404 research outputs found
Temperature Dependent Polarity Reversal in Au/Nb:SrTiO3 Schottky Junctions
We have observed temperature-dependent reversal of the rectifying polarity in
Au/Nb:SrTiO3 Schottky junctions. By simulating current-voltage characteristics
we have found that the permittivity of SrTiO3 near the interface exhibits
temperature dependence opposite to that observed in the bulk, significantly
reducing the barrier width. At low temperature, tunneling current dominates the
junction transport due both to such barrier narrowing and to suppressed thermal
excitations. The present results demonstrate that novel junction properties can
be induced by the interface permittivity
Phase Diagram of -(BEDT-TTF)ICl under High Pressure Based on the First-Principles Electronic Structure
We present a theoretical study on the superconductivity of
-(BEDT-TTF)ICl at 14.2 K under a high hydrostatic
pressure recently found, which is the highest among organic superconductors. In
the present work, we study an effective model using the fluctuation-exchange
(FLEX) approximation based on the results of first-principles calculation. In
the obtained phase diagram, the superconductivity with -like symmetry
is realized next to the antiferromagnetic phase, as a result of the
one-dimensional to two-dimensional crossover driven by the pressure.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. accepted for publication in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn.
errors correcte
High sensitive X-ray films to detect electron showers in 100 GeV region
Nonscreen type X-ray films were used in emulsion chamber experiments to detect high energy showers in cosmic rays. Ranges of the detection threshold is from about 1 to 2 TeV depending on the exposure conditions. Different types of X-ray films and sheets i.e. high sensitive screen type X-ray films and luminescence sheets were tested. The threshold of the shower detection is found to be about 200 GeV, which is much lower than that of nonscreen type X-ray films. These films are useful to detect showers in the medium energy range, a few hundred GeV, of the cosmic ray electrons
Observation of Multi-Tev Diffuse Gamma Rays from the Galactic Plane with the Tibet Air Shower Array
Data from the Tibet-III air shower array (with energies around 3 TeV) and
from the Tibet-II array (with energies around 10 TeV) have been searched for
diffuse gamma rays from the Galactic plane. These arrays have an angular
resolution of about 0.9 degrees. The sky regions searched are the inner Galaxy,
20 degrees <= l <= 55 degrees, and outer Galaxy, 140 degrees <= l <= 225
degrees, and |b| <= 2 degrees or <= 5 degrees. No significant Galactic plane
gamma-ray excess was observed. The 99% confidence level upper limits for
gamma-ray intensity obtained are (for |b| <= 2 degrees) 1.1 times 10^{-15}
cm^{-2}s^{-1}sr^{-1}MeV^{-1} at 3 TeV and 4.1 times 10^{-17}
cm^{-2}s^{-1}sr^{-1}MeV^{-1} at 10 TeV for the inner Galaxy, and 3.6 times
10^{-16} cm^{-2}s^{-1}sr^{-1}MeV^{-1} at 3 TeV and 1.3 times 10^{-17}
cm^{-2}s^{-1}sr^{-1}MeV^{-1} at 10 TeV for the outer Galaxy, assuming a
differential spectral index of 2.4. The upper limits are significant in the
multi-TeV region when compared to those from Cherenkov telescopes in the lower
energy region and other air shower arrays in the higher energy region; however,
the results are not sufficient to rule out the inverse Compton model with a
source electron spectral index of 2.0.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
Nucleation mechanism for the direct graphite-to-diamond phase transition
Graphite and diamond have comparable free energies, yet forming diamond from
graphite is far from easy. In the absence of a catalyst, pressures that are
significantly higher than the equilibrium coexistence pressures are required to
induce the graphite-to-diamond transition. Furthermore, the formation of the
metastable hexagonal polymorph of diamond instead of the more stable cubic
diamond is favored at lower temperatures. The concerted mechanism suggested in
previous theoretical studies cannot explain these phenomena. Using an ab initio
quality neural-network potential we performed a large-scale study of the
graphite-to-diamond transition assuming that it occurs via nucleation. The
nucleation mechanism accounts for the observed phenomenology and reveals its
microscopic origins. We demonstrated that the large lattice distortions that
accompany the formation of the diamond nuclei inhibit the phase transition at
low pressure and direct it towards the hexagonal diamond phase at higher
pressure. The nucleation mechanism proposed in this work is an important step
towards a better understanding of structural transformations in a wide range of
complex systems such as amorphous carbon and carbon nanomaterials
Helical motion and the origin of QPO in blazar-type sources
Recent observations and analysis of blazar sources provide strong evidence
for (i) the presence of significant periodicities in their lightcurves and (ii)
the occurrence of helical trajectories in their radio jets. In scenarios, where
the periodicity is caused by differential Doppler boosting effects along a
helical jet path, both of these facts may be naturally tied together. Here we
discuss four possible driving mechanisms for the occurrence of helical
trajectories: orbital motion in a binary system, Newtonian-driven jet
precession, internal jet rotation and motion along a global helical magnetic
field. We point out that for non-ballistic helical motion the observed period
may appear strongly shortened due to classical travel time effects. Finally,
the possible relevance of the above mentioned driving mechanisms is discussed
for Mkn~501, OJ 287 and AO 0235+16.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure; presented at the 5th Microquasar Workshop,
Beijing, June 2004. Accepted for publication in the Chinese Journal of
Astronomy and Astrophysic
High-Mass Cloud Cores in the eta Carinae Giant Molecular Cloud
We carried out an unbiased survey for massive dense cores in the giant
molecular cloud associated with eta Carinae with the NANTEN telescope in 12CO,
13CO, and C18O 1-0 emission lines. We identified 15 C18O cores. Two of the 15
cores are associated with IRAS point sources whose luminosities are larger than
10^4 Lo, which indicates that massive star formation is occuring within these
cores. Five cores including the two with IRAS sources are associated with MSX
point sources. We detected H13CO+ (1-0) emission toward 4 C18O cores, one of
which is associated with neither IRAS nor MSX point sources. This core shows
the presence of a bipolar molecular outflow in 12CO (2-1), which indicates that
star formation is also occuring in the core. In total, six C18O cores out of 15
are experienced star formation, and at least 2 of 15 are massive-star forming
cores in the eta Car GMC. We found that massive star formation occurs
preferentially in cores with larger column density, mass, number density, and
smaller ratio of virial mass to LTE mass Mvir/M. We also found that the cores
in the eta Car GMC are characterized by large line width and Mvir/M on average
compared to the cores in other GMCs. We investigated the origin of a large
amount of turbulence in the eta Car GMC. We propose the possibility that the
large turbulence was pre-existing when the GMC was formed, and is now
dissipating. Mechanisms such as multiple supernova explosions in the Carina
flare supershell may have contributed to form a GMC with a large amount of
turbulence.Comment: 41 pages, including 11 fugures and 9 tables. Accepted by ApJ. Author
changed. Paper with high resolution figures is available at
http://astrol.cias.osakafu-u.ac.jp/~yonekura/work/paper/etaCar
Probing magnetic turbulence by synchrotron polarimetry: statistics and structure of magnetic fields from Stokes correlators
We describe a technique for probing the statistical properties of cosmic
magnetic fields based on radio polarimetry data. Second-order magnetic field
statistics like the power spectrum cannot always distinguish between magnetic
fields with essentially different spatial structure. Synchrotron polarimetry
naturally allows certain 4th-order magnetic field statistics to be inferred
from observational data, which lifts this degeneracy and can thereby help us
gain a better picture of the structure of the cosmic fields and test
theoretical scenarios describing magnetic turbulence. In this work we show that
a 4th-order correlator of physical interest, the tension-force spectrum, can be
recovered from the polarized synchrotron emission data. We develop an estimator
for this quantity based on polarized-emission observations in the
Faraday-rotation-free frequency regime. We consider two cases: a statistically
isotropic field distribution, and a statistically isotropic field superimposed
on a weak mean field. In both cases the tension force power spectrum is
measurable; in the latter case, the magnetic power spectrum may also be
obtainable. The method is exact in the idealized case of a homogeneous
relativistic-electron distribution that has a power-law energy spectrum with a
spectral index p=3, and assumes statistical isotropy of the turbulent field. We
carry out tests of our method using synthetic data generated from numerically
simulated magnetic fields. We show that the method is valid, that it is not
prohibitively sensitive to the value of the electron spectral index, and that
the observed tension-force spectrum allows one to distinguish between, e.g., a
randomly tangled magnetic field (a default assumption in many studies) and a
field organized in folded flux sheets or filaments.Comment: Published on MNRAS 200
- …