2 research outputs found
Positronium in a liquid phase: formation, bubble state and chemical reactions
This chapter reviews the following items: 1. Energy deposition and track
structure of fast positrons: ionization slowing down, number of ion-electron
pairs, typical sizes, thermalization, electrostatic interaction between e+ and
its blob, effect of local heating; 2. Positronium formation in condensed media:
the Ore model, quasifree Ps state, intratrack mechanism of Ps formation; 3.
Fast intratrack diffusion-controlled reactions: Ps oxidation and ortho-para
conversion by radiolytic products, reaction rate constants, interpretation of
the PAL spectra in water at different temperatures; 4. Ps bubble models.
"Non-point" positronium: wave function, energy contributions, relationship
between the pick-off annihilation rate and the bubble radius
Nonreciprocity of Optical Absorption in the Magnetoelectric Antiferromagnet CuB<sub>2</sub>O<sub>4</sub>
The change in the absorption spectra due to reversal of the direction of light propagation (nonreciprocity of absorption) is a consequence of a simultaneous violation of both time-reversal and spatial-inversion symmetries. Here, we report on a high-resolution spectroscopic study of absorption nonreciprocity in the noncentrosymmetric multiferroic CuB2O4 below the antiferromagnetic transition temperature TN = 21 K in the commensurate phase in magnetic fields up to 0.5 T. The study was performed in a broad spectral region covering several exciton transitions, which all are followed by an anomalously rich structure due to the multiple exciton-magnon-phonon satellites. Two components were resolved for the spectral line near 1.4 eV corresponding to the exciton transition between the ground and the first excited state. A quantitative theory of the optical absorption and nonreciprocity at this line was developed. The theory takes into account the interference between the electric and magnetic dipole contributions to the absorption and gives an adequate explanation of the relevant effects