2,746 research outputs found
Directionality in van der Waals Interactions: the Case of 4-Acetylbiphenyl Adsorbed on Au(111)
We report on a theoretical study of adsorption of 4-Acetylbiphenyl molecule
and its diffusion properties in the main directions of the Au(111) surface.
Structural changes of the molecule, which are induced by adsorption lead to
stronger conjugation of the -system. The molecule is adsorbed in a flat
configuration on the surface with roughly the same binding energy along the
[110] and [112] directions, in good agreement with experiments. Furthermore,
the diffusion barriers imply an important directionality of the
molecule-surface interactions. This is somewhat surprising because our
calculations show that the prevailing interaction is the long-range
molecule-surface van der Waals interaction. Despite of its weakness, the van
der Waals interaction discriminates the preferential adsorption sites as well
as imposes a molecular geometry that needs to be considered when rationalizing
the diffusion barriers
Size effects in surface reconstructed and silicon nanowires
The geometrical and electronic structure properties of
silicon nanowires in the absence of surface passivation are studied by means of
density-functional calculations. As we have shown in a recent publication [R.
Rurali and N. Lorente, Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 94}, 026805 (2005)] the
reconstruction of facets can give rise to surface metallic states. In this
work, we analyze the dependence of geometric and electronic structure features
on the size of the wire and on the growth direction
Evaporation of (quantum) black holes and energy conservation
We consider Hawking radiation as due to a tunneling process in a black hole
were quantum corrections, derived from Quantum Einstein Gravity, are taken into
account. The consequent derivation, satisfying conservation laws, leads to a
deviation from an exact thermal spectrum. The non-thermal radiation is shown to
carry information out of the black hole. Under the appropriate approximation, a
quantum corrected temperature is assigned to the black hole. The evolution of
the quantum black hole as it evaporates is then described by taking into
account the full implications of energy conservation as well as the
back-scattered radiation. It is shown that, as a critical mass of the order of
Planck's mass is reached, the evaporation process decelerates abruptly while
the black hole mass decays towards this critical mass.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figure
The mechanism why colliders could create quasi-stable black holes
It has been postulated that black holes could be created in particle
collisions within the range of the available energies for nowadays colliders
(LHC). In this paper we analyze the evaporation of a type of black holes that
are candidates for this specific behaviour, namely, small black holes on a
brane in a world with large extra-dimensions. We examine their evolution under
the assumption that energy conservation is satisfied during the process and
compare it with the standard evaporation approach. We claim that, rather than
undergoing a quick total evaporation, black holes become quasi-stable. We
comment on the (absence of) implications for safety of this result. We also
discuss how the presence of black holes together with the correctness of the
energy conservation approach might be experimentally verified.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figure
Representations of the discrete inhomogeneous Lorentz group and Dirac wave equation on the lattice
We propose the fundamental and two dimensional representation of the Lorentz
groups on a (3+1)-dimensional hypercubic lattice, from which representations of
higher dimensions can be constructed. For the unitary representation of the
discrete translation group we use the kernel of the Fourier transform. From the
Dirac representation of the Lorentz group (including reflections) we derive in
a natural way the wave equation on the lattice for spin 1/2 particles. Finally
the induced representation of the discrete inhomogeneous Lorentz group is
constructed by standard methods and its connection with the continuous case is
discussed.Comment: LaTeX, 20 pages, 1 eps figure, uses iopconf.sty (late submission
Metallic and semi-metallic <100> silicon nanowires
Silicon nanowires grown along the -direction with a bulk Si core are
studied with density functional calculations. Two surface reconstructions
prevail after exploration of a large fraction of the phase space of nanowire
reconstructions. Despite their energetical equivalence, one of the
reconstructions is found to be strongly metallic while the other one is
semi-metallic. This electronic-structure behavior is dictated by the particular
surface states of each reconstruction. These results imply that doping is not
required in order to obtain good conducting Si nanowires.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures; Phys. Rev. Lett., in pres
On analytic properties of Meixner-Sobolev orthogonal polynomials of higher order difference operators
In this contribution we consider sequences of monic polynomials orthogonal
with respect to Sobolev-type inner product where is the Meixner linear operator,
, , , and
is the forward difference operator , or the backward difference
operator .
We derive an explicit representation for these polynomials. The ladder
operators associated with these polynomials are obtained, and the linear
difference equation of second order is also given. In addition, for these
polynomials we derive a -term recurrence relation. Finally, we find the
Mehler-Heine type formula for the case
Surface embedding, topology and dualization for spin networks
Spin networks are graphs derived from 3nj symbols of angular momentum. The
surface embedding, the topology and dualization of these networks are
considered. Embeddings into compact surfaces include the orientable sphere S^2
and the torus T, and the not orientable projective space P^2 and Klein's bottle
K. Two families of 3nj graphs admit embeddings of minimal genus into S^2 and
P^2. Their dual 2-skeletons are shown to be triangulations of these surfaces.Comment: LaTeX 17 pages, 6 eps figures (late submission to arxiv.org
Creating pseudo Kondo-resonances by field-induced diffusion of atomic hydrogen
In low temperature scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) experiments a cerium
adatom on Ag(100) possesses two discrete states with significantly different
apparent heights. These atomic switches also exhibit a Kondo-like feature in
spectroscopy experiments. By extensive theoretical simulations we find that
this behavior is due to diffusion of hydrogen from the surface onto the Ce
adatom in the presence of the STM tip field. The cerium adatom possesses
vibrational modes of very low energy (3-4meV) and very high efficiency (> 20%),
which are due to the large changes of Ce-states in the presence of hydrogen.
The atomic vibrations lead to a Kondo-like feature at very low bias voltages.
We predict that the same low-frequency/high-efficiency modes can also be
observed at lanthanum adatoms.Comment: five pages and four figure
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