660 research outputs found
Electron Removal Self Energy and its application to Ca2CuO2Cl2
We propose using the self energy defined for the electron removal Green's
function. Starting from the electron removal Green's function, we obtained
expressions for the removal self energy Sigma^ER (k,omega) that are applicable
for non-quasiparticle photoemission spectral functions from a single band
system. Our method does not assume momentum independence and produces the self
energy in the full k-omega space. The method is applied to the angle resolved
photoemission from Ca_2CuO_2Cl_2 and the result is found to be compatible with
the self energy value from the peak width of sharp features. The self energy is
found to be only weakly k-dependent. In addition, the Im Sigma shows a maximum
at around 1 eV where the high energy kink is located.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Electronic Structure of Electron-doped Sm1.86Ce0.14CuO4: Strong `Pseudo-Gap' Effects, Nodeless Gap and Signatures of Short Range Order
Angle resolved photoemission (ARPES) data from the electron doped cuprate
superconductor SmCeCuO shows a much stronger pseudo-gap
or "hot-spot" effect than that observed in other optimally doped -type
cuprates. Importantly, these effects are strong enough to drive the
zone-diagonal states below the chemical potential, implying that d-wave
superconductivity in this compound would be of a novel "nodeless" gap variety.
The gross features of the Fermi surface topology and low energy electronic
structure are found to be well described by reconstruction of bands by a
order. Comparison of the ARPES and optical data from
the sample shows that the pseudo-gap energy observed in optical data is
consistent with the inter-band transition energy of the model, allowing us to
have a unified picture of pseudo-gap effects. However, the high energy
electronic structure is found to be inconsistent with such a scenario. We show
that a number of these model inconsistencies can be resolved by considering a
short range ordering or inhomogeneous state.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Update on form factor at zero-recoil using the Oktay-Kronfeld action
We present an update on the calculation of
semileptonic form factor at zero recoil using the Oktay-Kronfeld bottom and
charm quarks on flavor HISQ ensembles generated by the MILC
collaboration. Preliminary results are given for two ensembles with and fm and MeV. Calculations have been done
with a number of valence quark masses, and the dependence of the form factor on
them is investigated on the fm ensemble. The excited state is
controlled by using multistate fits to the three-point correlators measured at
4--6 source-sink separations.Comment: 7 pages and 4 figures. Talk at The 36th Annual International
Symposium on Lattice Field Theory - LATTICE201
High resolution angle resolved photoemission studies on quasi-particle dynamics in graphite
We obtained the spectral function of the graphite H point using high
resolution angle resolved photoelectron spectroscopy (ARPES). The extracted
width of the spectral function (inverse of the photo-hole lifetime) near the H
point is approximately proportional to the energy as expected from the linearly
increasing density of states (DOS) near the Fermi energy. This is well
accounted by our electron-phonon coupling theory considering the peculiar
electronic DOS near the Fermi level. And we also investigated the temperature
dependence of the peak widths both experimentally and theoretically. The upper
bound for the electron-phonon coupling parameter is ~0.23, nearly the same
value as previously reported at the K point. Our analysis of temperature
dependent ARPES data at K shows that the energy of phonon mode of graphite has
much higher energy scale than 125K which is dominant in electron-phonon
coupling.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Sizeable suppression of thermal Hall effect upon isotopic substitution in strontium titanate
We report measurements of the thermal Hall effect in single crystals of both
pristine and isotopically substituted strontium titanate. We discovered a two
orders of magnitude difference in the thermal Hall conductivity between
and -enriched samples. In most
temperature ranges, the magnitude of thermal Hall conductivity ()
in is proportional to the magnitude of the longitudinal thermal
conductivity (), which suggests a phonon-mediated thermal Hall
effect. However, they deviate in the temperature of their maxima, and the
thermal Hall angle ratio () shows anomalously
decreasing behavior below the ferroelectric Curie temperature ~.
This observation suggests a new underlying mechanism, as the conventional
scenario cannot explain such differences within the slight change in phonon
spectrum. Notably, the difference in magnitude of thermal Hall conductivity and
rapidly decreasing thermal Hall angle ratio in is correlated
with the strength of quantum critical fluctuations in this displacive
ferroelectric. This relation points to a link between the quantum critical
physics of strontium titanate and its thermal Hall effect, a possible clue to
explain this example of an exotic phenomenon in non-magnetic insulating
systems.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letter
Quasi-coherent fluctuation measurement with the upgraded microwave imaging reflectometer in KSTAR
The microwave imaging reflectometer (MIR) is the leading diagnostic tool for study of density fluctuations in KSTAR. For last three years since 2014, major components such as the multi-frequency probe beam source, multi-channel detector array, signal processing electronic system, data acquisition system, and optical system have been gradually upgraded. In this paper, the detailed system upgrade with test results in the laboratory and/or plasma is given, and analysis results of a distinctive fluctuation structure referred to as the quasi-coherent mode (QCM) measured by the upgraded MIR system for an L-mode discharge are presented. Cross-coherence analysis with multiple channels shows that the QCM is localized in a core region and appears to be driven by electron temperature gradient for the discharg
Verifying Quantitative Reliability of Programs That Execute on Unreliable Hardware
Emerging high-performance architectures are anticipated to contain unreliable components that may exhibit soft errors, which silently corrupt the results of computations. Full detection and recovery from soft errors is challenging, expensive, and, for some applications, unnecessary. For example, approximate computing applications (such as multimedia processing, machine learning, and big data analytics) can often naturally tolerate soft errors. In this paper we present Rely, a programming language that enables developers to reason about the quantitative reliability of an application -- namely, the probability that it produces the correct result when executed on unreliable hardware. Rely allows developers to specify the reliability requirements for each value that a function produces. We present a static quantitative reliability analysis that verifies quantitative requirements on the reliability of an application, enabling a developer to perform sound and verified reliability engineering. The analysis takes a Rely program with a reliability specification and a hardware specification, that characterizes the reliability of the underlying hardware components, and verifies that the program satisfies its reliability specification when executed on the underlying unreliable hardware platform. We demonstrate the application of quantitative reliability analysis on six computations implemented in Rely.This research was supported in part by the National Science Foundation (Grants CCF-0905244, CCF-1036241, CCF-1138967, CCF-1138967, and IIS-0835652), the United States Department of Energy (Grant DE-SC0008923), and DARPA (Grants FA8650-11-C-7192, FA8750-12-2-0110)
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