11,763 research outputs found
Microscopic Modeling of the Growth of Order in an Alloy: Nucleated and Continuous Ordering
We study the early-stages of ordering in using a model Hamiltonian
derived from the effective medium theory of cohesion in metals: an approach
providing a microscopic description of interatomic interactions in alloys. Our
simulations show a crossover from a nucleated growth regime to a region where
the ordering does not follow any simple growth laws. This mirrors the
experimental observations in . The kinetics of growth, obtained from
the simulations, is in semi-quantitative agreement with experiments. The
real-space structures observed in our simulations offer some insight into the
nature of early-stage kineticsComment: 13 pages, Revtex, 3 postscript figures in a second file
Switchable resonant coupling of flux qubits
We propose a coupling scheme, where two or more flux qubits with different
eigenfrequencies share Josephson junctions with a coupler loop devoid of its
own quantum dynamics. Switchable two-qubit coupling is realized by tuning the
frequency of the AC magnetic flux through the coupler to a combination
frequency of two of the qubits. The coupling allows any or all of the qubits to
be simultaneously at the degeneracy point and can change sign.Comment: REVTeX 4, 4 pages, 2 figures, v2: reference added, v3: final version
published in Phys. Rev.
Laser acceleration of monoenergetic protons via a double layer emerging from an ultra-thin foil
We present theoretical and numerical studies of the acceleration of monoenergetic protons in a double layer formed by the laser irradiation of an ultra-thin film. The ponderomotive force of the laser light pushes the electrons forward, and the induced space charge electric field pulls the ions and makes the thin foil accelerate as a whole. The ions trapped by the combined electric field and inertial force in the accelerated frame, together with the electrons trapped in the well of the ponderomotive and ion electric field, form a stable double layer. The trapped ions are accelerated to monoenergetic energies up to 100 MeV and beyond, making them suitable for cancer treatment. We present an analytic theory for the laser-accelerated ion energy and for the amount of trapped ions as functions of the laser intensity, foil thickness and the plasma number density. We also discuss the underlying physics of the trapped and untrapped ions in a double layer. The analytical results are compared with those obtained from direct Vlasov simulations of the fully nonlinear electron and ion dynamics that is controlled by the laser light
Lateral shift of the transmitted light beam through a left-handed slab
It is reported that when a light beam travels through a slab of left-handed
medium in the air, the lateral shift of the transmitted beam can be negative as
well as positive. The necessary condition for the lateral shift to be positive
is given. The validity of the stationary-phase approach is demonstrated by
numerical simulations for a Gaussian-shaped beam. A restriction to the slab's
thickness is provided that is necessary for the beam to retain its profile in
the traveling. It is shown that the lateral shift of the reflected beam is
equal to that of the transmitted beam in the symmetric configuration.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
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