918 research outputs found
Electronic structure reconstruction by orbital symmetry breaking in IrTe2
We report an angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) study on IrTe2
which exhibits an interesting lattice distortion below 270 K and becomes
triangular lattice superconductors by suppressing the distortion via chemical
substitution or intercalation. ARPES results at 300 K show multi-band Fermi
surfaces with six-fold symmetry which are basically consistent with band
structure calculations. At 20 K in the distorted phase, whereas the flower
shape of the outermost Fermi surface does not change from that at 300 K,
topology of the inner Fermi surfaces is strongly modified by the lattice
distortion. The Fermi surface reconstruction by the distortion depends on the
orbital character of the Fermi surfaces, suggesting importance of Ir 5d and/or
Te 5p orbital symmetry breaking.Comment: 4pages, 4figure
Important Roles of Te 5p and Ir 5d Spin-orbit Interactions on the Multi-band Electronic Structure of Triangular Lattice Superconductor Ir1-xPtxTe2
We report an angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) study on a
triangular lattice superconductor IrPtTe in which the Ir-Ir
or Te-Te bond formation, the band Jahn-Teller effect, and the spin-orbit
interaction are cooperating and competing with one another. The Fermi surfaces
of the substituted system are qualitatively similar to the band structure
calculations for the undistorted IrTe with an upward chemical potential
shift due to electron doping. A combination of the ARPES and the band structure
calculations indicates that the Te spin-orbit interaction removes the
orbital degeneracy and induces type spin-orbit
coupling near the A point. The inner and outer Fermi surfaces are entangled by
the Te and Ir spin-orbit interactions which may provide exotic
superconductivity with singlet-triplet mixing.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy of the low-energy electronic structure of superconducting PrCuO driven by oxygen non-stoichiometry
Bulk crystals of electron-doped cuprates with the T'-type structure require
both Ce substitutions and reduction annealing for the emergence of
superconductivity while the reduction annealing alone can induce
superconductivity in thin films of the T'-type cuprates. In order to reveal
low-energy electronic states which are responsible for the superconductivity,
we have conducted angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy measurements on
thin films of the superconducting Ce-free T'-type cuprate PrCuO. The
results indicate that the overall band structure and the Fermi surface area of
the superconducting PrCuO are similar to those of superconducting
Ce-doped bulk single crystals, highlighting the importance of the actual
electron concentration rather than the Ce concentration when discussing the
physical properties of the T'-type cuprates
Spectromicroscopy of electronic phase separation in KFeSe superconductor
Structural phase separation in AFeSe system has been studied
by different experimental techniques, however, it should be important to know
how the electronic uniformity is influenced, on which length scale the
electronic phases coexist, and what is their spatial distribution. Here, we
have used novel scanning photoelectron microscopy (SPEM) to study the
electronic phase separation in KFeSe, providing a direct
measurement of the topological spatial distribution of the different electronic
phases. The SPEM results reveal a peculiar interconnected conducting
filamentary phase that is embedded in the insulating texture. The filamentary
structure with a particular topological geometry could be important for the
high T superconductivity in the presence of a phase with a large magnetic
moment in AFeSe materials.Comment: 14 pages,3 figure
Agent Based Modeling of Air Carrier Behavior for Evaluation of Technology Equipage and Adoption
As part of ongoing research, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and LMI developed a research framework to assist policymakers in identifying impacts on the U.S. air transportation system (ATS) of potential policies and technology related to the implementation of the Next Generation Air Transportation System (NextGen). This framework, called the Air Transportation System Evolutionary Simulation (ATS-EVOS), integrates multiple models into a single process flow to best simulate responses by U.S. commercial airlines and other ATS stakeholders to NextGen-related policies, and in turn, how those responses impact the ATS. Development of this framework required NASA and LMI to create an agent-based model of airline and passenger behavior. This Airline Evolutionary Simulation (AIRLINE-EVOS) models airline decisions about tactical airfare and schedule adjustments, and strategic decisions related to fleet assignments, market prices, and equipage. AIRLINE-EVOS models its own heterogeneous population of passenger agents that interact with airlines; this interaction allows the model to simulate the cycle of action-reaction as airlines compete with each other and engage passengers. We validated a baseline configuration of AIRLINE-EVOS against Airline Origin and Destination Survey (DB1B) data and subject matter expert opinion, and we verified the ATS-EVOS framework and agent behavior logic through scenario-based experiments. These experiments demonstrated AIRLINE-EVOS's capabilities in responding to an input price shock in fuel prices, and to equipage challenges in a series of analyses based on potential incentive policies for best equipped best served, optimal-wind routing, and traffic management initiative exemption concepts.
- …