2,541 research outputs found
Optimization of -Layer Systems for Josephson Junctions from a Microstructure Point of View
-layer systems are frequently used for Josephson junction-based
superconducting devices. Although much work has been devoted to the
optimization of the superconducting properties of these devices, systematic
studies on influence of deposition conditions combined with structural analyses
on the nanoscale are rare up to now. We have focused on the optimization of the
structural properties of -layer systems deposited on Si(111)
substrates with a particular focus on the thickness homogeneity of the
-tunnel barrier. A standard high-vacuum electron-beam deposition system
was used and the effect of substrate pretreatment, different Al-deposition
temperatures and Al-deposition rates was studied. Transmission electron
microscopy was applied to analyze the structural properties of the
-layer systems to determine the thickness homogeneity of the
layer, grain size distribution in the Al layers, Al-grain boundary
types and the morphology of the interface. We show that the
structural properties of the lower Al layer are decisive for the structural
quality of the whole -layer system. Optimum conditions yield an
epitaxial Al(111) layer on a Si(111) substrate with an Al-layer thickness
variation of only 1.6 nm over more than 10 and large lateral grain
sizes up to 1 . Thickness fluctuations of the -tunnel barrier are
minimized on such an Al layer which is essential for the homogeneity of the
tunnel current. Systematic variation of the Al-deposition rate and deposition
temperature allows to develop an understanding of the growth mechanisms
THE IMPACTS OF THE CONSERVATION RESERVE PROGRAM ON RURAL COMMUNITIES: THE CASE OF THREE OREGON COUNTIES
Using an economic input/output model, the community personal income impacts of participating in the Conservation Reserve Program were analyzed for three rural Oregon counties. While individual farmers may benefit from participation, there may be net adverse impact on the community if the retired land is relatively productive or if the inputs that are no longer purchased would have been purchased locally. These negative effects may be exacerbated if participating farmers quit farming and leave the local area or if the Conservation Reserve Program benefits go to absentee landowners. The Conservation Reserve Program may then represent a conflict between community and national policy objectives.Agricultural and Food Policy, Community/Rural/Urban Development,
Collective Modes in a Symmetry-Broken Phase: Antiferromagnetically Correlated Quantum Wells
We investigate the intersubband spin-density-excitation spectrum of a double
quantum well in a low-density symmetry-broken phase with interwell
antiferromagnetic correlations. This spectrum is related to the intensity
measured in depolarized inelastic light scattering (ILS) experiments and
therefore provides a means of empirically identifying the antiferromagnetic
phase. Our computations reveal the existence of two collective modes, a damped
Nambu-Goldstone (NG) mode arising from the broken spin symmetry and an undamped
optical mode. Since the NG mode contains most of the spectral weight, ILS
experiments will need to examine the low-frequency response for signatures of
the antiferromagnetic phase.Comment: 4 pages, REVTEX with psfig macro, 4 figure
Correlating the nanostructure of Al-oxide with deposition conditions and dielectric contributions of two-level systems in perspective of superconducting quantum circuits
This work is concerned with Al/Al-oxide(AlO)/Al-layer systems which are
important for Josephson-junction-based superconducting devices such as quantum
bits. The device performance is limited by noise, which has been to a large
degree assigned to the presence and properties of two-level tunneling systems
in the amorphous AlO tunnel barrier. The study is focused on the
correlation of the fabrication conditions, nanostructural and nanochemical
properties and the occurrence of two-level tunneling systems with particular
emphasis on the AlO-layer. Electron-beam evaporation with two different
processes and sputter deposition were used for structure fabrication, and the
effect of illumination by ultraviolet light during Al-oxide formation is
elucidated. Characterization was performed by analytical transmission electron
microscopy and low-temperature dielectric measurements. We show that the
fabrication conditions have a strong impact on the nanostructural and
nanochemical properties of the layer systems and the properties of two-level
tunneling systems. Based on the understanding of the observed structural
characteristics, routes are derived towards the fabrication of
Al/AlO/Al-layers systems with improved properties.Comment: 28 pages, 4 figure
Generation of four-partite GHZ and W states by using a high-finesse bimodal cavity
We propose two novel schemes to engineer four-partite entangled
Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) and W states in a deterministic way by using
chains of (two-level) Rydberg atoms within the framework of cavity QED. These
schemes are based on the resonant interaction of the atoms with a bimodal
cavity that simultaneously supports, in contrast to a single-mode cavity, two
independent modes of the photon field. In addition, we suggest the schemes to
reveal the non-classical correlations for the engineered GHZ and W states. It
is shown how these schemes can be extended in order to produce general
N-partite entangled GHZ and W states.Comment: RevTex file, 13 pages, 7 figures, corrected typo
Exchange Instabilities in Semiconductor Double Quantum Well Systems
We consider various exchange-driven electronic instabilities in semiconductor
double-layer systems in the absence of any external magnetic field. We
establish that there is no exchange-driven bilayer to monolayer charge transfer
instability in the double-layer systems. We show that, within the unrestricted
Hartree-Fock approximation, the low density stable phase (even in the absence
of any interlayer tunneling) is a quantum ``pseudospin rotated'' spontaneous
interlayer phase coherent spin-polarized symmetric state rather than the
classical Ising-like charge-transfer phase. The U(1) symmetry of the double
quantum well system is broken spontaneously at this low density quantum phase
transition, and the layer density develops quantum fluctuations even in the
absence of any interlayer tunneling. The phase diagram for the double quantum
well system is calculated in the carrier density--layer separation space, and
the possibility of experimentally observing various quantum phases is
discussed. The situation in the presence of an external electric field is
investigated in some detail using the
spin-polarized-local-density-approximation-based self-consistent technique and
good agreement with existing experimental results is obtained.Comment: 24 pages, figures included. Also available at
http://www-cmg.physics.umd.edu/~lzheng/preprint/ct.uu/ . Revised final
version to appear in PR
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