40 research outputs found
Edge states of graphene bilayer strip
The electronic structure of the zig-zag bilayer strip is analyzed. The
electronic spectra of the bilayer strip is computed. The dependence of the edge
state band flatness on the bilayer width is found. The density of states at the
Fermi level is analytically computed. It is shown that it has the singularity
which depends on the width of the bilayer strip. There is also asymmetry in the
density of states below and above the Fermi energy.Comment: 9 page
Disclination vortices in elastic media
The vortex-like solutions are studied in the framework of the gauge model of
disclinations in elastic continuum. A complete set of model equations with
disclination driven dislocations taken into account is considered. Within the
linear approximation an exact solution for a low-angle wedge disclination is
found to be independent from the coupling constants of the theory. As a result,
no additional dimensional characteristics (like the core radius of the defect)
are involved. The situation changes drastically for 2\pi vortices where two
characteristic lengths, l_\phi and l_W, become of importance. The asymptotical
behaviour of the solutions for both singular and nonsingular 2\pi vortices is
studied. Forces between pairs of vortices are calculated.Comment: 13 pages, published versio
Superradiance Transition in Photosynthetic Light-Harvesting Complexes
We investigate the role of long-lasting quantum coherence in the efficiency
of energy transport at room temperature in Fenna-Matthews-Olson photosynthetic
complexes. The excitation energy transfer due to the coupling of the light
harvesting complex to the reaction center ("sink") is analyzed using an
effective non-Hermitian Hamiltonian. We show that, as the coupling to the
reaction center is varied, maximal efficiency in energy transport is achieved
in the vicinity of the superradiance transition, characterized by a segregation
of the imaginary parts of the eigenvalues of the effective non-Hermitian
Hamiltonian. Our results demonstrate that the presence of the sink (which
provides a quasi--continuum in the energy spectrum) is the dominant effect in
the energy transfer which takes place even in absence of a thermal bath. This
approach allows one to study the effects of finite temperature and the effects
of any coupling scheme to the reaction center. Moreover, taking into account a
realistic electric dipole interaction, we show that the optimal distance from
the reaction center to the Fenna-Matthews-Olson system occurs at the
superradiance transition, and we show that this is consistent with available
experimental data.Comment: 9 page
The Einsteinian T(3)-Gauge Approach and the Stress Tensor of the Screw Dislocation in the Second Order: Avoiding the Cut-off at the Core
A translational gauge approach of the Einstein type is proposed for obtaining
the stresses that are due to non-singular screw dislocation. The stress
distribution of second order around the screw dislocation is classically known
for the hollow circular cylinder with traction-free external and internal
boundaries. The inner boundary surrounds the dislocation's core, which is not
captured by the conventional solution. The present gauge approach enables us to
continue the classically known quadratic stresses inside the core. The gauge
equation is chosen in the Hilbert--Einstein form, and it plays the role of
non-conventional incompatibility law. The stress function method is used, and
it leads to the modified stress potential given by two constituents: the
conventional one, say, the `background' and a short-ranged gauge contribution.
The latter just causes additional stresses, which are localized. The asymptotic
properties of the resulting stresses are studied. Since the gauge contributions
are short-ranged, the background stress field dominates sufficiently far from
the core. The outer cylinder's boundary is traction-free. At sufficiently
moderate distances, the second order stresses acquire regular continuation
within the core region, and the cut-off at the core does not occur. Expressions
for the asymptotically far stresses provide self-consistently new length scales
dependent on the elastic parameters. These lengths could characterize an
exteriority of the dislocation core region.Comment: 34 pages, LaTe
Monotone Simulations of Nonmonotone Proofs.
We show that an LK proof of size m of a monotone sequent (a sequent that contains only formulas in the basis 4; 3) can be turned into a proof containing only monotone formulas of size mOðlog mÞ and with the number of proof lines polynomial in m: Also we show that some interesting special cases, namely the functional and the onto versions of Pigeonhole Principle and a version of the Matching Principle, have polynomial size monotone proofs. We prove that LK is polynomially bounded if and only if its monotone fragment is