3,237 research outputs found
Dynamics of fast pattern formation in porous silicon by laser interference
Patterns are fabricated on 290 nm thick nanostructured porous silicon layers by phase-mask laser interference using single pulses of an excimer laser (193 nm, 20 ns pulse duration). The dynamics of pattern formation is studied by measuring in real time the intensity of the diffraction orders 0 and 1 at 633 nm. The results show that a transient pattern is formed upon melting at intensity maxima sites within a time 1-”s) upon melting induced by homogeneous beam exposure and related to the different scenario for releasing the heat from hot regions. The diffraction efficiency of the pattern is finally controlled by a combination of laser fluence and initial thickness of the nanostructured porous silicon layer and the present results open perspectives on heat release management upon laser exposure as well as have potential for alternative routes for switching applications.Postprint (published version
Do fiscal imbalances deteriorate sovereign debt ratings ?
We use sovereign debt rating estimations from Afonso, Gomes and Rother (2009, 2011) for Fitch, Moodyâs, and Standard & Poorâs, to assess to what extent the recent fiscal imbalances are being reflected on the sovereign debt notations. With macro and fiscal data up to 2010, and macro and fiscal projections, we obtain the expected rating for several OECD countries. The answer to the title question is yes, but in a diverse way for each country. Our average model predictions point to a heterogeneous behaviour of rating agencies across countries
Discovery of high proper motion ancient white dwarfs: nearby massive compact halo objects?
We present the discovery and spectroscopic identification of two very high
proper motion ancient white dwarf stars, found in a systematic proper motion
survey. Their kinematics and apparent magnitude clearly indicate that they are
halo members, while their optical spectra are almost identical to the recently
identified cool Halo white dwarf WD0346+246. Canonical stellar halo models
predict a white dwarf volume density of two orders of magnitude less than the
approx 7*10^{-4} Solar masses per pc^{-3} inferred from this survey. With the
caveat that the sample size is very small, it appears that a significant
fraction, about 10%, of the local dark matter halo is in the form of very old,
cool, white dwarfs.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in ApJL; references
adde
Microlens Parallaxes with SIRTF
The Space Infrared Telescope Facility (SIRTF) will drift away from the Earth
at about 0.1 AU/yr. Microlensing events will therefore have different
characteristics as seen from the satellite and the Earth. From the difference,
it is possible in principle to measure v-tilde, the transverse velocity of the
lens projected onto the observer plane. Since v-tilde has very different values
for different populations (disk, halo, Large Magellanic Cloud), such
measurements could help identify the location, and hence the nature, of the
lenses. I show that the method previously developed by Gould for measuring such
satellite parallaxes fails completely in the case of SIRTF: it is overwhelmed
by degeneracies which arise from fact that the Earth and satellite observations
are in different band passes. I develop a new method which allows for
observations in different band passes and yet removes all degeneracies. The
method combines a purely ground-based measurement of the "parallax asymmetry"
with a measurement of the delay between the time the event peaks at the Earth
and satellite. In effect, the parallax asymmetry determines the component of
v-tilde in the Earth-Sun direction, while the delay time measures the component
of v-tilde in the direction of the Earth's orbit.Comment: 21 pages plus 3 figure
First evidence for spectral state transitions in the ESO243-49 hyper luminous X-ray source HLX-1
The brightest Ultra-Luminous X-ray source (ULX), ESO 243-49 HLX-1, with a 0.2
- 10 keV X-ray luminosity of up to 10^42 erg s^-1, provides the strongest
evidence to date for the existence of intermediate mass black holes. Although
small scale X-ray spectral variability has already been demonstrated, we have
initiated a monitoring campaign with the X-ray Telescope onboard the Swift
satellite to search for luminosity-related spectral changes and to compare its
behavior with the better studied stellar mass black holes. In this paper, we
report a drop in the XRT count rate by a factor of ~8 which occurred
simultaneously with a hardening of the X-ray spectrum. A second observation
found that the source had re-brightened by a factor of ~21 which occurred
simultaneously with a softening of the X-ray spectrum. This may be the first
evidence for a transition between the low/hard and high/soft states.Comment: Accepted by ApJ Letter, 2 figure
Lightcurve Classification in Massive Variability Surveys II: Transients towards the Large Magellanic Cloud
Automatic classification of variability is now possible with tools like
neural networks. Here, we present two neural networks for the identification of
microlensing events -- the first discriminates against variable stars and the
second against supernovae. The inputs to the networks include parameters
describing the shape and the size of the lightcurve, together with colour of
the event. The network computes the posterior probability of microlensing,
together with an estimate of the likely error. An algorithm is devised for
direct calculation of the microlensing rate from the output of the neural
networks. We present a new analysis of the microlensing candidates towards the
Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). The neural networks confirm the microlensing
nature of only 7 of the possible 17 events identified by the MACHO experiment.
This suggests that earlier estimates of the microlensing optical depth towards
the LMC may have been overestimated. A smaller number of events is consistent
with the assumption that all the microlensing events are caused by the known
stellar populations in the outer Galaxy/LMC.Comment: 11 pages, MNRAS, in pres
Optimal Microlensing Observations
One of the major limitations of microlensing observations toward the Large
Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is the low rate of event detection. What can be done to
improve this rate? Is it better to invest telescope time in more frequent
observations of the inner high surface-brightness fields, or in covering new,
less populated outer fields? How would a factor 2 improvement in CCD
sensitivity affect the detection efficiency? Would a series of major (factor
2--4) upgrades in telescope aperture, seeing, sky brightness, camera size, and
detector efficiency increase the event rate by a huge factor, or only
marginally? I develop a simplified framework to address these questions. With
observational resources fixed at the level of the MACHO and EROS experiments,
the biggest improvement (factor ~2) would come by reducing the time spent on
the inner ~25 deg^2 and applying it to the outer ~100 deg^2. By combining this
change with the characteristics of a good medium-size telescope (2.5 m mirror,
1" point spread function, thinned CCD chips, 1 deg^2 camera, and dark sky), it
should be possible to increase the detection of LMC events to more than 100 per
year (assuming current estimates of the optical depth apply to the entire LMC).Comment: Submitted to ApJ, 13 pages plus 3 figure
Can the transformation time in phase change optical recording be improved by using femtosecond laser pulses?
CLEO/EUROPE ; EQEC European Quantum Electronics Conference, Munich ICm, Germany, 22-27 June, 2003N
Slow interfacial reamorphization of Ge films melted by ps laser pulses
Melting and rapid solidification is induced in 50-nm-thick amorphous Ge films on glass substrates by single laser pulses at 583 nm with a duration of 10 ps. The solidification process is followed by means of reflectivity measurements with ns time resolution both at the air/film (front) and the substrate/film (back) interfaces. Due to interference effects between the light reflected at the film-substrate and film-liquid interfaces, the back side reflectivity measurements turn out to be very sensitive to the melt depth induced by the laser pulse and their comparison to optical simulations enables the determination of the solidification dynamics. For low fluences, only a thin layer of the film is melted and solidification occurs interfacially leading to reamorphization of the molten material. The results provide a critical interface velocity for amorphization of âŒ4 m/s, much slower than the one that has widely been reported for elementary semiconductors. For high fluences, the molten layer depth approaches the film thickness and the results are consistent with a bulk solidification process. In this case, recalescence effects upon solid phase nucleation become important and lead to the formation of crystallites distributed throughout the whole resolidified volume. © 1998 American Institute of Physics.Jan Siegel acknowledges the funding of the European Community through a grant (ERB40001GT954352) within the Training and Mobility of Researchers Program. This work has been partially supported by CICYT (Spain) under project TIC93-0125.Peer Reviewe
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