18,395 research outputs found
Forbidden island heights in stress-driven coherent Stranski-Krastanov growth
The observed height distribution of clusters obtained in strained epitaxy has
been often interpreted in terms of electronic effects. We show that some
aspects can be explained classically by the interplay of strain and edge
energies. We find that soft materials can transform directly from monolayer
into thicker islands by two-dimensional (2D) multilayer nucleation and growth.
There is a critical thickness decreasing with the force constant. Thinner
islands are thermodynamically forbidden, due to the insufficient stress
relaxation upon clustering particularly under tensile stress. At sufficiently
large misfits the barrier for 2D multilayer nucleation is significantly smaller
than the barrier for subsequent single-layer nucleation. The effects are found
to be quantitatively reasonable and offer a plausible explanation for the
absence of thin islands and 2D growth of flattop islands usually attributed to
quantum size effects.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Accepted version. Includes quantitative
estimations comparing with experiments plus minor change
On Rank Driven Dynamical Systems
We investigate a class of models related to the Bak-Sneppen model, initially
proposed to study evolution. The BS model is extremely simple and yet captures
some forms of "complex behavior" such as self-organized criticality that is
often observed in physical and biological systems.
In this model, random fitnesses in are associated to agents located
at the vertices of a graph . Their fitnesses are ranked from worst (0) to
best (1). At every time-step the agent with the worst fitness and some others
\emph{with a priori given rank probabilities} are replaced by new agents with
random fitnesses. We consider two cases: The \emph{exogenous case} where the
new fitnesses are taken from an a priori fixed distribution, and the
\emph{endogenous case} where the new fitnesses are taken from the current
distribution as it evolves.
We approximate the dynamics by making a simplifying independence assumption.
We use Order Statistics and Dynamical Systems to define a \emph{rank-driven
dynamical system} that approximates the evolution of the \emph{distribution} of
the fitnesses in these rank-driven models, as well as in the Bak-Sneppen model.
For this simplified model we can find the limiting marginal distribution as a
function of the initial conditions. Agreement with experimental results of the
BS model is excellent.Comment: 12 gigures, 20 page
Validation of stellar population and kinematical analysis of galaxies
3D spectroscopy produces hundreds of spectra from which maps of the
characteristics of stellar populations (age-metallicity) and internal
kinematics of galaxies can be derived. We carried on simulations to assess the
reliability of inversion methods and to define the requirements for future
observations. We quantify the biases and show that to minimize the errors on
the kinematics, age and metallicity (in a given observing time) the size of the
spatial elements and the spectral dispersion should be chosen to obtain an
instrumental velocity dispersion comparable to the physical dispersion.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, extended version of a poster proceeding to appear
in "Science Perspectives for 3D Spectroscopy", eds. M. Kissler-Patig, M. M.
Roth and J. R. Walsh, ESO Astrophysics Symposia. (The two last pages with
figures are not in the conference proceedings.
Image Slicer Performances from a Demonstrator for the SNAP/JDEM Mission - Part I: Wavelength Accuracy
A well-adapted visible and infrared spectrograph has been developed for the
SNAP (SuperNova/Acceleration Probe) experiment proposed for JDEM. The
instrument should have a high sensitivity to see faint supernovae but also a
good redshift determination better than 0.003(1+z) and a precise
spectrophotometry (2%). An instrument based on an integral field method with
the powerful concept of imager slicing has been designed. A large prototyping
effort has been performed in France which validates the concept. In particular
a demonstrator reproducing the full optical configuration has been built and
tested to prove the optical performances both in the visible and in the near
infrared range. This paper is the first of two papers. The present paper focus
on the wavelength measurement while the second one will present the
spectrophotometric performances. We adress here the spectral accuracy expected
both in the visible and in the near infrared range in such configuration and we
demonstrate, in particular, that the image slicer enhances the instrumental
performances in the spectral measurement precision by removing the slit effect.
This work is supported in France by CNRS/INSU/IN2P3 and by the French spatial
agency (CNES) and in US by the University of California.Comment: Submitted to PAS
Non-labeled, Real-time Detection of H1N1 DNA Hybridization Using Combined QCM-D System
Detection of H1N1 or other seasonal and highly contagious viruses are of vital importance, since early diagnosis from a patient\u27s fluid, such as saliva, would accelerate treatment and containment of the flu. Current lab tests often require cumbersome labeling steps and several hours to detect the presence of viral DNAs. The QCM-D (quartz crystal microbalances with dissipation) technology was used to detect presence as well as distinguish H1N1 and H1N5 DNAs in real-time (a few minutes) with the use of relatively small sample volume (200-500 ul). Single stranded complementary H1N1 DNA was immobilized via Neutravidin-biotin linkage on a gold substrate where biotin was anchored through self assembled monolayers (SAM). Samples containing ss-H1N1 or H5N1 DNA were introduced to the sensor chamber at various sensing conditions. Effect of temperature, ionic strength in buffer, and flow rate were studied and discussed in this paper. The setup allowed recognition and monitoring of kinetics of up to 100 nano-molar (nM) concentrations H1N1/H5N1 DNA in real-time without cumbersome labeling steps. This result demonstrates possibility of real-time diagnosis of H1N1 or other contagious viruses in a doctor\u27s office
The Luminous and Carbon-Rich Supernova 2006gz: A Double Degenerate Merger?
Spectra and light curves of SN 2006gz show the strongest signature of
unburned carbon and one of the slowest fading light curves ever seen in a type
Ia event (Delta m_15 = 0.69 +/- 0.04). The early-time Si II velocity is low,
implying it was slowed by an envelope of unburned material. Our best estimate
of the luminosity implies M_V = -19.74 and the production of ~ 1.2 M_sun of
56Ni. This suggests a super-Chandrasekhar mass progenitor. A double degenerate
merger is consistent with these observations.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL (5 pages, 4 figures). UBVr'i' light
curves, UVOIR light curves, and spectra available at
http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/supernova/SN2006g
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