33,650 research outputs found
Pressure-control purge panel for automatic butt welding
Modification of a purge panel for use in an automatic butt weld reduces the drop in pressure between the regulators and the weld head and tube purge fitting. The invention affects air regulators for plants, regulating circuits for pneumatic valves, and automatic welding machines
Isospin-projected nuclear level densities by the shell model Monte Carlo method
We have developed an efficient isospin projection method in the shell model
Monte Carlo approach for isospin-conserving Hamiltonians. For isoscalar
observables this projection method has the advantage of being exact sample by
sample. The isospin projection method allows us to take into account the proper
isospin dependence of the nuclear interaction, thus avoiding a sign problem
that such an interaction introduces in unprojected calculations. We apply our
method in the calculation of the isospin dependence of level densities in the
complete shell. We find that isospin-dependent corrections to the
total level density are particularly important for nuclei.Comment: 5 pages including 4 figure
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Avoiding Future Famines: Strengthening the Ecological Foundation of Food Security through Sustainable Food Systems. A UNEP Synthesis Report
Resistivity studies under hydrostatic pressure on a low-resistance variant of the quasi-2D organic superconductor kappa-(BEDT-TTF)2Cu[N(CN)2]Br: quest for intrinsic scattering contributions
Resistivity measurements have been performed on a low (LR)- and high
(HR)-resistance variant of the kappa-(BEDT-TTF)_2Cu[N(CN)_2]Br superconductor.
While the HR sample was synthesized following the standard procedure, the LR
crystal is a result of a somewhat modified synthesis route. According to their
residual resistivities and residual resistivity ratios, the LR crystal is of
distinctly superior quality. He-gas pressure was used to study the effect of
hydrostatic pressure on the different transport regimes for both variants. The
main results of these comparative investigations are (i) a significant part of
the inelastic-scattering contribution, which causes the anomalous rho(T)
maximum in standard HR crystals around 90 K, is sample dependent, i.e.
extrinsic in nature, (ii) the abrupt change in rho(T) at T* approx. 40 K from a
strongly temperature-dependent behavior at T > T* to an only weakly T-dependent
rho(T) at T < T* is unaffected by this scattering contribution and thus marks
an independent property, most likely a second-order phase transition, (iii)
both variants reveal a rho(T) proportional to AT^2 dependence at low
temperatures, i.e. for T_c < T < T_0, although with strongly sample-dependent
coefficients A and upper bounds for the T^2 behavior measured by T_0. The
latter result is inconsistent with the T^2 dependence originating from coherent
Fermi-liquid excitations.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Transport in single-molecule transistors: Kondo physics and negative differential resistance
We report two examples of transport phenomena based on sharp features in the
effective density of states of molecular-scale transistors: Kondo physics in
C-based devices, and gate-modulated negative differential resistance
(NDR) in ``control'' devices that we ascribe to adsorbed contamination. We
discuss the need for a statistical approach to device characterization, and the
criteria that must be satisfied to infer that transport is based on single
molecules. We describe apparent Kondo physics in C-based single-molecule
transistors (SMTs), including signatures of molecular vibrations in the Kondo
regime. Finally, we report gate-modulated NDR in devices made without
intentional molecular components, and discuss possible origins of this
property.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures. To appear in Oct. 2004 issue of Nanotechnology,
proceedings of International Conference on Nanoscale Devices and Systems
Integratio
Bipolarons in the Extended Holstein Hubbard Model
We numerically and analytically calculate the properties of the bipolaron in
an extended Hubbard Holstein model, which has a longer range electron-phonon
coupling like the Fr\" ohlich model. In the strong coupling regime, the
effective mass of the bipolaron in the extended model is much smaller than the
Holstein bipolaron mass. In contrast to the Holstein bipolaron, the bipolaron
in the extended model has a lower binding energy and remains bound with
substantial binding energy even in the large-U limit. In comparison with the
Holstein model where only a singlet bipolaron is bound, in the extended
Holstein model a triplet bipolaron can also form a bound state. We discuss the
possibility of phase separation in the case of finite electron doping.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Influence of Anomalous Dispersion on Optical Characteristics of Quantum Wells
Frequency dependencies of optical characteristics (reflection, transmission
and absorption of light) of a quantum well are investigated in a vicinity of
interband resonant transitions in a case of two closely located excited energy
levels. A wide quantum well in a quantizing magnetic field directed normally to
the quantum-well plane, and monochromatic stimulating light are considered.
Distinctions between refraction coefficients of barriers and quantum well, and
a spatial dispersion of the light wave are taken into account. It is shown that
at large radiative lifetimes of excited states in comparison with nonradiative
lifetimes, the frequency dependence of the light reflection coefficient in the
vicinity of resonant interband transitions is defined basically by a curve,
similar to the curve of the anomalous dispersion of the refraction coefficient.
The contribution of this curve weakens at alignment of radiative and
nonradiative times, it is practically imperceptible at opposite ratio of
lifetimes . It is shown also that the frequency dependencies similar to the
anomalous dispersion do not arise in transmission and absorption coefficients.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Magnetooptical effects in quantum wells irradiated with light pulses
The method of detection and investigation of the magnetopolaron effect in the
semiconductor quantum wells (QW) in a strong magnetic field, based on pulse
light irradiation and measuring the reflected and transmitted pulses, has been
proposed. It has been shown that a beating amplitude on the frequencies,
corresponding to the magnetopolaron energy level splitting, depends strongly
from the exciting pulse width. The existence of the time points of the total
reflection and total transparency has been predicted. The high orders of the
perturbation theory on electron-electromagnetic field interaction have been
taken into account.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures with captions, corrected typos, figures are
reedeted to improve their quality in accordance with the Referee requirement;
Phys. Rev. B, Brief Reports, submitted for publicatio
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