245 research outputs found
The structure of fluid trifluoromethane and methylfluoride
We present hard X-ray and neutron diffraction measurements on the polar
fluorocarbons HCF3 and H3CF under supercritical conditions and for a range of
molecular densities spanning about a factor of ten. The Levesque-Weiss-Reatto
inversion scheme has been used to deduce the site-site potentials underlying
the measured partial pair distribution functions. The orientational
correlations between adjacent fluorocarbon molecules -- which are characterized
by quite large dipole moments but no tendency to form hydrogen bonds -- are
small compared to a highly polar system like fluid hydrogen chloride. In fact,
the orientational correlations in HCF3 and H3CF are found to be nearly as small
as those of fluid CF4, a fluorocarbon with no dipole moment.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
Bubbles in galactic haloes
We briefly discuss a possible interconnection of vertical HI structures
observed in the Milky Way Galaxy with large scale blow-outs caused by the
explosions of multiple clustered SNe. We argue that the observed OB
associations can produce only about 60 such events, or approximately one
chimney per 3 kpc within the solar circle. We also discuss the overall
properties of HI shells in nearby face-on galaxies and the distribution of
H and dust in edge-on galaxies. We argue that the presence of dust in
galactic haloes may indicate that radiation pressure is the most probable
mechanism capable of transporting dust to large heights above the galactic
plane. In order to make this possible, the galactic magnetic field must have a
strong vertical component. We mention that SNe explosions can initiate the
Parker instability which in turn creates large scale magnetic loops with a
strong vertical component. Recent observations of nearby edge-on galaxies
favour this suggestion.Comment: 11 pages, 4 Figs, Talk at the JENAM, May 29 -- June 3, 2000, Mosco
All-electron GW calculation based on the LAPW method: application to wurtzite ZnO
We present a new, all-electron implementation of the GW approximation and
apply it to wurtzite ZnO. Eigenfunctions computed in the local-density
approximation (LDA) by the full-potential linearized augmented-plane-wave
(LAPW) or the linearized muffin-tin-orbital (LMTO) method supply the input for
generating the Green function G and the screened Coulomb interaction W. A mixed
basis is used for the expansion of W, consisting of plane waves in the
interstitial region and augmented-wavefunction products in the
augmentation-sphere regions. The frequency-dependence of the dielectric
function is computed within the random-phase approximation (RPA), without a
plasmon-pole approximation. The Zn 3d orbitals are treated as valence states
within the LDA; both core and valence states are included in the self-energy
calculation. The calculated bandgap is smaller than experiment by about 1eV, in
contrast to previously reported GW results. Self-energy corrections are
orbital-dependent, and push down the deep O 2s and Zn 3d levels by about 1eV
relative to the LDA. The d level shifts closer to experiment but the size of
shift is underestimated, suggesting that the RPA overscreens localized states.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Cluster algebras in algebraic Lie theory
We survey some recent constructions of cluster algebra structures on
coordinate rings of unipotent subgroups and unipotent cells of Kac-Moody
groups. We also review a quantized version of these results.Comment: Invited survey; to appear in Transformation Group
First principles study of strain/electronic interplay in ZnO; Stress and temperature dependence of the piezoelectric constants
We present a first-principles study of the relationship between stress,
temperature and electronic properties in piezoelectric ZnO. Our method is a
plane wave pseudopotential implementation of density functional theory and
density functional linear response within the local density approximation. We
observe marked changes in the piezoelectric and dielectric constants when the
material is distorted. This stress dependence is the result of strong, bond
length dependent, hybridization between the O and Zn electrons. Our
results indicate that fine tuning of the piezoelectric properties for specific
device applications can be achieved by control of the ZnO lattice constant, for
example by epitaxial growth on an appropriate substrate.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Toward polarized antiprotons: Machine development for spin-filtering experiments
The paper describes the commissioning of the experimental equipment and the
machine studies required for the first spin-filtering experiment with protons
at a beam kinetic energy of MeV in COSY. The implementation of a
low- insertion made it possible to achieve beam lifetimes of
s in the presence of a dense polarized hydrogen
storage-cell target of areal density . The developed techniques can be directly
applied to antiproton machines and allow for the determination of the
spin-dependent cross sections via spin filtering
Criticality in confined ionic fluids
A theory of a confined two dimensional electrolyte is presented. The positive
and negative ions, interacting by a potential, are constrained to move on
an interface separating two solvents with dielectric constants and
. It is shown that the Debye-H\"uckel type of theory predicts that
the this 2d Coulomb fluid should undergo a phase separation into a coexisting
liquid (high density) and gas (low density) phases. We argue, however, that the
formation of polymer-like chains of alternating positive and negative ions can
prevent this phase transition from taking place.Comment: RevTex, no figures, in press Phys. Rev.
Ising Universality in Three Dimensions: A Monte Carlo Study
We investigate three Ising models on the simple cubic lattice by means of
Monte Carlo methods and finite-size scaling. These models are the spin-1/2
Ising model with nearest-neighbor interactions, a spin-1/2 model with
nearest-neighbor and third-neighbor interactions, and a spin-1 model with
nearest-neighbor interactions. The results are in accurate agreement with the
hypothesis of universality. Analysis of the finite-size scaling behavior
reveals corrections beyond those caused by the leading irrelevant scaling
field. We find that the correction-to-scaling amplitudes are strongly dependent
on the introduction of further-neighbor interactions or a third spin state. In
a spin-1 Ising model, these corrections appear to be very small. This is very
helpful for the determination of the universal constants of the Ising model.
The renormalization exponents of the Ising model are determined as y_t = 1.587
(2), y_h = 2.4815 (15) and y_i = -0.82 (6). The universal ratio Q =
^2/ is equal to 0.6233 (4) for periodic systems with cubic symmetry.
The critical point of the nearest-neighbor spin-1/2 model is K_c=0.2216546
(10).Comment: 25 pages, uuencoded compressed PostScript file (to appear in Journal
of Physics A
The liquid-vapor interface of an ionic fluid
We investigate the liquid-vapor interface of the restricted primitive model
(RPM) for an ionic fluid using a density-functional approximation based on
correlation functions of the homogeneous fluid as obtained from the
mean-spherical approximation (MSA). In the limit of a homogeneous fluid our
approach yields the well-known MSA (energy) equation of state. The ionic
interfacial density profiles, which for the RPM are identical for both species,
have a shape similar to those of simple atomic fluids in that the decay towards
the bulk values is more rapid on the vapor side than on the liquid side. This
is the opposite asymmetry of the decay to that found in earlier calculations
for the RPM based on a square-gradient theory. The width of the interface is,
for a wide range of temperatures, approximately four times the second moment
correlation length of the liquid phase. We discuss the magnitude and
temperature dependence of the surface tension, and argue that for temperatures
near the triple point the ratio of the dimensionless surface tension and
critical temperature is much smaller for the RPM than for simple atomic fluids.Comment: 6 postscript figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Improved high-temperature expansion and critical equation of state of three-dimensional Ising-like systems
High-temperature series are computed for a generalized Ising model with
arbitrary potential. Two specific ``improved'' potentials (suppressing leading
scaling corrections) are selected by Monte Carlo computation. Critical
exponents are extracted from high-temperature series specialized to improved
potentials, achieving high accuracy; our best estimates are:
, , , ,
. By the same technique, the coefficients of the small-field
expansion for the effective potential (Helmholtz free energy) are computed.
These results are applied to the construction of parametric representations of
the critical equation of state. A systematic approximation scheme, based on a
global stationarity condition, is introduced (the lowest-order approximation
reproduces the linear parametric model). This scheme is used for an accurate
determination of universal ratios of amplitudes. A comparison with other
theoretical and experimental determinations of universal quantities is
presented.Comment: 65 pages, 1 figure, revtex. New Monte Carlo data by Hasenbusch
enabled us to improve the determination of the critical exponents and of the
equation of state. The discussion of several topics was improved and the
bibliography was update
- …