18,178 research outputs found
The role of excitons and trions on electron spin polarization in quantum wells
We have studied the time evolution of the electron spin polarization under
continuous photoexcitation in remotely n-doped semiconductor quantum wells. The
doped region allows us to get the necessary excess of free electrons to form
trions. We have considered electron resonant photoexcitation at free, exciton
and trion electron energy levels. Also, we have studied the relative effect of
photoexcitation energy density and doping concentration. In order to obtain the
two-dimensional density evolution of the different species, we have performed
dynamic calculations through the matrix density formalism. Our results indicate
that photoexcitation of free electron level leads to a higher spin
polarization. Also, we have found that increasing the photoexcitation energy or
diminishing the doping enhances spin polarization.Comment: 30 pages, 11 figures, 1 tabl
Guaranteed emergence of genuine entanglement in 3-qubit evolving systems
Multipartite entanglement has been shown to be of particular relevance for a
better understanding and exploitation of the dynamics and flow of entanglement
in multiparty systems. This calls for analysis aimed at identifying the
appropriate processes that guarantee the emergence of multipartite entanglement
in a wide range of scenarios. Here we carry on such analysis considering a
system of two initially entangled qubits, one of which is let to interact with
a third qubit according to an arbitrary unitary evolution. We establish
necessary and sufficient conditions on the corresponding Kraus operators, to
discern whether the evolved state pertains to either one of the classes of
3-qubit pure states that exhibit some kind of entanglement, namely biseparable,
W-, and GHZ- genuine entangled classes. Our results provide a classification of
the Kraus operators according to their capacity of producing 3-qubit
entanglement, and pave the way for extending the analysis to larger systems and
determining the particular interactions that must be implemented in order to
create, enhance and distribute entanglement in a specific manner.Comment: Two new subsections included. Accepted for publication in The
European Physical Journal
Systematic Study of Fermion Masses and Mixing Angles in Horizontal SU(2) Gauge Theory
Despite its great success in explaining the basic interactions of nature, the
standard model suffers from an inability to explain the observed masses of the
fundamental particles and the weak mixing angles between them. We shall survey
a set of possible extensions to the standard model, employing an SU(2)
``horizontal'' gauge symmetry between the particle generations, to see what
light they can shed on this problem.Comment: 43 pages, 4 figures (available by postal mail on request), OZ-92/0
Intrinsic versus super-rough anomalous scaling in spontaneous imbibition
We study spontaneous imbibition using a phase field model in a two
dimensional system with a dichotomic quenched noise. By imposing a constant
pressure at the origin, we study the case when the interface
advances at low velocities, obtaining the scaling exponents ,
and within the intrinsic
anomalous scaling scenario. These results are in quite good agreement with
experimental data recently published. Likewise, when we increase the interface
velocity, the resulting scaling exponents are , and . Moreover, we observe that the local
properties of the interface change from a super-rough to an intrinsic anomalous
description when the contrast between the two values of the dichotomic noise is
increased. From a linearized interface equation we can compute analytically the
global scaling exponents which are comparable to the numerical results,
introducing some properties of the quenched noise.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review
Does consumer sentiment predict regional consumption?
This paper tests the ability of consumer sentiment to predict retail spending at the state level. The results here suggest that, although there is a significant relationship between sentiment measures and retail sales growth in several states, consumer sentiment exhibits only modest predictive power for future changes of retail spending. Measures of consumer sentiment, however, contain additional explanatory power aside from the information available in other indicators. We also find that by restricting our attention to fluctuations in retail sales that occur at the business cycle frequency we can uncover a significant relationship between consumer sentiment and retail sales growth in many additional states. In light of these results, we conclude that the practical value of sentiment indices to forecast consumer spending at the state level is, at best, limited.Consumer behavior ; Consumption (Economics) ; Economic indicators
Coherent XUV generation driven by sharp metal tips photoemission
It was already experimentally demonstrated that high-energy electrons can be
generated using metal nanotips as active media. In addition, it has been
theoretically proven that the high-energy tail of the photoemitted electrons is
intrinsically linked to the recollision phenomenon. Through this recollision
process it is also possible to convert the energy gained by the laser-emitted
electron in the continuum in a coherent XUV photon. It means the emission of
harmonic radiation appears to be feasible, although it has not been
experimentally demonstrated hitherto till now. In this paper, we employ a
quantum mechanical approach to model the electron dipole moment including both
the laser experimental conditions and the bulk matter properties and predict is
possible to generate coherent UV and XUV radiation using metal nanotips as
sources. Our quantum mechanical results are fully supported by their classical
counterparts.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1309.034
Periodic forcing in viscous fingering of a nematic liquid crystal
We study viscous fingering of an air-nematic interface in a radial Hele-Shaw
cell when periodically switching on and off an electric field, which reorients
the nematic and thus changes its viscosity, as well as the surface tension and
its anisotropy (mainly enforced by a single groove in the cell). We observe
undulations at the sides of the fingers which correlate with the switching
frequency and with tip oscillations which give maximal velocity to smallest
curvatures. These lateral undulations appear to be decoupled from spontaneous
(noise-induced) side branching. We conclude that the lateral undulations are
generated by successive relaxations between two limiting finger widths. The
change between these two selected pattern scales is mainly due to the change in
the anisotropy. This scenario is confirmed by numerical simulations in the
channel geometry, using a phase-field model for anisotropic viscous fingering.Comment: completely rewritten version, more clear exposition of results (14
pages in Revtex + 7 eps figures
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