15,783 research outputs found
Electron-phonon interaction and antiferromagnetic correlations
We study effects of the Coulomb repulsion on the electron-phonon interaction
(EPI) in a model of cuprates at zero and finite doping. We find that
antiferromagnetic correlations strongly enhance EPI effects on the electron
Green's function with respect to the paramagnetic correlated system, but the
net effect of the Coulomb interaction is a moderate suppression of the EPI.
Doping leads to additional suppression, due to reduced antiferromagnetic
correlations. In contrast, the Coulomb interaction strongly suppresses EPI
effects on phonons, but the suppression weakens with doping.Comment: 4 pages and 5 figure
2.45 GHz Class E Power Amplifier for a Transmitter Combining LINC and EER
A 10 W class-E RF power amplifier (PA) is designed and fabricated using a Cree GaN HEMT. The proposed PA uses an innovative input circuit to optimize band with. At 2.45 GHz the PA achieves a PAE of 60 % at an outputpower of 40 dBm. The resulting amplifier is simulated and constructed using a transmissionline topology. Two of these amplifiers are fabricated on a single board for outphasing application. Their suitability for outphasing application and supply modulation is investigated.
Real-time observation of interfering crystal electrons in high-harmonic generation
Accelerating and colliding particles has been a key strategy to explore the
texture of matter. Strong lightwaves can control and recollide electronic
wavepackets, generating high-harmonic (HH) radiation which encodes the
structure and dynamics of atoms and molecules and lays the foundations of
attosecond science. The recent discovery of HH generation in bulk solids
combines the idea of ultrafast acceleration with complex condensed matter
systems and sparks hope for compact solid-state attosecond sources and
electronics at optical frequencies. Yet the underlying quantum motion has not
been observable in real time. Here, we study HH generation in a bulk solid
directly in the time-domain, revealing a new quality of strong-field
excitations in the crystal. Unlike established atomic sources, our solid emits
HH radiation as a sequence of subcycle bursts which coincide temporally with
the field crests of one polarity of the driving terahertz waveform. We show
that these features hallmark a novel non-perturbative quantum interference
involving electrons from multiple valence bands. The results identify key
mechanisms for future solid-state attosecond sources and next-generation
lightwave electronics. The new quantum interference justifies the hope for
all-optical bandstructure reconstruction and lays the foundation for possible
quantum logic operations at optical clock rates
Self consistent kinetic simulations of SPT and HEMP thrusters including the near-field plume region
The Particle-in-Cell (PIC) method was used to study two different ion
thruster concepts - Stationary Plasma Thrusters (SPT) and High Efficiency
Multistage Plasma Thrusters (HEMP-T), in particular the plasma properties in
the discharge chamber due to the different magnetic field configurations.
Special attention was paid to the simulation of plasma particle fluxes on the
thrusters channel surfaces. In both cases, PIC proved itself as a powerful
tool, delivering important insight into the basic physics of the different
thruster concepts. The simulations demonstrated that the new HEMP thruster
concept allows for a high thermal efficiency due to both minimal energy
dissipation and high acceleration efficiency. In the HEMP thruster the plasma
contact to the wall is limited only to very small areas of the magnetic field
cusps, which results in much smaller ion energy flux to the thruster channel
surface as compared to SPT. The erosion yields for dielectric discharge channel
walls of SPT and HEMP thrusters were calculated with the binary collision code
SDTrimSP. For SPT, an erosion rate on the level of 1 mm of sputtered material
per hour was observed. For HEMP, thruster simulations have shown that there is
no erosion inside the dielectric discharge channel.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures This work was presented at 21st International
Conference on Numerical Simulation of Plasmas (ICNSP'09
Pauli susceptibility of A3C60 (A=K, Rb)
The Pauli paramagnetic susceptibility of A3C60 (A= K, Rb) compounds is
calculated. A lattice quantum Monte Carlo method is applied to a multi-band
Hubbard model, including the on-site Coulomb interaction U. It is found that
the many-body enhancement of the susceptibility is of the order of a factor of
three. This reconciles estimates of the density of states from the
susceptibility with other estimates. The enhancement is an example of a
substantial many-body effect in the doped fullerenes.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, 2 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. B more
information at http://www.mpi-stuttgart.mpg.de/dokumente/andersen/fullerene
Metal-insulator transitions: Influence of lattice structure, Jahn-Teller effect, and Hund's rule coupling
We study the influence of the lattice structure, the Jahn-Teller effect and
the Hund's rule coupling on a metal-insulator transition in AnC60 (A= K, Rb).
The difference in lattice structure favors A3C60 (fcc) being a metal and A4C60
(bct) being an insulator, and the coupling to Hg Jahn-Teller phonons favors
A4C60 being nonmagnetic. The coupling to Hg (Ag) phonons decreases (increases)
the value Uc of the Coulomb integral at which the metal-insulator transition
occurs. There is an important partial cancellation between the Jahn-Teller
effect and the Hund's rule coupling.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX, 3 eps figure, additional material available at
http://www.mpi-stuttgart.mpg.de/docs/ANDERSEN/fullerene
Stability diagrams for bursting neurons modeled by three-variable maps
We study a simple map as a minimal model of excitable cells. The map has two
fast variables which mimic the behavior of class I neurons, undergoing a
sub-critical Hopf bifurcation. Adding a third slow variable allows the system
to present bursts and other interesting biological behaviors. Bifurcation lines
which locate the excitability region are obtained for different planes in
parameter space.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publicatio
Enhancing Tc in field-doped Fullerenes by applying uniaxial stress
Capitalizing on the two-dimensional nature of superconductivity in
field-effect doped C60, we show that it should be possible to increase the
transition temperature Tc by applying uniaxial stress perpendicular to the gate
electrode. This method not only holds the promise of substantially enhancing Tc
(by about 30 K per GPa), but also provides a sensitive check of the current
understanding of superconductivity in the doped Fullerenes.Comment: 3 pages RevTe
Pion-nucleon scattering in a meson-exchange model
The pi-N interaction is studied within a meson-exchange model and in a
coupled-channels approach which includes the channels pi-N, eta-N, as well as
three effective pi-pi-N channels namely rho-N, pi-Delta, and sigma-N. Starting
out from an earlier model of the Julich group systematic improvements in the
dynamics and in some technical aspects are introduced. With the new model an
excellent quantitative reproduction of the pi-N phase shifts and inelasticity
parameters in the energy region up to 1.9 GeV and for total angular momenta J
leq 3/2 is achieved. Simultaneously, good agreement with data for the total and
differential pi-N -> eta-N transition cross sections is obtained. The
connection of the pi_N dynamics in the S_{11} partial wave with the reaction
pi-N -> eta-N is discussed.Comment: 32 pages, 9 figure
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