1,493 research outputs found
Observation of Buried Phosphorus Dopants near Clean Si(100)-(2x1) with Scanning Tunneling Microscopy
We have used scanning tunneling microscopy to identify individual phosphorus
dopant atoms near the clean silicon (100)-(2x1) reconstructed surface. The
charge-induced band bending signature associated with the dopants shows up as
an enhancement in both filled and empty states and is consistent with the
appearance of n-type dopants on compound semiconductor surfaces and passivated
Si(100)-(2x1). We observe dopants at different depths and see a strong
dependence of the signature on the magnitude of the sample voltage. Our results
suggest that, on this clean surface, the antibonding surface state band acts as
an extension of the bulk conduction band into the gap. The positively charged
dimer vacancies that have been observed previously appear as depressions in the
filled states, as opposed to enhancements, because they disrupt these surface
bands.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. TeX for OSX from Wierde
Importance of In-Plane Anisotropy in the Quasi Two-Dimensional Antiferromagnet BaNiVO
The phase diagram of the quasi two-dimensional antiferromagnet
BaNiVO is studied by specific heat, thermal expansion,
magnetostriction, and magnetization for magnetic fields applied perpendicular
to . At T, a crossover to a high-field state,
where increases linearly, arises from a competition of intrinsic and
field-induced in-plane anisotropies. The pressure dependences of and
are interpreted using the picture of a pressure-induced in-plane
anisotropy. Even at zero field and ambient pressure, in-plane anisotropy cannot
be neglected, which implies deviations from pure
Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless behavior.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Recommended from our members
Tobacco outlet density and adolescents' cigarette smoking: a meta-analysis.
Theory of Umklapp-assisted recombination of bound excitons in Si:P
We present the calculations for the oscillator strength of the recombination
of excitons bound to phosphorous donors in silicon. We show that the direct
recombination of the bound exciton cannot account for the experimentally
measured oscillator strength of the no-phonon line. Instead, the recombination
process is assisted by an umklapp process of the donor electron state. We make
use of the empirical pseudopotential method to evaluate the Umklapp-assisted
recombination matrix element in second-order perturbation theory. Our result is
in excellent agreement with the experiment. We also present two methods to
improve the optical resolution of the optical detection of the spin state of a
single nucleus in silicon.Comment: 9 pages, 6 EPS figures, Revtex
Paclitaxel-Eluting Coronary Stents in Patients With Diabetes Mellitus Pooled Analysis From 5 Randomized Trials
ObjectivesWe sought to examine the safety and efficacy of paclitaxel-eluting stents (PES) in patients with diabetes mellitus (DM).BackgroundCompared with patients without DM, patients with DM undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention are at increased risk for mortality and restenosis. The safety of drug-eluting stents in diabetic patients has recently been called into question by a published meta-analysis of randomized trials.MethodsPatient-level data were pooled from 5 prospective, double-blind, randomized trials of PES versus bare-metal stents (BMS) (n = 3,513). Safety and efficacy outcomes through 4 years of follow-up were assessed among the 827 randomized patients (23.6%) with DM.ResultsPatients treated with PES and BMS has similar baseline characteristics among both the diabetic and nondiabetic cohorts within these trials. At 4-year follow-up, there were no significant differences between PES and BMS among diabetic patients in the rates of death (8.4% vs. 10.3%, respectively, p = 0.61), myocardial infarction (6.9% vs. 8.9%, p = 0.17), or stent thrombosis (1.4% vs. 1.2%, p = 0.92). Treatment of diabetic patients with PES compared with treatment with BMS was associated with a significant and durable reduction in target lesion revascularization over the 4-year follow-up period (12.4% vs. 24.7%, p < 0.0001). The relative safety and efficacy of PES compared with the relative safety and efficacy of BMS in diabetic patients extended to both those requiring and not requiring insulin.ConclusionsIn these 5 randomized trials in which patients with single, primarily noncomplex lesions were enrolled, treatment with PES compared with treatment with BMS was safe and effective, resulting in markedly lower rates of target lesion revascularization at 4 years, with similar rates of death, myocardial infarction, and stent thrombosis
Multiwavelength Observations of Markarian 421 in March 2001: an Unprecedented View on the X-ray/TeV Correlated Variability
(Abridged) We present a detailed analysis of week-long simultaneous
observations of the blazar Mrk421 at 2-60 keV X-rays (RXTE) and TeV gamma-rays
(Whipple and HEGRA) in 2001. The unprecedented quality of this dataset enables
us to establish firmly the existence of the correlation between the TeV and
X-ray luminosities, and to start unveiling some of its more detailed
characteristics, in particular its energy dependence, and time variability. The
source shows strong, highly correlated variations in X-ray and gamma-ray. No
evidence of X-ray/gamma-ray interband lag is found on the full week dataset (<3
ks). However, a detailed analysis of the March 19 flare reveals that data are
not consistent with the peak of the outburst in the 2-4 keV X-ray and TeV band
being simultaneous. We estimate a 2.1+/-0.7 ks TeV lag. The amplitudes of the
X-ray and gamma-ray variations are also highly correlated, and the TeV
luminosity increases more than linearly w.r.t. the X-ray one. The strong
correlation supports the standard model in which a unique electrons population
produces the X-rays by synchrotron radiation and the gamma-ray component by
inverse Compton scattering. However, for the individual best observed flares
the gamma-ray flux scales approximately quadratically w.r.t. the X-ray flux,
posing a serious challenge to emission models for TeV blazars. Rather special
conditions and/or fine tuning of the temporal evolution of the physical
parameters of the emission region are required in order to reproduce the
quadratic correlation.Comment: Correction to authorship. Minor editorial changes to text, figures,
references. 22 pages (emulateapj), 12 figures (47 postscript files) Published
in ApJ, 2008 April 20 (ADS: 2008ApJ...677..906F
A Search for Dark Matter Annihilation with the Whipple 10m Telescope
We present observations of the dwarf galaxies Draco and Ursa Minor, the local
group galaxies M32 and M33, and the globular cluster M15 conducted with the
Whipple 10m gamma-ray telescope to search for the gamma-ray signature of
self-annihilating weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) which may
constitute astrophysical dark matter (DM). We review the motivations for
selecting these sources based on their unique astrophysical environments and
report the results of the data analysis which produced upper limits on excess
rate of gamma rays for each source. We consider models for the DM distribution
in each source based on the available observational constraints and discuss
possible scenarios for the enhancement of the gamma-ray luminosity. Limits on
the thermally averaged product of the total self-annihilation cross section and
velocity of the WIMP, , are derived using conservative estimates for
the magnitude of the astrophysical contribution to the gamma-ray flux. Although
these limits do not constrain predictions from the currently favored
theoretical models of supersymmetry (SUSY), future observations with VERITAS
will probe a larger region of the WIMP parameter phase space, and
WIMP particle mass (m_\chi).Comment: 33 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
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