'ezin Method in Relativistic Quantum Mechanics
The method suggested by Balian and Br\'ezin for treating angular momentum
reduction in the Faddeev equations is shown to be applicable to the
relativistic three-body problem.Comment: 14 pages in LaTe
Quantum Gauge Equivalence in QED
We discuss gauge transformations in QED coupled to a charged spinor field,
and examine whether we can gauge-transform the entire formulation of the theory
from one gauge to another, so that not only the gauge and spinor fields, but
also the forms of the operator-valued Hamiltonians are transformed. The
discussion includes the covariant gauge, in which the gauge condition and
Gauss's law are not primary constraints on operator-valued quantities; it also
includes the Coulomb gauge, and the spatial axial gauge, in which the
constraints are imposed on operator-valued fields by applying the
Dirac-Bergmann procedure. We show how to transform the covariant, Coulomb and
spatial axial gauges to what we call
``common form,'' in which all particle excitation modes have identical
properties. We also show that, once that common form has been reached, QED in
different gauges has a common time-evolution operator that defines
time-translation for states that represent systems of electrons and photons.
By combining gauge transformations with changes of representation from
standard to common form, the entire apparatus of a gauge theory can be
transformed from one gauge to another.Comment: Contribution for a special issue of Foundations of Physics honoring
Fritz Rohrlich; edited by Larry P. Horwitz, Tel-Aviv University, and Alwyn
van der Merwe, University of Denver (Plenum Publishing, New York); 40 pages,
REVTEX, Preprint UCONN-93-3, 1 figure available upon request from author
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