30,065 research outputs found
Nanoscale Quantum Solvation of para-H around the Linear OCS Molecule inside He Droplets
We present a microscopic analysis of the quantum solvation structures of
para-H around the OCS molecule when embedded in low temperature He
droplets. The structures of clusters containing M=5 and 6 para-H molecules
are compared with corresponding structures for M=1 (OCS-H complex) and M=17
(a full solvation shell), as well as with the clusters in the absence of
helium. We find that the helium has negligible effect on the structures for the
small and large OCS(H) clusters, but that it modifies the cluster
structure for M=6. We discuss implications of these results for the onset of
superfluidity in the solvating hydrogen shell and for spectroscopic
measurements.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in J. Low Temp. Phy
Microscopic two-fluid theory of rotational constants of the OCS-H complex in He droplets
We present a microscopic quantum analysis for rotational constants of the
OCS-H complex in helium droplets using the local two-fluid theory in
conjunction with path integral Monte Carlo simulations. Rotational constants
are derived from effective moments of inertia calculated assuming that motion
of the H molecule and the local non-superfluid helium density is rigidly
coupled to the molecular rotation of OCS and employing path integral methods to
sample the corresponding H and helium densities. The rigid coupling
assumption for H-OCS is calibrated by comparison with exact calculations of
the free OCS-H complex. The presence of the H molecule is found to
induce a small local non-superfluid helium density in the second solvation
shell which makes a non-negligible contribution to the moment of inertia of the
complex in helium. The resulting moments of inertia for the OCS-H complex
embedded in a cluster of 63 helium atoms are found to be in good agreement with
experimentally measured values in large helium droplets. Implications for
analysis of rotational constants of larger complexes of OCS with multiple H
molecules in helium are discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in J. Chem. Phy
Path integral Monte Carlo simulation of global and local superfluidity in liquid He reservoirs separated by nanoscale apertures
We present a path integral Monte Carlo study of the global superfluid
fraction and local superfluid density in cylindrically-symmetric reservoirs of
liquid He separated by nanoaperture arrays. The superfluid response to
both translations along the axis of symmetry (longitudinal response) and
rotations about the cylinder axis (transverse response) are computed, together
with radial and axial density distributions that reveal the microscopic
inhomogeneity arising from the combined effects of the confining external
potential and the He-He interatomic potentials. We make a microscopic
determination of the length-scale of decay of superfluidity at the radial
boundaries of the system by analyzing the local superfluid density distribution
to extract a displacement length that quantifies the superfluid mass
displacement away from the boundary. We find that the longitudinal superfluid
response is reduced in reservoirs separated by a septum containing sufficiently
small apertures compared to a cylinder with no intervening aperture array, for
all temperatures below . For a single aperture in the septum, a
significant drop in the longitudinal superfluid response is seen when the
aperture diameter is made smaller than twice the empirical
temperature-dependent He healing length, consistent with the formation of a
weak link between the reservoirs. Increasing the diameter of a single aperture
or the number of apertures in the array results in an increase of the
superfluid density toward the expected bulk value.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
The finite-temperature Monte Carlo method and its application to superfluid helium clusters
We review the use of the path integral Monte Carlo (PIMC) methodology to the
study of finite-size quantum clusters, with particular emphasis on recent
applications to pure and impurity-doped He clusters. We describe the principles
of PIMC, the use of the multilevel Metropolis method for sampling particle
permutations, and the methods used to accurately incorporate anisotropic
molecule-helium interactions into the path integral scheme. Applications to
spectroscopic studies of embedded atoms and molecules are summarized, with
discussion of the new concepts of local and nanoscale superfluidity that have
been generated by recent PIMC studies of the impurity-doped He clusters.Comment: P. Huang, Y. Kwon, and K. B. Whaley, in "Quantum Fluids in
Confinement", Vol. 4 of "Advances in Quantum Many-Body Theories", edited by
E. Krotscheck and J. Navarro (World Scientific, Singapore, 2002), in pres
Fractional ac Josephson effect in p- and d-wave superconductors
For certain orientations of Josephson junctions between two p_x-wave or two
d-wave superconductors, the subgap Andreev bound states produce a 4pi-periodic
relation between the Josephson current I and the phase difference phi: I
sin(phi/2). Consequently, the ac Josephson current has the fractional frequency
eV/h, where V is the dc voltage. In the tunneling limit, the Josephson current
is proportional to the first power (not square) of the electron tunneling
amplitude. Thus, the Josephson current between unconventional superconductors
is carried by single electrons, rather than by Cooper pairs. The fractional ac
Josephson effect can be observed experimentally by measuring frequency spectrum
of microwave radiation from the junction. We also study junctions between
singlet s-wave and triplet p_x-wave, as well as between chiral p_x + ip_y-wave
superconductors.Comment: v. 5: minor update of references in proofs; v.4: minor improvements;
v.3: major expansion to 13 pages, 6 figures; v.2: significantly expanded to 6
pages; v.1: 4 pages, 2 figures, RevTeX
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