2,668 research outputs found
A study of tungsten-technetium alloys Quarterly progress report, 1 Jan. - 1 Apr. 1966
Ductile-brittle transition test method for tungsten-technetium alloy specimen
A study of tungsten-technetium alloys Quarterly progress report, Apr. 1 - Oct. 1, 1966
Electron beam remelted tungsten technetium alloys forged while encapsulated in molybdenum cans - surface appearance and edge cracking propertie
Biorthonormal Matrix-Product-State Analysis for Non-Hermitian Transfer-Matrix Renormalization-Group in the Thermodynamic Limit
We give a thorough Biorthonormal Matrix-Product-State (BMPS) analysis of the
Transfer-Matrix Renormalization-Group (TMRG) for non-Hermitian matrices in the
thermodynamic limit. The BMPS is built on a dual series of reduced
biorthonormal bases for the left and right Perron states of a non-Hermitian
matrix. We propose two alternative infinite-size Biorthonormal TMRG (iBTMRG)
algorithms and compare their numerical performance in both finite and infinite
systems. We show that both iBTMRGs produce a dual infinite-BMPS (iBMPS) which
are translationally invariant in the thermodynamic limit. We also develop an
efficient wave function transformation of the iBTMRG, an analogy of McCulloch
in the infinite-DMRG [arXiv:0804.2509 (2008)], to predict the wave function as
the lattice size is increased. The resulting iBMPS allows for probing bulk
properties of the system in the thermodynamic limit without boundary effects
and allows for reducing the computational cost to be independent of the lattice
size, which are illustrated by calculating the magnetization as a function of
the temperature and the critical spin-spin correlation in the thermodynamic
limit for a 2D classical Ising model.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure
PRECISION: a fast PYTHON pipeline for high-contrast imaging – application to SPHERE observations of the red supergiant VX Sagitariae
The search for extrasolar planets has driven rapid advances in instrumentation, resulting in cameras such as SPHERE at the VLT, GPI at Gemini South and SCExAO at Subaru, capable of achieving very high contrast (∼106) around bright stars with small inner working angles (∼0.1arcsec). The optimal exploitation of data from these instruments depends on the availability of easy-to-use software to process and analyse their data products. We present a pure-PYTHON pipeline, PRECISION, which provides fast, memory-efficient reduction of data from the SPHERE/IRDIS near-infrared imager, and can be readily extended to other instruments. We apply PRECISION to observations of the extreme red supergiant VX Sgr, the inner outflow of which is revealed to host complex, asymmetric structure in the near-IR. In addition, optical polarimetric imaging reveals clear extended polarized emission on ∼0.5 arcsec scales that varies significantly with azimuth, confirming the asymmetry. While not conclusive, this could suggest that the ejecta are confined to a disc or torus, which we are viewing nearly face on, although other non-spherical or clumpy configurations remain possible. VX Sgr has no known companions, making such a geometry difficult to explain, as there is no obvious source of angular momentum in the system
Model Independent Form Factors for Spin Independent Neutralino-Nucleon Scattering from Elastic Electron Scattering Data
Theoretical calculations of neutralino-nucleon interaction rates with various
nuclei are of great interest to direct dark matter searches such as CDMS,
EDELWEISS, ZEPLIN, and other experiments since they are used to establish upper
bounds on the WIMP-proton cross section. These interaction rates and cross
sections are generally computed with standard, one or two parameter
model-dependent nuclear form factors, which may not exactly mirror the actual
form factor for the particular nucleus in question. As is well known, elastic
electron scattering can allow for very precise determinations of nuclear form
factors and hence nuclear charge densities for spherical or near-spherical
nuclei. We use charge densities derived from elastic electron scattering data
to calculate model independent, analytic form factors for various target nuclei
important in dark matter searches, such as Si, Ge, S, Ca and others. We have
found that for nuclear recoils in the range of 1-100 keV significant
differences in cross sections and rates exist when the model independent form
factors are used: at 30 keV nuclear recoil the form factors squared differ by a
factor of 1.06 for Si, 1.11 for Ca, 1.27 for Ge, and 1.92
for Xe. We show the effect of different form factors on the upper limit
on the WIMP-proton cross section obtained with a hypothetical Ge
detector during a 100 kg-day effective exposure. Helm form factors with various
parameter choices differ at most by 10--20% from the best (Fourier Bessel) form
factor, and can approach it to better than 1% if the parameters are chosen to
mimic the actual nuclear density.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure
Theory of two magnon Raman scattering in antiferromagnetic iron pnictides
Although the parent iron-based pnictides and chalcogenides are itinerant
antiferromagnets, the use of local moment picture to understand their magnetic
properties is still widespread. We study magnetic Raman scattering from a local
moment perspective for various quantum spin models proposed for this new class
of superconductors. These models vary greatly in the level of magnetic
frustration and show a vastly different two-magnon Raman response. Light
scattering by two-magnon excitations thus provides a robust and independent
measure of the underlying spin interactions. In accord with other recent
experiments, our results indicate that the amount of magnetic frustration in
these systems may be small.Comment: Original: 4+ pages, 4 figures. Replaced: 4+ pages, 4 figure with
revised title and conten
A balancing act: Evidence for a strong subdominant d-wave pairing channel in
We present an analysis of the Raman spectra of optimally doped based on LDA band structure calculations and the
subsequent estimation of effective Raman vertices. Experimentally a narrow,
emergent mode appears in the () Raman spectra only below
, well into the superconducting state and at an energy below twice the
energy gap on the electron Fermi surface sheets. The Raman spectra can be
reproduced quantitatively with estimates for the magnitude and momentum space
structure of the s pairing gap on different Fermi surface sheets, as
well as the identification of the emergent sharp feature as a
Bardasis-Schrieffer exciton, formed as a Cooper pair bound state in a
subdominant channel. The binding energy of the exciton relative
to the gap edge shows that the coupling strength in this subdominant
channel is as strong as 60% of that in the dominant
channel. This result suggests that may be the dominant pairing
symmetry in Fe-based sperconductors which lack central hole bands.Comment: 10 pages, 6 Figure
{\sc precision}: A fast python pipeline for high-contrast imaging -- application to SPHERE observations of the red supergiant VX Sagitariae
The search for extrasolar planets has driven rapid advances in
instrumentation, resulting in cameras such as SPHERE at the VLT, GPI at Gemini
South and SCExAO at Subaru, capable of achieving very high contrast
() around bright stars with small inner working angles (\sim
0\farcs{1}). The optimal exploitation of data from these instruments depends
on the availability of easy-to-use software to process and analyse their data
products. We present a pure-python pipeline, {\sc precision}, which provides
fast, memory-efficient reduction of data from the SPHERE/IRDIS near-infrared
imager, and can be readily extended to other instruments. We apply {\sc
precision} to observations of the extreme red supergiant VX~Sgr, the inner
outflow of which is revealed to host complex, asymmetric structure in the
near-IR. In addition, optical polarimetric imaging reveals clear extended
polarised emission on scales which varies
significantly with azimuth, confirming the asymmetry. While not conclusive,
this could suggest that the ejecta are confined to a disc or torus, which we
are viewing nearly face on, although other non-spherical or clumpy
configurations remain possible. VX~Sgr has no known companions, making such a
geometry difficult to explain, as there is no obvious source of angular
momentum in the system.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures. Accepted by MNRA
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