39,932 research outputs found
Roughness exponents and grain shapes
In surfaces with grainy features, the local roughness shows a crossover
at a characteristic length , with roughness exponent changing from
to a smaller . The grain shape, the choice of
or height-height correlation function (HHCF) , and the procedure to
calculate root mean-square averages are shown to have remarkable effects on
. With grains of pyramidal shape, can be as low as 0.71,
which is much lower than the previous prediction 0.85 for rounded grains. The
same crossover is observed in the HHCF, but with initial exponent
for flat grains, while for some conical grains it may
increase to . The universality class of the growth process
determines the exponents after the crossover, but has no
effect on the initial exponents and , supporting the
geometric interpretation of their values. For all grain shapes and different
definitions of surface roughness or HHCF, we still observe that the crossover
length is an accurate estimate of the grain size. The exponents obtained
in several recent experimental works on different materials are explained by
those models, with some surface images qualitatively similar to our model
films.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures and 2 table
Finite-size effects in roughness distribution scaling
We study numerically finite-size corrections in scaling relations for
roughness distributions of various interface growth models. The most common
relation, which considers the average roughness . This illustrates how
finite-size corrections can be obtained from roughness distributions scaling.
However, we discard the usual interpretation that the intrinsic width is a
consequence of high surface steps by analyzing data of restricted
solid-on-solid models with various maximal height differences between
neighboring columns. We also observe that large finite-size corrections in the
roughness distributions are usually accompanied by huge corrections in height
distributions and average local slopes, as well as in estimates of scaling
exponents. The molecular-beam epitaxy model of Das Sarma and Tamborenea in 1+1
dimensions is a case example in which none of the proposed scaling relations
works properly, while the other measured quantities do not converge to the
expected asymptotic values. Thus, although roughness distributions are clearly
better than other quantities to determine the universality class of a growing
system, it is not the final solution for this task.Comment: 25 pages, including 9 figures and 1 tabl
Stellar archeology of the nearby LINER galaxies NGC 4579 and NGC 4736
Stellar archeology of nearby LINER galaxies may reveal if there is a stellar
young population that may be responsible for the LINER phenomenon. We show
results for the classical LINER galaxies NGC 4579 and NGC 4736 and find no
evidence of such populations.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures, to be published in the Proceedings of the IAU
Symposium no. 26
- …