229,638 research outputs found
A Possible Origin of Dark Energy
We discuss the possibility that the existence of dark energy may be due to
the presence of a spin zero field , either elementary or composite. In
the presence of other matter field, the transformation
constant can generate a negative pressure, like the cosmological constant. In
this picture, our universe can be thought as a very large bag, similar to the
much smaller MIT bag model for a single nucleon.Comment: 4 pages, no figure, typos correcte
Experimental investigation of the asymmetric spectroscopic characteristics of electron- and hole-doped cuprates
Quasiparticle tunneling spectroscopic studies of electron- (n-type) and hole-doped (p-type) cuprates reveal that the pairing symmetry, pseudogap phenomenon and spatial homogeneity of the superconducting order parameter are all non-universal. We compare our studies of p-type YBa2Cu3O7-delta and n-type infinite-layer Sr(0.9)Ln(0.1)CuO(2) (Ln = La, Gd) systems with results from p-type Bi2Sr2CaCu2Ox and n-type one-layer Nd1.85Ce0.15CuO4 cuprates, and attribute various non-universal behavior to different competing orders in p-type and n-type cuprates
Unstable topography of biphasic surfactant monolayers
We study the conformation of a heterogeneous surfactant monolayer at a
fluid-fluid interface, near a boundary between two lateral regions of differing
elastic properties. The monolayer attains a conformation of shallow, steep
`mesas' with a height difference of up to 10 nm. If the monolayer is
progressively compressed (e.g. in a Langmuir trough), the profile develops
overhangs and finally becomes unstable at a surface tension of about K(delta
c_0)^2, where (delta c_0) is the difference in spontaneous curvature and K a
bending stiffness. We discuss the relevance of this instability to recently
observed folding behavior in lung surfactant monolayers, and to the absence of
domain structures in films separating oil and water in emulsions.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, LaTex using epl.cls, accepted for Europhys Let
Thermal rounding of the depinning transition in ultrathin Pt/Co/Pt films
We perform a scaling analysis of the mean velocity of extended magnetic
domain walls driven in ultrathin Pt/Co/Pt ferromagnetic films with
perpendicular anisotropy, as a function of the applied external field for
different film-thicknesses. We find that the scaling of the experimental data
around the thermally rounded depinning transition is consistent with the
universal depinning exponents theoretically expected for elastic interfaces
described by the one-dimensional quenched Edwards-Wilkinson equation. In
particular, values for the depinning exponent and thermal rounding
exponent are tested and the present analysis of the experimental data is
compatible with and , in agreement with numerical
simulations.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
The Electronic States of Two Oppositely doped Mott Insulators Bilayers
We study the effect of Coulomb interaction between two oppositely doped
low-dimensional tJ model systems. We exactly show that, in the one-dimensional
case, an arbitrarily weak interaction leads to the formation of charge neutral
electron-hole pairs. We then use two different mean-field theories to address
the two-dimensional case, where inter-layer excitons also form and condense. We
propose that this results in new features which have no analog in single
layers, such as the emergence of an insulating spin liquid phase. Our simple
bilayer model might have relevance to the physics of doped Mott insulator
interfaces and of the new four layer Ba2CaCu4O8 compound.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Comment on "Statistical Mechanics of Non-Abelian Chern-Simons Particles"
The second virial coefficient for non-Abelian Chern-Simons particles is
recalculated. It is shown that the result is periodic in the flux parameter
just as in the Abelian theory.Comment: 3 pages, latex fil
Robustness of Majorana Fermion induced Fractional Josephson Effect
It is shown in previous works that the coupling between two Majorana end
states in superconducting quantum wires leads to fractional Josephson effect.
However, in realistic experimental conditions, multiple bands of the wires are
occupied and the Majorana end states are accompanied by other fermionic end
states. This raises the question concerning the robustness of fractional
Josephson effect in these situations. In this work, we show that the absence of
the avoided energy crossing which gives rise to the fractional Josephson effect
is robust, even when the Majorana fermions are coupled with arbitrary strengths
to other fermions. Moreover, we calculate the temperature dependence of the
fractional Josephson current and show that it is suppressed by thermal
excitations to the other fermion bound states.Comment: 4+ pages, 3 figure
Investigating the Physical Origin of Unconventional Low-Energy Excitations and Pseudogap Phenomena in Cuprate Superconductors
We investigate the physical origin of unconventional low-energy excitations
in cuprate superconductors by considering the effect of coexisting competing
orders (CO) and superconductivity (SC) and of quantum fluctuations and other
bosonic modes on the low-energy charge excitation spectra. By incorporating
both SC and CO in the bare Green's function and quantum phase fluctuations in
the self-energy, we can consistently account for various empirical findings in
both the hole- and electron-type cuprates, including the excess subgap
quasiparticle density of states, ``dichotomy'' in the fluctuation-renormalized
quasiparticle spectral density in momentum space, and the occurrence and
magnitude of a low-energy pseudogap being dependent on the relative gap
strength of CO and SC. Comparing these calculated results with experiments of
ours and others, we suggest that there are two energy scales associated with
the pseudogap phenomena, with the high-energy pseudogap probably of magnetic
origin and the low-energy pseudogap associated with competing orders.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. Invited paper for the 2006 Taiwan International
Conference on Superconductivity. Correspondence author: Nai-Chang Yeh
(e-mail: [email protected]
Decay of nuclear hyperpolarization in silicon microparticles
We investigate the low-field relaxation of nuclear hyperpolarization in
undoped and highly doped silicon microparticles at room temperature following
removal from high field. For nominally undoped particles, two relaxation time
scales are identified for ambient fields above 0.2 mT. The slower, T_1s, is
roughly independent of ambient field; the faster, T_1f, decreases with
increasing ambient field. A model in which nuclear spin relaxation occurs at
the particle surface via a two-electron mechanism is shown to be in good
agreement with the experimental data, particularly the field-independence of
T_1s. For boron-doped particles, a single relaxation time scale is observed.
This suggests that for doped particles, mobile carriers and bulk ionized
acceptor sites, rather than paramagnetic surface states, are the dominant
relaxation mechanisms. Relaxation times for the undoped particles are not
affected by tumbling in a liquid solution.Comment: related papers at http://marcuslab.harvard.ed
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