13,834 research outputs found
New Internal Stress Driven on-Chip Micromachines for Extracting Mechanical Properties of Thin Films
A new concept of micromachines has been developed for measuring the
mechanical properties of thin metallic films. The actuator is a beam undergoing
large internal stresses built up during the deposition process. Al thin films
are deposited partly on the actuator beam and on the substrate. By etching the
structure, the actuator contracts and pulls the Al film. Full stress strain
curves can be generated by designing a set of micromachines with various
actuator lengths. In the present study, the displacements have been measured by
scanning electronic microscopy. The stress is derived from simple continuum
mechanics relationships. The tensile properties of Al films of various
thicknesses have been tested. A marked increase of the strength with decreasing
film thickness is observed.Comment: Submitted on behalf of TIMA Editions
(http://irevues.inist.fr/tima-editions
Renormalization Group Improved Optimized Perturbation Theory: Revisiting the Mass Gap of the O(2N) Gross-Neveu Model
We introduce an extension of a variationally optimized perturbation method,
by combining it with renormalization group properties in a straightforward
(perturbative) form. This leads to a very transparent and efficient procedure,
with a clear improvement of the non-perturbative results with respect to
previous similar variational approaches. This is illustrated here by deriving
optimized results for the mass gap of the O(2N) Gross-Neveu model, compared
with the exactly know results for arbitrary N. At large N, the exact result is
reproduced already at the very first order of the modified perturbation using
this procedure. For arbitrary values of N, using the original perturbative
information only known at two-loop order, we obtain a controllable percent
accuracy or less, for any N value, as compared with the exactly known result
for the mass gap from the thermodynamical Bethe Ansatz. The procedure is very
general and can be extended straightforwardly to any renormalizable Lagrangian
model, being systematically improvable provided that a knowledge of enough
perturbative orders of the relevant quantities is available.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figure, v2: Eq. (4.5) corrected, comments adde
Hard parton damping in hot QCD
The gluon and quark collisional widths in hot QCD plasmas are discussed with
emphasis on temperatures near Tc, where the coupling is large. Considering the
effect on the entropy, which is known from lattice calculations, it is argued
that the width of the partons, which in the perturbative limit is given by
gamma ~ g^2 ln(1/g) T, should be sizeable at intermediate temperatures but has
to be small close to Tc. This behavior implies a substantial reduction of the
radiative energy loss of jets near Tc.Comment: invitetd talk given at 'Hot Quarks 04', July 18-24 2004, Taos Valley,
NM, US
Visualizing quantum entanglement and the EPR paradox during the photodissociation of a diatomic molecule using two ultrashort laser pulses
We investigate theoretically the dissociative ionization of a H2+ molecule
using two ultrashort laser (pump-probe) pulses. The pump pulse prepares a
dissociating nuclear wave packet on an ungerade surface of H2+. Next, an UV (or
XUV) probe pulse ionizes this dissociating state at large (R = 20 - 100 bohr)
internuclear distance. We calculate the momenta distributions of protons and
photoelectrons which show a (two-slit-like) interference structure. A general,
simple interference formula is obtained which depends on the electron and
protons momenta, as well as on the pump-probe delay on the pulses durations and
polarizations. This interference can be interpreted as visualization of an
electron state delocalized over the two-centres. This state is an entangled
state of a hydrogen atom with a momentum p and a proton with an opposite
momentum. -p dissociating on the ungerade surface of H2+. This pump-probe
scheme can be used to reveal the nonlocality of the electron which intuitively
should be localized on just one of the protons separated by the distance R much
larger than the atomic Bohr orbit
The immediate environment of the Class 0 protostar VLA1623, on scales of ~50-100 AU, observed at millimetre and centimetre wavelengths
We present high angular resolution observations, taken with the Very Large
Array (VLA) and Multiple Element Radio Linked Interferometer Network (MERLIN)
radio telescopes, at 7mm and 4.4cm respectively, of the prototype Class 0
protostar VLA1623. At 7mm we detect two sources (VLA1623A & B) coincident with
the two previously detected components at the centre of this system. The
separation between the two is 1.2arcsec, or ~170AU at an assumed distance of
139pc. The upper limit to the size of the source coincident with each component
of VLA1623 is ~0.7arcsec, in agreement with previous findings. This corresponds
to a diameter of ~100AU at an assumed distance of 139pc. Both components show
the same general trend in their broadband continuum spectra, of a steeper dust
continuum spectrum shortward of 7mm and a flatter spectrum longward of this.
We estimate an upper limit to the VLA1623A disc mass of <0.13Msol and an
upper limit to its radius of ~50AU. The longer wavelength data have a spectral
index of \alpha~0.6+/-0.3. This is too steep to be explained by optically thin
free-free emission. It is most likely due to optically thick free-free
emission. Alternatively, we speculate that it might be due to the formation of
larger grains or planetesimals in the circumstellar disc. We estimate the mass
of VLA1623B to be <0.15M$sol. We can place a lower limit to its size of ~30x7
AU, and an upper limit to its diameter of ~100AU. The longer wavelength data of
VLA1623B also have a spectral index of \alpha~0.6+/-0.3. The nature of VLA1623B
remains a matter of debate. It could be a binary companion to the protostar, or
a knot in the radio jet from VLA1623A.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in MNRA
Recent advances on IMF research
Here I discuss recent work on brown dwarfs, massive stars and the IMF in
general. The stellar IMF can be well described by an invariant two-part power
law in present-day star-formation events within the Local Group of galaxies. It
is nearly identical in shape to the pre-stellar core mass function. The
majority of brown dwarfs follow a separate IMF. Evidence from globular clusters
and ultra-compact dwarf galaxies has emerged that IMFs may have been top heavy
depending on the star-formation rate density. The IGIMF then ranges from bottom
heavy at low galaxy-wide star formation rates to being top-heavy in
galaxy-scale star bursts.Comment: 6 pages, LaTeX, to appear in The Labyrinth of Star Formation, 18-22
June 2012, Crete, (eds.) D. Stamatellos, S. Goodwin, and D. Ward-Thompson,
Springer, in press; replaced version: very minor corrections plus the
addition of reference Smith & Lucey (2013) on the bottom-heavy IMF in
elliptical galaxie
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