887 research outputs found

    Discrete Symmetries from Broken SU(N)SU(N) and the MSSM

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    In order that discrete symmetries should not be violated by gravitational effects, it is necessary to gauge them. In this paper we discuss the gauging of ZN\Z_N from the breaking of a high energy SU(N)SU(N) gauge symmetry, and derive consistency conditions for the resulting discrete symmetry fr om the requirement of anomaly cancellation in the parent symmetry. These results are then applied to a detailed analysis of the possible discrete symmetries forbidding proton decay in the minimal supersymmetric standard model.Comment: 14 pages, plain TEX, computer problems fixed since first versio

    Nonequilibrium phase transitions in models of adsorption and desorption

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    The nonequilibrium phase transition in a system of diffusing, coagulating particles in the presence of a steady input and evaporation of particles is studied. The system undergoes a transition from a phase in which the average number of particles is finite to one in which it grows linearly in time. The exponents characterizing the mass distribution near the critical point are calculated in all dimensions.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures (To appear in Phys. Rev. E

    A modeling approach to understanding OLED performance improvements arising from spatial variations in guest:host blend ratio

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    Phosphorescent organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs) suffer from efficiency roll off, where device efficiency rapidly decays at higher luminance. One strategy to minimize this loss of efficiency at higher luminance is the use of non-uniform or graded guest:host blend ratios within the emissive layer. This work applies a multi-scale modeling framework to elucidate the mechanisms by which a non-uniform blend ratio can change the performance of an OLED. Mobility and exciton data are extracted from a kinetic Monte–Carlo model, which is then coupled to a drift diffusion model for fast sampling of the parameter space. The model is applied to OLEDs with uniform, linear, and stepwise graduations in the blend ratio in the emissive layer. The distribution of the guests in the film was found to affect the mobility of the charge carriers, and it was determined that having a graduated guest profile broadened the recombination zone, leading to a reduction in second order annihilation rates. That is, there was a reduction in triplet–triplet and triplet-polaron annihilation. Reducing triplet–triplet and triplet-polaron annihilation would lead to an improvement in device efficiency

    Interference effects in electronic transport through metallic single-wall carbon nanotubes

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    In a recent paper Liang {\it et al.} [Nature {\bf 411}, 665 (2001)] showed experimentally, that metallic nanotubes, strongly coupled to external electrodes, may act as coherent molecular waveguides for electronic transport. The experimental results were supported by theoretical analysis based on the scattering matrix approach. In this paper we analyze theoretically this problem using a real-space approach, which makes it possible to control quality of interface contacts. Electronic structure of the nanotube is taken into account within the tight-binding model. External electrodes and the central part (sample) are assumed to be made of carbon nanotubes, while the contacts between electrodes and the sample are modeled by appropriate on-site (diagonal) and hopping (off-diagonal) parameters. Conductance is calculated by the Green function technique combined with the Landauer formalism. In the plots displaying conductance {\it vs.} bias and gate voltages, we have found typical diamond structure patterns, similar to those observed experimentally. In certain cases, however, we have found new features in the patterns, like a double-diamond sub-structure.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures. To apear in Phys. Rev.

    Kang-Redner Anomaly in Cluster-Cluster Aggregation

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    The large time, small mass, asymptotic behavior of the average mass distribution \pb is studied in a dd-dimensional system of diffusing aggregating particles for 1d21\leq d \leq 2. By means of both a renormalization group computation as well as a direct re-summation of leading terms in the small reaction-rate expansion of the average mass distribution, it is shown that \pb \sim \frac{1}{t^d} (\frac{m^{1/d}}{\sqrt{t}})^{e_{KR}} for mtd/2m \ll t^{d/2}, where eKR=ϵ+O(ϵ2)e_{KR}=\epsilon +O(\epsilon ^2) and ϵ=2d\epsilon =2-d. In two dimensions, it is shown that \pb \sim \frac{\ln(m) \ln(t)}{t^2} for mt/ln(t) m \ll t/ \ln(t). Numerical simulations in two dimensions supporting the analytical results are also presented.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, Revtex

    Electron scattering in multi-wall carbon-nanotubes

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    We analyze two scattering mechanisms that might cause intrinsic electronic resistivity in multi-wall carbon nanotubes: scattering by dopant impurities, and scattering by inter-tube electron-electron interaction. We find that for typically doped multi-wall tubes backward scattering at dopants is by far the dominating effect.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Closely related alpha-tropomyosin mRNAs in quail fibroblasts and skeletal muscle cells.

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    We describe the analysis of two quail cDNA clones representing distinct but closely related alpha-tropomyosin mRNAs. cDNA clone cC101 corresponds to a 1.2-kilobase RNA which accumulates to high levels during myoblast differentiation and which encodes the major isoform of skeletal muscle alpha-tropomyosin. cDNA clone cC102 corresponds to a 2-kilobase RNA which is abundant in cultured embryonic skin fibroblasts and which encodes one of two alpha-tropomyosin-related fibroblast tropomyosins of 35,000 and 34,000 daltons apparent molecular mass (class 1 tropomyosins). The cC102 protein is unique among reported nonstriated-muscle tropomyosins in being identical in amino acid sequence to the major isoform of skeletal muscle alpha-tropomyosin over an uninterrupted stretch of at least 183 amino acids (residues 75-257). The two protein sequences differ in the COOH-terminal region beginning with residue 258. Because the cC101 and cC102 RNAs share an extensive region (at least 373 nucleotides) of nucleotide sequence identity upstream of the codon for residue 258, they are likely derived from a single gene by alternative RNA splicing, as was recently proposed in the case of related beta-tropomyosin mRNAs in human fibroblasts and skeletal muscle (MacLeod, A. R., Houlker, C., Reinach, R. C., Smillie, L. B., Talbot, K., Modi, G., and Walsh, F. S. (1985) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 82, 7835-7837). No alpha-tropomyosin-related RNAs are abundant in undifferentiated myoblasts. This suggests the possibility of a fibroblast-specific function, as opposed to a general nonmuscle-cell function for class 1 tropomyosins and also has implications for the regulation of alpha-tropomyosin gene expression during embryonic development

    Quantum Anti-Zeno Effect

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    We demonstrate that near threshold decay processes may be accelerated by repeated measurements. Examples include near threshold photodetachment of an electron from a negative ion, and spontaneous emission in a cavity close to the cutoff frequency, or in a photon band gap material.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    A Study of the S=1/2 Alternating Chain using Multiprecision Methods

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    In this paper we present results for the ground state and low-lying excitations of the S=1/2S=1/2 alternating Heisenberg antiferromagnetic chain. Our more conventional techniques include perturbation theory about the dimer limit and numerical diagonalization of systems of up to 28 spins. A novel application of multiple precision numerical diagonalization allows us to determine analytical perturbation series to high order; the results found using this approach include ninth-order perturbation series for the ground state energy and one magnon gap, which were previously known only to third order. We also give the fifth-order dispersion relation and third-order exclusive neutron scattering structure factor for one-magnon modes and numerical and analytical binding energies of S=0 and S=1 two-magnon bound states.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures. for submission to Phys.Rev.B. PICT files of figs available at http://csep2.phy.ornl.gov/theory_group/people/barnes/barnes.htm
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