487 research outputs found
Dynamic building envelopes
Chris Leung explains his recent research into deployable
external insulation: dynamic facades which use paraffin wax
and passive environmental technology to move between open
and closed states and allow what has until now often been
mutually exclusive – daylight and minimal heat loss
Hubbard model versus t-J model: The one-particle spectrum
The origin of the apparent discrepancies between the one-particle spectra of
the Hubbard and t-J models is revealed: Wavefunction corrections, in addition
to the three-site terms, should supplement the bare t-J. In this way a
quantitative agreement between the two models is obtained, even for the
intermediate- values appropriate for the high-Tc cuprate superconductors.
Numerical results for clusters of up to 20 sites are presented. The momentum
dependence of the observed intensities in the photoemission spectra of
Sr2CuO2Cl2 are well described by this complete strong-coupling approach.Comment: 4 two-column RevTeX pages, including 4 Postscript figures. Uses epsf.
Accepted for publication in Physical Review B, Rapid Communicatio
Tight-binding g-Factor Calculations of CdSe Nanostructures
The Lande g-factors for CdSe quantum dots and rods are investigated within
the framework of the semiempirical tight-binding method. We describe methods
for treating both the n-doped and neutral nanostructures, and then apply these
to a selection of nanocrystals of variable size and shape, focusing on
approximately spherical dots and rods of differing aspect ratio. For the
negatively charged n-doped systems, we observe that the g-factors for
near-spherical CdSe dots are approximately independent of size, but show strong
shape dependence as one axis of the quantum dot is extended to form rod-like
structures. In particular, there is a discontinuity in the magnitude of
g-factor and a transition from anisotropic to isotropic g-factor tensor at
aspect ratio ~1.3. For the neutral systems, we analyze the electron g-factor of
both the conduction and valence band electrons. We find that the behavior of
the electron g-factor in the neutral nanocrystals is generally similar to that
in the n-doped case, showing the same strong shape dependence and discontinuity
in magnitude and anisotropy. In smaller systems the g-factor value is dependent
on the details of the surface model. Comparison with recent measurements of
g-factors for CdSe nanocrystals suggests that the shape dependent transition
may be responsible for the observations of anomalous numbers of g-factors at
certain nanocrystal sizes.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures. Fixed typos to match published versio
Relation between flux formation and pairing in doped antiferromagnets
We demonstrate that patterns formed by the current-current correlation
function are landmarks which indicate that spin bipolarons form in doped
antiferromagnets. Holes which constitute a spin bipolaron reside at opposite
ends of a line (string) formed by the defects in the antiferromagnetic spin
background. The string is relatively highly mobile, because the motion of a
hole at its end does not raise extensively the number of defects, provided that
the hole at the other end of the line follows along the same track. Appropriate
coherent combinations of string states realize some irreducible representations
of the point group C_4v. Creep of strings favors d- and p-wave states. Some
more subtle processes decide the symmetry of pairing. The pattern of the
current correlation function, that defines the structure of flux, emerges from
motion of holes at string ends and coherence factors with which string states
appear in the wave function of the bound state. Condensation of bipolarons and
phase coherence between them puts to infinity the correlation length of the
current correlation function and establishes the flux in the system.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
An Exact Diagonalization Demonstration of Incommensurability and Rigid Band Filling for N Holes in the t-J Model
We have calculated S(q) and the single particle distribution function
for N holes in the t - J model on a non--square sqrt{8} X sqrt{32} 16--site
lattice with periodic boundary conditions; we justify the use of this lattice
in compariosn to those of having the full square symmetry of the bulk. This new
cluster has a high density of vec k points along the diagonal of reciprocal
space, viz. along k = (k,k). The results clearly demonstrate that when the
single hole problem has a ground state with a system momentum of vec k =
(pi/2,pi/2), the resulting ground state for N holes involves a shift of the
peak of the system's structure factor away from the antiferromagnetic state.
This shift effectively increases continuously with N. When the single hole
problem has a ground state with a momentum that is not equal to k =
(pi/2,pi/2), then the above--mentioned incommensurability for N holes is not
found. The results for the incommensurate ground states can be understood in
terms of rigid--band filling: the effective occupation of the single hole k =
(pi/2,pi/2) states is demonstrated by the evaluation of the single particle
momentum distribution function . Unlike many previous studies, we show
that for the many hole ground state the occupied momentum states are indeed k =
(+/- pi/2,+/- pi/2) states.Comment: Revtex 3.0; 23 pages, 1 table, and 13 figures, all include
Manifestation of photonic band structure in small clusters of spherical particles
We study the formation of the photonic band structure in small clusters of
dielectric spheres. The first signs of the band structure, an attribute of an
infinite crystal, can appear for clusters of 5 particles. Density of resonant
states of a cluster of 32 spheres may exhibit a well defined structure similar
to the density of electromagnetic states of the infinite photonic crystal. The
resonant mode structure of finite-size aggregates is shown to be insensitive to
random displacements of particles off the perfect lattice positions as large as
half-radius of the particle. The results were obtained by an efficient
numerical method, which relates the density of resonant states to the the
scattering coefficients of the electromagnetic scattering problem. Generalized
multisphere Mie (GMM) solution was used to obtain scattering matrix elements.
These results are important to miniature photonic crystal design as well as
understanding of light localization in dense random media.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Continuity of the Maximum-Entropy Inference
We study the inverse problem of inferring the state of a finite-level quantum
system from expected values of a fixed set of observables, by maximizing a
continuous ranking function. We have proved earlier that the maximum-entropy
inference can be a discontinuous map from the convex set of expected values to
the convex set of states because the image contains states of reduced support,
while this map restricts to a smooth parametrization of a Gibbsian family of
fully supported states. Here we prove for arbitrary ranking functions that the
inference is continuous up to boundary points. This follows from a continuity
condition in terms of the openness of the restricted linear map from states to
their expected values. The openness condition shows also that ranking functions
with a discontinuous inference are typical. Moreover it shows that the
inference is continuous in the restriction to any polytope which implies that a
discontinuity belongs to the quantum domain of non-commutative observables and
that a geodesic closure of a Gibbsian family equals the set of maximum-entropy
states. We discuss eight descriptions of the set of maximum-entropy states with
proofs of accuracy and an analysis of deviations.Comment: 34 pages, 1 figur
A Precise Measurement of the Weak Mixing Angle in Neutrino-Nucleon Scattering
We report a precise measurement of the weak mixing angle from the ratio of
neutral current to charged current inclusive cross-sections in deep-inelastic
neutrino-nucleon scattering. The data were gathered at the CCFR neutrino
detector in the Fermilab quadrupole-triplet neutrino beam, with neutrino
energies up to 600 GeV. Using the on-shell definition, , we obtain .Comment: 10 pages, Nevis Preprint #1498 (Submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett.
Determination of the Strange Quark Content of the Nucleon from a Next-to-Leading-Order QCD Analysis of Neutrino Charm Production
We present the first next-to-leading-order QCD analysis of neutrino charm
production, using a sample of 6090 - and -induced
opposite-sign dimuon events observed in the CCFR detector at the Fermilab
Tevatron. We find that the nucleon strange quark content is suppressed with
respect to the non-strange sea quarks by a factor \kappa = 0.477 \:
^{+\:0.063}_{-\:0.053}, where the error includes statistical, systematic and
QCD scale uncertainties. In contrast to previous leading order analyses, we
find that the strange sea -dependence is similar to that of the non-strange
sea, and that the measured charm quark mass, , is larger and consistent with that determined in other processes.
Further analysis finds that the difference in -distributions between
and is small. A measurement of the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa
matrix element is also presented.
uufile containing compressed postscript files of five Figures is appended at
the end of the LaTeX source.Comment: Nevis R#150
The anomalous Higgs-top couplings in the MSSM
The anomalous couplings of the top quark and the Higgs boson has been studied
in an effective theory resulting in the framework of the minimal supersymmetric
extension of the standard model (MSSM) when the heavy fields are integrated
out. Constraints on the parameters of the model from the experimental data on
the ratio are derived.Comment: Latex, 26 pages + 13 ps figures, final version in PR
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