227 research outputs found

    Measurement of miniband parameters of a doped superlattice by photoluminescence in high magnetic fields

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    We have studied a 50/50\AA superlattice of GaAs/Al0.21_{0.21}Ga0.79_{0.79}As composition, modulation-doped with Si, to produce n=1.4×1012n=1.4\times 10^{12} cm2^{-2} electrons per superlattice period. The modulation-doping was tailored to avoid the formation of Tamm states, and photoluminescence due to interband transitions from extended superlattice states was detected. By studying the effects of a quantizing magnetic field on the superlattice photoluminescence, the miniband energy width, the reduced effective mass of the electron-hole pair, and the band gap renormalization could be deduced.Comment: minor typing errors (minus sign in eq. (5)

    Comparison of some theoretical models for fittings of the temperature dependence of the fundamental energy gap in GaAs

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    In this work we report on a comparison of some theoretical models usually used to fit the dependence on temperature of the fundamental energy gap of semiconductor materials. We used in our investigations the theoretical models of Viña, Pässler-p and Pässler-ρ to fit several sets of experimental data, available in the literature for the energy gap of GaAs in the temperature range from 12 to 974 K. Performing several fittings for different values of the upper limit of the analyzed temperature range (Tmax), we were able to follow in a systematic way the evolution of the fitting parameters up to the limit of high temperatures and make a comparison between the zero-point values obtained from the different models by extrapolating the linear dependence of the gaps at high T to T = 0 K and that determined by the dependence of the gap on isotope mass. Using experimental data measured by absorption spectroscopy, we observed the non-linear behavior of Eg(T) of GaAs for T > ΘD.Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES)CNP

    Academic success in schools in the Algarve: when leadership is part of the solution and not of the problem

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    This paper presents the results of a case study conducted among school principals in the southern region of Portugal, located in urban, suburban and rural settings. The five cases that comprise this study were subjected to a final rating of “Very Good” in the external evaluation process of schools, whose data were collected through semi-structured interviews and documentary analysis (regulations and educational project, reports of the external evaluation of responsibility of Inspeção Geral de Educação e Ciência de Portugal). The data collected in this exploratory study were systematized and analyzed according to the following indicators: the students’ academic success, the teachers’ professional development, the organizational development and the identifying features of schools principals. Overall, we cannot affirm the existence of differences according to geographical area, although some particularities which proved to be interesting and indicative of good leadership practices could be highlighted.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy of InAs/GaAs(001) submonolayer quantum dots

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    Cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy (X-STM) was employed to characterize the InAs submonolayer quantum dots (SMLQDs) grown on top of a Si-doped GaAs(001) substrate in the presence of (2X4) and c(4X4) surface reconstructions. Multiple layers were grown under different conditions to study their effects on the formation, morphology and local composition of the SMLQDs. The morphological and compositional variations in SMLQDs were observed by both filled and emptystate imaging. A detailed analysis of indium segregation in the SMLQDs layers was described by fitting local indium concentration profile with a standard segregation model. A strong influence of arsenic flux over the formation of the SMLQDs and indium incorporation was observed and reported. We investigated the well-width fluctuations of the InGaAs quantum well (QW) in which SMLQDs were formed . The monolayer fluctuations of the well width were negligible compared to the more pronounced compositional fluctuations in all the layers. Keywords: Submonolayer quantum dots, Surface reconstruction, X-STM, Indium segregatio

    Quantum Hall ferromagnet in a parabolic well

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    We report the observation of an anomalous magnetoresistance peak in a tilted magnetic field corresponding to filling factor of 2 in several parabolic wells of different width. This phenomenon is due to the unpolarizedferromagnetic transitions in quantum Hall ferromagnets. The domain formation induced by the random impurity potential is responsible for this magnetoresistance peak. The shift of the peak position with the tilt angle is attributed to the magnetic-field dependence of the exchange-correlation energy across the transition

    Spin coherence generation in negatively charged self-assembled (In,Ga)As quantum dots by pumping excited trion states

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    Spin coherence generation in an ensemble of negatively charged (In,Ga)As/GaAs quantum dots was investigated by picosecond time-resolved pump-probe spectroscopy measuring ellipticity. Robust coherence of the ground-state electron spins is generated by pumping excited charged exciton (trion) states. The phase of the coherent state, as evidenced by the spin ensemble precession about an external magnetic field, varies relative to spin coherence generation resonant with the ground state. The phase variation depends on the pump photon energy. It is determined by (a) pumping dominantly either singlet or triplet excited states, leading to a phase inversion, and (b) the subsequent carrier relaxation into the ground states. From the dependence of the precession phase and the measured g factors, information about the quantum dot shell splitting and the exchange energy splitting between triplet and singlet states can be extracted in the ensemble.CNPqCNPq [500660/2011-5, 304685/2010-0, 475296/2009-5]FAPESPFAPESP [2010/10452-8]LNLSBrazilian Synchrotron Light Laboratory/MCT (LMF)LNLS-Brazilian Synchrotron Light Laboratory/MCT (LMF)Deutsche ForschungsgemeinschaftDeutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [BA1549/11-3

    Dynamic and Polarized Muscle Cell Behaviors Accompany Tail Morphogenesis in the Ascidian Ciona intestinalis

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    BACKGROUND: Axial elongation is a key morphogenetic process that serves to shape developing organisms. Tail extension in the ascidian larva represents a striking example of this process, wherein paraxially positioned muscle cells undergo elongation and differentiation independent of the segmentation process that characterizes the formation of paraxial mesoderm in vertebrates. Investigating the cell behaviors underlying the morphogenesis of muscle in ascidians may therefore reveal the evolutionarily conserved mechanisms operating during this process. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPLE FINDINGS: A live cell imaging approach utilizing subcellularly-localized fluorescent proteins was employed to investigate muscle cell behaviors during tail extension in the ascidian Ciona intestinalis. Changes in the position and morphology of individual muscle cells were analyzed in vivo in wild type embryos undergoing tail extension and in embryos in which muscle development was perturbed. Muscle cells were observed to undergo elongation in the absence of positional reorganization. Furthermore, high-speed high-resolution live imaging revealed that the onset and progression of tail extension were characterized by the presence of dynamic and polarized actin-based protrusive activity at the plasma membrane of individual muscle cells. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results demonstrate that in the Ciona muscle, tissue elongation resulted from gradual and coordinated changes in cell geometry and not from changes in cell topology. Proper formation of muscle cells was found to be necessary not only for muscle tissue elongation, but also more generally for completion of tail extension. Based upon the characterized dynamic changes in cell morphology and plasma membrane protrusive activity, a three-phase model is proposed to describe the cell behavior operating during muscle morphogenesis in the ascidian embryo
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