15,666 research outputs found

    Piezoconductivity of gated suspended graphene

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    We investigate the conductivity of graphene sheet deformed over a gate. The effect of the deformation on the conductivity is twofold: The lattice distortion can be represented as pseudovector potential in the Dirac equation formalism, whereas the gate causes inhomogeneous density redistribution. We use the elasticity theory to find the profile of the graphene sheet and then evaluate the conductivity by means of the transfer matrix approach. We find that the two effects provide functionally different contributions to the conductivity. For small deformations and not too high residual stress the correction due to the charge redistribution dominates and leads to the enhancement of the conductivity. For stronger deformations, the effect of the lattice distortion becomes more important and eventually leads to the suppression of the conductivity. We consider homogeneous as well as local deformation. We also suggest that the effect of the charge redistribution can be best measured in a setup containing two gates, one fixing the overall charge density and another one deforming graphene locally

    Large Magnetic Moments of Arsenic-Doped Mn Clusters and their Relevance to Mn-Doped III-V Semiconductor Ferromagnetism

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    We report electronic and magnetic structure of arsenic-doped manganese clusters from density-functional theory using generalized gradient approximation for the exchange-correlation energy. We find that arsenic stabilizes manganese clusters, though the ferromagnetic coupling between Mn atoms are found only in Mn2_2As and Mn4_4As clusters with magnetic moments 9 μB\mu_B and 17 μB\mu_B, respectively. For all other sizes, x=x= 3, 5-10, Mnx_xAs clusters show ferrimagnetic coupling. It is suggested that, if grown during the low temperature MBE, the giant magnetic moments due to ferromagnetic coupling in Mn2_2As and Mn4_4As clusters could play a role on the ferromagnetism and on the variation observed in the Curie temperature of Mn-doped III-V semiconductors.Comment: 4 Pages, 3 Figures[1 EPS and 2 JPG files], RevTeX

    On a Petrov-type D homogeneous solution

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    We present a new two-parameter family of solutions of Einstein gravity with negative cosmological constant in 2+1 dimensions. These solutions are obtained by squashing the anti-de Sitter geometry along one direction and posses four Killing vectors. Global properties as well as the four dimensional generalization are discussed, followed by the investigation of the geodesic motion. A simple global embedding of these spaces as the intersection of four quadratic surfaces in a seven dimensional space is obtained. We argue also that these geometries describe the boundary of a four dimensional nutty-bubble solution and are relevant in the context of AdS/CFT correspondence.Comment: 20 pages, TeX fil

    Investigations on T violation and CPT symmetry in the neutral kaon system -- a pedagogical approach --

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    During the recent years experiments with neutral kaons have yielded remarkably sensitive results which are pertinent to such fundamental phenomena as CPT invariance (protecting causality), time-reversal invariance violation, coherence of wave functions, and entanglement of kaons in pair states. We describe the phenomenological developments and the theoretical conclusions drawn from the experimental material. An outlook to future experimentation is indicated.Comment: 41 pages, 9 figures. See arXiv:hep-ph/0603075 for an enlarged versio

    Force-extension relation of cross-linked anisotropic polymer networks

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    Cross-linked polymer networks with orientational order constitute a wide class of soft materials and are relevant to biological systems (e.g., F-actin bundles). We analytically study the nonlinear force-extension relation of an array of parallel-aligned, strongly stretched semiflexible polymers with random cross-links. In the strong stretching limit, the effect of the cross-links is purely entropic, independent of the bending rigidity of the chains. Cross-links enhance the differential stretching stiffness of the bundle. For hard cross-links, the cross-link contribution to the force-extension relation scales inversely proportional to the force. Its dependence on the cross-link density, close to the gelation transition, is the same as that of the shear modulus. The qualitative behavior is captured by a toy model of two chains with a single cross-link in the middle.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure

    On Gravitational Radiation in Quadratic f(R)f(R) Gravity

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    We investigate the gravitational radiation emitted by an isolated system for gravity theories with Lagrange density f(R)=R+aR2f(R) = R + aR^2. As a formal result we obtain leading order corrections to the quadrupole formula in General Relativity. We make use of the analogy of f(R)f(R) theories with scalar--tensor theories, which in contrast to General Relativity feature an additional scalar degree of freedom. Unlike General Relativity, where the leading order gravitational radiation is produced by quadrupole moments, the additional degree of freedom predicts gravitational radiation of all multipoles, in particular monopoles and dipoles, as this is the case for the most alternative gravity theories known today. An application to a hypothetical binary pulsar moving in a circular orbit yields the rough limit a≲1.7⋅1017 m2a \lesssim 1.7\cdot10^{17}\,\mathrm{m}^2 by constraining the dipole power to account at most for 1% of the quadrupole power as predicted by General Relativity.Comment: 14 Pages, 1 Figur

    Soliton Stability in Systems of Two Real Scalar Fields

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    In this paper we consider a class of systems of two coupled real scalar fields in bidimensional spacetime, with the main motivation of studying classical or linear stability of soliton solutions. Firstly, we present the class of systems and comment on the topological profile of soliton solutions one can find from the first-order equations that solve the equations of motion. After doing that, we follow the standard approach to classical stability to introduce the main steps one needs to obtain the spectra of Schr\"odinger operators that appear in this class of systems. We consider a specific system, from which we illustrate the general calculations and present some analytical results. We also consider another system, more general, and we present another investigation, that introduces new results and offers a comparison with the former investigations.Comment: 16 pages, Revtex, 3 f igure

    Nonlinear modes in the harmonic PT-symmetric potential

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    We study the families of nonlinear modes described by the nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation with the PT-symmetric harmonic potential x2−2iαxx^2-2i\alpha x. The found nonlinear modes display a number of interesting features. In particular, we have observed that the modes, bifurcating from the different eigenstates of the underlying linear problem, can actually belong to the same family of nonlinear modes. We also show that by proper adjustment of the coefficient α\alpha it is possible to enhance stability of small-amplitude and strongly nonlinear modes comparing to the well-studied case of the real harmonic potential.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures; accepted to Phys. Rev.

    Shock propagation and stability in causal dissipative hydrodynamics

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    We studied the shock propagation and its stability with the causal dissipative hydrodynamics in 1+1 dimensional systems. We show that the presence of the usual viscosity is not enough to stabilize the solution. This problem is solved by introducing an additional viscosity which is related to the coarse-graining scale of the theory.Comment: 14 pages, 16 figure

    Structure-dependent ferroelectricity of niobium clusters (NbN, N=2-52)

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    The ground-state structures and ferroelectric properties of NbN (N=2-52) have been investigated by a combination of density-functional theory (DFT) in the generalized gradient approximation (GGA) and an unbiased global search with the guided simulated annealing. It is found that the electric dipole moment (EDM) exists in the most of NbN and varies considerably with their sizes. And the larger NbN (N>=25) prefer the amorphous packing. Most importantly, our numerical EDM values of NbN (N>=38) exhibit an extraordinary even-odd oscillation, which is well consistent with the experimental observation, showing a close relationship with the geometrical structures of NbN. Finally, an inverse coordination number (ICN) function is proposed to account for the structural relation of the EDM values, especially their even-odd oscillations starting from Nb38.Comment: 11 pages and 4 figure
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