923 research outputs found

    Impact of van der Waals forces on the classical shuttle instability

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    The effects of including the van der Waals interaction in the modelling of the single electron shuttle have been investigated numerically. It is demonstrated that the relative strength of the vdW-forces and the elastic restoring forces determine the characteristics of the shuttle instability. In the case of weak elastic forces and low voltages the grain is trapped close to one lead, and this trapping can be overcome by Coulomb forces by applying a bias voltage VV larger than a threshold voltage VuV_{\rm u}. This allows for grain motion leading to an increase in current by several orders of magnitude above the transition voltage VuV_{\rm u}. Associated with the process is also hysteresis in the I-V characteristics.Comment: minor revisions, updated references, Article published in Phys. Rev. B 69, 035309 (2004

    Development and property study of the extremely thin 12 \texorpdfstring{μm\mu m} C-type straw tubes with 5-mm diameter for a Straw Tracker System of COMET

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    The COMET experiment focuses on searching for the direct conversion of a muon into an electron with aluminum nuclei without emitting a neutrino (so-called μ→e\mu\rightarrow e conversion). This conversion violates charged lepton flavor conservation law, a fundamental principle in the Standard Model. The COMET experiment requirement is to achieve the muon-to-electron conversation sensitivity on a level of 10−1710^{-17}. The Straw Tracker System (STS) based on straw tubes could provide the necessary spatial resolution of 150 μ\mum and the electron momentum resolution better than 200 keV/c. The COMET experiment will be separated into two phases. Phase-I will operate with the 3.2 kW 8-GeV-proton beam, and Phase-II will operate with beam intensity increased to 56 kW. STS must operate in a vacuum with 1 bar internal pressure applied to straws. The initial design of 10-mm-diameter straws developed for phase-I will not be as efficient with the 20 times increased beam intensity of Phase II, but the new STS design based on 5-mm-diameter 12-μ\mum thick straws could fully satisfy the required efficiency. The mechanical properties of these straws, such as sagging, elongation, dependence of the diameter on over-pressure, etc, are discussed in this article

    Electromechanics of charge shuttling in dissipative nanostructures

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    We investigate the current-voltage (IV) characteristics of a model single-electron transistor where mechanical motion, subject to strong dissipation, of a small metallic grain is possible. The system is studied both by using Monte Carlo simulations and by using an analytical approach. We show that electromechanical coupling results in a highly nonlinear IV-curve. For voltages above the Coulomb blockade threshold, two distinct regimes of charge transfer occur: At low voltages the system behave as a static asymmetric double junction and tunneling is the dominating charge transfer mechanism. At higher voltages an abrupt transition to a new shuttle regime appears, where the grain performs an oscillatory motion back and forth between the leads. In this regime the current is mainly mediated by charges that are carried on the grain as it moves from one lead to the other.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, final version to be published in PR

    The photometric properties of a vast stellar substructure in the outskirts of M33

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    We have surveyed ∼40\sim40sq.degrees surrounding M33 with CFHT MegaCam in the g and i filters, as part of the Pan-Andromeda Archaeological Survey. Our observations are deep enough to resolve the top 4mags of the red giant branch population in this galaxy. We have previously shown that the disk of M33 is surrounded by a large, irregular, low-surface brightness substructure. Here, we quantify the stellar populations and structure of this feature using the PAndAS data. We show that the stellar populations of this feature are consistent with an old population with <[Fe/H]>∼−1.6<[Fe/H]>\sim-1.6dex and an interquartile range in metallicity of ∼0.5\sim0.5dex. We construct a surface brightness map of M33 that traces this feature to μV≃33\mu_V\simeq33mags\,arcsec−2^{-2}. At these low surface brightness levels, the structure extends to projected radii of ∼40\sim40kpc from the center of M33 in both the north-west and south-east quadrants of the galaxy. Overall, the structure has an "S-shaped" appearance that broadly aligns with the orientation of the HI disk warp. We calculate a lower limit to the integrated luminosity of the structure of −12.7±0.5-12.7\pm0.5mags, comparable to a bright dwarf galaxy such as Fornax or AndII and slightly less than $1\$ of the total luminosity of M33. Further, we show that there is tentative evidence for a distortion in the distribution of young stars near the edge of the HI disk that occurs at similar azimuth to the warp in HI. The data also hint at a low-level, extended stellar component at larger radius that may be a M33 halo component. We revisit studies of M33 and its stellar populations in light of these new results, and we discuss possible formation scenarios for the vast stellar structure. Our favored model is that of the tidal disruption of M33 in its orbit around M31.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 17 figures. ApJ preprint forma

    Phonon dispersion and electron-phonon interaction in peanut-shaped fullerene polymers

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    We reveal that the periodic radius modulation peculiar to one-dimensional (1D) peanut-shaped fullerene (C60_{60}) polymers exerts a strong influence on their low-frequency phonon states and their interactions with mobile electrons. The continuum approximation is employed to show the zone-folding of phonon dispersion curves, which leads to fast relaxation of a radial breathing mode in the 1D C60_{60} polymers. We also formulate the electron-phonon interaction along the deformation potential theory, demonstrating that only a few set of electron and phonon modes yields a significant magnitude of the interaction relevant to the low-temperature physics of the system. The latter finding gives an important implication for the possible Peierls instability of the C60_{60} polymers suggested in the earlier experiment.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure

    Low frequency current noise of the single-electron shuttle

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    Coupling between electronic and mechanical degrees of freedom in a single electron shuttle system can cause a mechanical instability leading to shuttle transport of electrons between external leads. We predict that the resulting low frequency current noise can be enhanced due to amplitude fluctuations of the shuttle oscillations. Moreover, at the onset of mechanical instability a pronounced peak in the low frequency noise is expected.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
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