617 research outputs found
Bloch Oscillation under a Bichromatic Laser: Quasi-Miniband Formation, Collapse, and Dynamical Delocalization and Localization
A novel DC and AC driving configuration is proposed for semiconductor
superlattices, in which the THz AC driving is provided by an intense
bichromatic cw laser. The two components of the laser, usually in the visible
light range, are near but not exactly resonant with interband Wannier-Stark
transitions, and their frequency difference equals the Wannier-Stark ladder
spacing. Multi-photon processes with the intermediate states in the conduction
(valence) band cause dynamical delocalization and localization of valence
(conduction) electrons, and the corresponding formation and collapse of the
quasi-minibands.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Fractional and unquantized dc voltage generation in THz-driven semiconductor superlattices
We consider the spontaneous creation of a dc voltage across a strongly
coupled semiconductor superlattice subjected to THz radiation. We show that the
dc voltage may be approximately proportional either to an integer or to a half-
integer multiple of the frequency of the applied ac field, depending on the
ratio of the characteristic scattering rates of conducting electrons. For the
case of an ac field frequency less than the characteristic scattering rates, we
demonstrate the generation of an unquantized dc voltage.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, RevTEX, EPSF. Revised version v3: corrected typo
Bloch oscillations, Zener tunneling and Wannier-Stark ladders in the time-domain
We present a time-domain analysis of carrier dynamics in a semiconductor
superlattice with two minibands. Integration of the density-matrix equations of
motion reveals a number of new features: (i) for certain values of the applied
static electric field strong interband transitions occur; (ii) in static fields
the complex time-dependence of the density-matrix displays a sequence of stable
plateaus in the low field regime, and (iii) for applied fields with a periodic
time-dependence the dynamic response can be understood in terms of the
quasienergy spectra.Comment: 4 pages, 6 PostScript figures available from [email protected], REVTEX
3.
Spontaneous DC Current Generation in a Resistively Shunted Semiconductor Superlattice Driven by a TeraHertz Field
We study a resistively shunted semiconductor superlattice subject to a
high-frequency electric field. Using a balance equation approach that
incorporates the influence of the electric circuit, we determine numerically a
range of amplitude and frequency of the ac field for which a dc bias and
current are generated spontaneously and show that this region is likely
accessible to current experiments. Our simulations reveal that the Bloch
frequency corresponding to the spontaneous dc bias is approximately an integer
multiple of the ac field frequency.Comment: 8 pages, Revtex, 3 Postscript figure
Electron Bloch Oscillations and Electromagnetic Transparency of Semiconductor Superlattices in Multi-Frequency Electric Fields
We examine phenomenon of electromagnetic transparency in semiconductor
superlattices (having various miniband dispersion laws) in the presence of
multi-frequency periodic and non-periodic electric fields. Effects of induced
transparency and spontaneous generation of static fields are discussed. We paid
a special attention on a self-induced electromagnetic transparency and its
correlation to dynamic electron localization. Processes and mechanisms of the
transparency formation, collapse, and stabilization in the presence of external
fields are studied. In particular, we present the numerical results of the time
evolution of the superlattice current in an external biharmonic field showing
main channels of transparency collapse and its partial stabilization in the
case of low electron density superlattices
Bloch gain in dc-ac-driven semiconductor superlattices in the absence of electric domains
We study theoretically the feasibility of amplification and generation of
terahertz radiation in dc-ac-driven semiconductor superlattices in the absence
of electric domains. We find that if in addition to dc bias a strong THz pump
field is applied, Bloch gain profile for a small THz signal can be achieved
under conditions of positive static differential conductivity. Here the
positive differential conductivity arises, similarly to the case of
large-signal amplification scheme [H. Kroemer, cond-mat/0009311)], due to
modifications of dc current density caused by the application of high-frequency
ac field [K. Unterrainer \textit{et al.}, Phys. Rev. Lett. \textbf{76}, 2973
(1996)]. Whereas the sign of absorption at low and zero frequencies is
sensitive to the ac fields, the gain profile in the vicinity of gain maximum is
robust. We suggest to use this ac-induced effect in a starter for THz Bloch
oscillator. Our analysis demonstrates that the application of a short THz pulse
to a superlattice allows to suppress the undesirable formation of electric
domains and reach a sustained large-amplitude operation of the dc-biased Bloch
scillator.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figure
Consistency of Global Modis Aerosol Optical Depths over Ocean on Terra and Aqua Ceres SSF Datasets
Aerosol retrievals over ocean from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) onboard Terra and Aqua platforms are available from the Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System (CERES) Single Scanner Footprint (SSF) datasets generated at NASA Langley Research Center (LaRC). Two aerosol products are reported side-by-side. The primary M product is generated by sub-setting and remapping the multi-spectral (0.47-2.1 micrometer) MODIS produced oceanic aerosol (MOD04/MYD04 for Terra/Aqua) onto CERES footprints. M*D04 processing uses cloud screening and aerosol algorithms developed by the MODIS science team. The secondary AVHRR-like A product is generated in only two MODIS bands 1 and 6 (on Aqua, bands 1 and 7). The A processing uses the CERES cloud screening algorithm, and NOAA/NESDIS glint identification, and single-channel aerosol retrieval algorithms. The M and A products have been documented elsewhere and preliminarily compared using 2 weeks of global Terra CERES SSF Edition 1A data in which the M product was based on MOD04 collection 3. In this study, the comparisons between the M and A aerosol optical depths (AOD) in MODIS band 1 (0.64 micrometers), tau(sub 1M) and tau(sub 1A) are re-examined using 9 days of global CERES SSF Terra Edition 2A and Aqua Edition 1B data from 13 - 21 October 2002, and extended to include cross-platform comparisons. The M and A products on the new CERES SSF release are generated using the same aerosol algorithms as before, but with different preprocessing and sampling procedures, lending themselves to a simple sensitivity check to non-aerosol factors. Both tau(sub 1M) and tau(sub 1A) generally compare well across platforms. However, the M product shows some differences, which increase with ambient cloud amount and towards the solar side of the orbit. Three types of comparisons conducted in this study - cross-platform, cross-product, and cross-release confirm the previously made observation that the major area for improvement in the current aerosol processing lies in a more formalized and standardized sampling (and most importantly, cloud screening) whereas optimization of the aerosol algorithm is deemed to be an important yet less critical element
Nonlinear dynamics of large amplitude dust acoustic shocks and solitary pulses in dusty plasmas
We present a fully nonlinear theory for dust acoustic (DA) shocks and DA
solitary pulses in a strongly coupled dusty plasma, which have been recently
observed experimentally by Heinrich et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 103, 115002
(2009)], Teng et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 103, 245005 (2009)], and Bandyopadhyay
et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 101, 065006 (2008)]. For this purpose, we use a
generalized hydrodynamic model for the strongly coupled dust grains, accounting
for arbitrary large amplitude dust number density compressions and potential
distributions associated with fully nonlinear nonstationary DA waves.
Time-dependent numerical solutions of our nonlinear model compare favorably
well with the recent experimental works (mentioned above) that have reported
the formation of large amplitude non-stationary DA shocks and DA solitary
pulses in low-temperature dusty plasma discharges.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. To be published in Physical Review
Fokker-Planck Equation for Boltzmann-type and Active Particles: transfer probability approach
Fokker-Planck equation with the velocity-dependent coefficients is considered
for various isotropic systems on the basis of probability transition (PT)
approach. This method provides the self-consistent and universal description of
friction and diffusion for Brownian particles. Renormalization of the friction
coefficient is shown to occur for two dimensional (2-D) and three dimensional
(3-D) cases, due to the tensorial character of diffusion. The specific forms of
PT are calculated for the Boltzmann-type of collisions and for the
absorption-type of collisions (the later are typical for dusty plasmas and some
other systems). Validity of the Einstein's relation for the Boltzmann-type
collisions is analyzed for the velocity-dependent friction and diffusion
coefficients. For the Boltzmann-type collisions in the region of very high
grain velocity as well as it is always for non-Boltzmann collisions, such as,
e.g., absorption collisions, the Einstein relation is violated, although some
other relations (determined by the structure of PT) can exist. The generalized
friction force is investigated in dusty plasma in the framework of the PT
approach. The relation between this force, negative collecting friction force
and scattering and collecting drag forces is established.+AFwAXA- The concept
of probability transition is used to describe motion of active particles in an
ambient medium. On basis of the physical arguments the PT for a simple model of
the active particle is constructed and the coefficients of the relevant
Fokker-Planck equation are found. The stationary solution of this equation is
typical for the simplest self-organized molecular machines.+AFwAXA- PACS
number(s): 52.27.Lw, 52.20.Hv, 52.25.Fi, 82.70.-yComment: 18 page
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