832 research outputs found
IMPACT OF OFFICE AUTOMATION ON SOCIETY: Implications for Education, Policy and Research
Information Systems Working Papers Serie
Extraction of the Electron Self-Energy from Angle Resolved Photoemission Data: Application to Bi2212
The self-energy , the fundamental function which
describes the effects of many-body interactions on an electron in a solid, is
usually difficult to obtain directly from experimental data. In this paper, we
show that by making certain reasonable assumptions, the self-energy can be
directly determined from angle resolved photoemission data. We demonstrate this
method on data for the high temperature superconductor
(Bi2212) in the normal, superconducting, and pseudogap phases.Comment: expanded version (6 pages), to be published, Phys Rev B (1 Sept 99
Direct observation of particle-hole mixing in the superconducting state by angle-resolved photoemission
Particle-hole (p-h) mixing is a fundamental consequence of the existence of a
pair condensate. We present direct experimental evidence for p-h mixing in the
angle-resolved photoemission (ARPES) spectra in the superconducting state of
Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_{8+\delta}. In addition to its pedagogical importance, this
establishes unambiguously that the gap observed in ARPES is associated with
superconductivity.Comment: 3 pages, revtex, 4 postscript figure
On the determination of the Fermi surface in high-Tc superconductors by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy
We study the normal state electronic excitations probed by angle resolved
photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) in Bi2201 and Bi2212. Our main goal is to
establish explicit criteria for determining the Fermi surface from ARPES data
on strongly interacting systems where sharply defined quasiparticles do not
exist and the dispersion is very weak in parts of the Brillouin zone.
Additional complications arise from strong matrix element variations within the
zone. We present detailed results as a function of incident photon energy, and
show simple experimental tests to distinguish between an intensity drop due to
matrix element effects and spectral weight loss due to a Fermi crossing. We
reiterate the use of polarization selection rules in disentangling the effect
of umklapps due to the BiO superlattice in Bi2212. We conclude that, despite
all the complications, the Fermi surface can be determined unambiguously: it is
a single large hole barrel centered about (pi,pi) in both materials.Comment: Expanded discussion of symmetrization method in Section 5, figures
remain the sam
Quasiparticles in the superconducting state of Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8
Recent improvements in momentum resolution by a factor of 32 lead to
qualitatively new ARPES results on the spectra of Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8 (Bi2212) along
the (pi,pi) direction, where there is a node in the superconducting gap. With
improved resolution, we now see the intrinsic lineshape, which indicates the
presence of true quasiparticles at the Fermi momentum in the superconducting
state, and lack thereof in the normal state. The region of momentum space
probed here is relevant for charge transport, motivating a comparison of our
results to conductivity measurements by infrared reflectivity.Comment: revised paper with new figure
Effects of Supplementing High Levels of Cu, Co, Mn, and Zn After Calving on Productivity of Two-Year-Old Cows
When cow management, health and nutrition are adequate. supplementation of trace minerals at high levels is not beneficial and may in fact be detrimental to reproductive performance
The Fermi surface of Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8
We study the Fermi surface of Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8 (Bi2212) using angle resolved
photoemission (ARPES) with a momentum resolution of ~ 0.01 of the Brillouin
zone. We show that, contrary to recent suggestions, the Fermi surface is a
large hole barrel centered at (pi,pi), independent of the incident photon
energy.Comment: 4 pages (revtex), 4 figures (eps, 2 color
Evolution of the pairing pseudogap in the spectral function with interplane anisotropy
We study the pairing pseudogap in the spectral function as a function of
interplane coupling. The analytical expressions for the self-energy in the
critical regime are obtained for any degree of anisotropy. The frequency
dependence of the self-energy is found to be qualitatively different in two and
three dimensions, and the crossover from two to three dimensional behavior is
discussed. In particular, by considering the anisotropy of the Fermi velocity
and gap along the Fermi surface, we can qualitatively explain recent
photoemission experiments on high temperature superconductors concerning the
temperature dependent Fermi arcs seen in the pseudogap phase.Comment: 20 pages, revtex, 5 encapsulated postscript figures include
Structure of the Maize Streak Virus Geminate Particle
AbstractThe Geminiviridae is an extensive family of plant viruses responsible for economically devastating diseases in crops worldwide. Geminiviruses package circular, single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) genomes. The characteristic twinned or “geminate” particles, which consist of two joined, incomplete T = 1 icosahedra, are unique among viruses. We have determined the first structure of a geminivirus particle, the Nigerian strain of Maize streak virus (MSV-N), using cryo-electron microscopy and three-dimensional image reconstruction methods. The particle, of dimensions 220 × 380 Å, has an overall 52-point-group symmetry, in which each half particle “head” consists of the coat protein (CP) arranged with quasi-icosahedral symmetry. We have modeled the MSV-N CP as an eight-stranded, antiparallel β-barrel motif (a structural motif common to all known ssDNA viruses) with an N-terminal α-helix. This has produced a model of the geminate particle in which 110 copies of the CP nicely fit into the reconstructed density map. The reconstructed density map and MSV-N pseudo-atomic model demonstrate that the geminate particle has a stable, defined structure
Electronic excitations in BiSrCaCuO : Fermi surface, dispersion, and absence of bilayer splitting
From a detailed study, including polarization dependence, of the normal state
angle-resolved photoemission spectra for BiSrCaCuO, we find
only one CuO band related feature. All other spectral features can be
ascribed either to umklapps from the superlattice or to ``shadow bands''. Even
though the dispersion of the peaks looks like band theory, the lineshape is
anomalously broad and no evidence is found for bilayer splitting. We argue that
the ``dip feature'' in the spectrum below arises not from bilayer
splitting, but rather from many body effects.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, 3 uuencoded postscript figure
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