2,422 research outputs found
Transient terahertz spectroscopy of excitons and unbound carriers in quasi two-dimensional electron-hole gases
We report a comprehensive experimental study and detailed model analysis of
the terahertz dielectric response and density kinetics of excitons and unbound
electron-hole pairs in GaAs quantum wells. A compact expression is given, in
absolute units, for the complex-valued terahertz dielectric function of
intra-excitonic transitions between the 1s and higher-energy exciton and
continuum levels. It closely describes the terahertz spectra of resonantly
generated excitons. Exciton ionization and formation are further explored,
where the terahertz response exhibits both intra-excitonic and Drude features.
Utilizing a two-component dielectric function, we derive the underlying exciton
and unbound pair densities. In the ionized state, excellent agreement is found
with the Saha thermodynamic equilibrium, which provides experimental
verification of the two-component analysis and density scaling. During exciton
formation, in turn, the pair kinetics is quantitatively described by a Saha
equilibrium that follows the carrier cooling dynamics. The terahertz-derived
kinetics is, moreover, consistent with time-resolved luminescence measured for
comparison. Our study establishes a basis for tracking pair densities via
transient terahertz spectroscopy of photoexcited quasi-two-dimensional
electron-hole gases.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, final versio
Overcoming challenges: Going mobile with your own video models.
This is the publisher's version, also found here: http://cec.metapress.com/content/xtv27p4270444543/?p=368d1858244d4b8d957b1ecaf7e99f37&pi=
A recurrent neural network with ever changing synapses
A recurrent neural network with noisy input is studied analytically, on the
basis of a Discrete Time Master Equation. The latter is derived from a
biologically realizable learning rule for the weights of the connections. In a
numerical study it is found that the fixed points of the dynamics of the net
are time dependent, implying that the representation in the brain of a fixed
piece of information (e.g., a word to be recognized) is not fixed in time.Comment: 17 pages, LaTeX, 4 figure
Concept for a Large Scalable Space Telescope: In-Space Assembly
We present a conceptual design for a scalable (10-50 meter segmented filled-aperture) space observatory operating at UV-optical-near infrared wavelengths. This telescope is designed for assembly in space by robots, astronauts or a combination of the two, as envisioned in NASA s Vision for Space Exploration. Our operations concept for this-space telescope provides for assembly and check-out in an Earth Moon L2 (EML2) orbit, and transport to a Sun-Earth L2 (SEL2) orbit for science operations and routine servicing, with return to EML2 for major servicing. We have developed and analyzed initial designs for the optical, structural, thermal and attitude control systems for a 30-m aperture space telescope. We further describe how the separate components are packaged for launch by heavy lift vehicle(s) and the approach for the robot assembly of the telescope from these components
Parity forbidden excitations of Sr2CuO2Cl2 revealed by optical third-harmonic spectroscopy
We present the first study of nonlinear optical third harmonic generation in
the strongly correlated charge-transfer insulator Sr2CuO2Cl2. For fundamental
excitation in the near-infrared, the THG spectrum reveals a strongly resonant
response for photon energies near 0.7 eV. Polarization analysis reveals this
novel resonance to be only partially accounted for by three-photon excitation
to the optical charge-transfer exciton, and indicates that an even-parity
excitation at 2 eV, with a_1g symmetry, participates in the third harmonic
susceptibility.Comment: Requires RevTeX v4.0beta
Depletion potential in hard-sphere mixtures: theory and applications
We present a versatile density functional approach (DFT) for calculating the
depletion potential in general fluid mixtures. In contrast to brute force DFT,
our approach requires only the equilibrium density profile of the small
particles {\em before} the big (test) particle is inserted. For a big particle
near a planar wall or a cylinder or another fixed big particle the relevant
density profiles are functions of a single variable, which avoids the numerical
complications inherent in brute force DFT. We implement our approach for
additive hard-sphere mixtures. By investigating the depletion potential for
high size asymmetries we assess the regime of validity of the well-known
Derjaguin approximation for hard-sphere mixtures and argue that this fails. We
provide an accurate parametrization of the depletion potential in hard-sphere
fluids which should be useful for effective Hamiltonian studies of phase
behavior and colloid structure
Multiple-Point and Multiple-Time Correlations Functions in a Hard-Sphere Fluid
A recent mode coupling theory of higher-order correlation functions is tested
on a simple hard-sphere fluid system at intermediate densities. Multi-point and
multi-time correlation functions of the densities of conserved variables are
calculated in the hydrodynamic limit and compared to results obtained from
event-based molecular dynamics simulations. It is demonstrated that the mode
coupling theory results are in excellent agreement with the simulation results
provided that dissipative couplings are included in the vertices appearing in
the theory. In contrast, simplified mode coupling theories in which the
densities obey Gaussian statistics neglect important contributions to both the
multi-point and multi-time correlation functions on all time scales.Comment: Second one in a sequence of two (in the first, the formalism was
developed). 12 pages REVTeX. 5 figures (eps). Submitted to Phys.Rev.
Orientational order in dipolar fluids consisting of nonspherical hard particles
We investigate fluids of dipolar hard particles by a certain variant of
density-functional theory. The proper treatment of the long range of the
dipolar interactions yields a contribution to the free energy which favors
ferromagnetic order. This corrects previous theoretical analyses. We determine
phase diagrams for dipolar ellipsoids and spherocylinders as a function of the
aspect ratio of the particles and their dipole moment. In the nonpolar limit
the results for the phase boundary between the isotropic and nematic phase
agree well with simulation data. Adding a longitudinal dipole moment favors the
nematic phase. For oblate or slightly elongated particles we find a
ferromagnetic liquid phase, which has also been detected in computer
simulations of fluids consisting of spherical dipolar particles. The detailed
structure of the phase diagram and its evolution upon changing the aspect ratio
are discussed in detail.Comment: 35 pages LaTeX with epsf style, 11 figures in eps format, submitted
to Phys. Rev.
Pressure Dependence of Born Effective Charges, Dielectric Constant and Lattice Dynamics in SiC
The pressure dependence of the Born effective charge, dielectric constant and
zone-center LO and TO phonons have been determined for -SiC by a linear
response method based on the linearized augmented plane wave calculations
within the local density approximation. The Born effective charges are found to
increase nearly linearly with decreasing volume down to the smallest volume
studied, , corresponding to a pressure of about 0.8 Mbar. This
seems to be in contradiction with the conclusion of the turnover behavior
recently reported by Liu and Vohra [Phys.\ Rev.\ Lett.\ {\bf 72}, 4105 (1994)]
for -SiC. Reanalyzing their procedure to extract the pressure dependence of
the Born effective charges, we suggest that the turnover behavior they obtained
is due to approximations in the assumed pressure dependence of the dielectric
constant , the use of a singular set of experimental data
for the equation of state, and the uncertainty in measured phonon frequencies,
especially at high pressure.Comment: 25 pages, revtex, 5 postscript figures appended, to be published in
Phys. Rev.
Phase separation in mixtures of colloids and long ideal polymer coils
Colloidal suspensions with free polymer coils which are larger than the
colloidal particles are considered. The polymer-colloid interaction is modeled
by an extension of the Asakura-Oosawa model. Phase separation occurs into
dilute and dense fluid phases of colloidal particles when polymer is added. The
critical density of this transition tends to zero as the size of the polymer
coils diverges.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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