570 research outputs found
Carbon-related defects in Si:C/silicon heterostructures assessed by deep-level transient spectroscopy
This paper reports on a Deep-Level Transient Spectroscopy (DLTS) study of the electrically active defects in similar to 100 nm Si: C stressors, formed by chemical vapor deposition on p-type Czochralski silicon substrates. In addition, the impact of a post-deposition Rapid Thermal Annealing (RTA) at 850 degrees C on the DLT-spectra is investigated. It is shown that close to the surface at least two types of hole traps are present: one kind exhibiting slow hole capture, which may have a partial extended defect nature and a second type of hole trap behaving like a point defect. RTA increases the concentration of both hole traps and, in addition, introduces a point defect at EV + 0.35 eV in the depletion region of the silicon substrate at some distance from the Si: C epi layer. This level most likely corresponds with CiOi-related centers. Finally, a negative feature is found systematically for larger reverse bias pulses, which could point to a response of trap states at the Si: C/silicon hetero-interface
The Dutch version of the Child Posttraumatic Cognitions Inventory:validation in a clinical sample and a school sample
With the inclusion of trauma-related cognitions in the DSM-5 criteria for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), the assessment of these cognitions has become essential. Therefore, valid tools for the assessment of these cognitions are warranted
Shapiro steps in a superconducting film with an antidot lattice
Shapiro voltage steps at voltages V_n=nV_0 (n integer) have been observed in
the voltage-current characteristics of a superconducting film with a square
lattice of perforating microholes (antidots)in the presence of radiofrequent
radiation. These equidistant steps appear at the second matching field H_2 when
the flow of the interstitial vortex lattice in the periodic potential created
by the antidots and the vortices trapped by them, is in phase with the applied
rf frequency. Therefore, the observation of Shapiro steps clearly reveals the
presence of mobile intersitial vortices in superconducting films with regular
pinning arrays. The interstitial vortices, moved by the driving current,
coexist with immobile vortices strongly pinned at the antidots.Comment: 6 pages text, 3 EPS figures, RevTeX, accepted for publication in PRB
Rapid Communication
Confinement and Quantization Effects in Mesoscopic Superconducting Structures
We have studied quantization and confinement effects in nanostructured
superconductors. Three different types of nanostructured samples were
investigated: individual structures (line, loop, dot), 1-dimensional (1D)
clusters of loops and 2D clusters of antidots, and finally large lattices of
antidots. Hereby, a crossover from individual elementary "plaquettes", via
clusters, to huge arrays of these elements, is realized. The main idea of our
study was to vary the boundary conditions for confinement of the
superconducting condensate by taking samples of different topology and, through
that, modifying the lowest Landau level E_LLL(H). Since the critical
temperature versus applied magnetic field T_c(H) is, in fact, E_LLL(H) measured
in temperature units, it is varied as well when the sample topology is changed
through nanostructuring. We demonstrate that in all studied nanostructured
superconductors the shape of the T_c(H) phase boundary is determined by the
confinement topology in a unique way.Comment: 28 pages, 19 EPS figures, uses LaTeX's aipproc.sty, contribution to
Euroschool on "Superconductivity in Networks and Mesoscopic Systems", held in
Siena, Italy (8-20 september 1997
Axion-Dilaton Domain Walls and Fake Supergravity
Dynamical systems methods are used to investigate domain-wall solutions of a
two-parameter family of models in which gravity is coupled to an axion, and to
a dilaton with an exponential potential of either sign. A complete global
analysis is presented for (i) constant axion and (ii) flat walls, including a
study of bifurcations and a new exact domain-wall solution with non-constant
axion. We reconsider `fake supergravity' issues in light of these results. We
show, by example, how domain walls determine multi-valued superpotentials that
branch at stationary points that are not stationary points of the potential,
and we apply this result to potentials with anti-de Sitter vacua. We also show
by example that `adapted' truncation to a single-scalar model is sometimes
inconsistent, and we propose a `generalized' fake supergravity formalism that
applies in some such cases.Comment: 43pp, 19 figures; minor corrections and extensions; one additional
figur
Non-relativistic ten-dimensional minimal supergravity
We construct a non-relativistic limit of ten-dimensional N=1 supergravity
from the point of view of the symmetries, the action, and the equations of
motion. This limit can only be realized in a supersymmetric way provided we
impose by hand a set of geometric constraints, invariant under all the
symmetries of the non-relativistic theory, that define a so-called `self-dual'
Dilatation-invariant String Newton-Cartan geometry. The non-relativistic action
exhibits three emerging symmetries: one local scale symmetry and two local
conformal supersymmetries. Due to these emerging symmetries the Poisson
equation for the Newton potential and two partner fermionic equations do not
follow from a variation of the non-relativistic action but, instead, are
obtained by a supersymmetry variation of the other equations of motion that do
follow from a variation of the non-relativistic action. We shortly discuss the
inclusion of the Yang-Mills sector that would lead to a non-relativistic
heterotic supergravity action.Comment: 40 pages, minor change
Hypermultiplets and hypercomplex geometry from 6 to 3 dimensions
The formulation of hypermultiplets that has been developed for 5-dimensional
matter multiplets is by dimensional reductions translated into the appropriate
spinor language for 6 and 4 dimensions. We also treat the theories without
actions that have the geometrical structure of hypercomplex geometry. The
latter is the generalization of hyper-Kaehler geometry that does not require a
Hermitian metric and hence corresponds to field equations without action. The
translation tables of this paper allow the direct application of superconformal
tensor calculus for the hypermultiplets using the available Weyl multiplets in
6 and 4 dimensions. Furthermore, the hypermultiplets in 3 dimensions that
result from reduction of vector multiplets in 4 dimensions are considered,
leading to a superconformal formulation of the c-map and an expression for the
main geometric quantities of the hyper-Kaehler manifolds in the image of this
map.Comment: 18 pages; v2: several clarifications in text and formulae, version to
appear in Class.Quantum Gravit
Generalized Newton-Cartan geometries for particles and strings
We discuss the generalized Newton-Cartan geometries that can serve as gravitational background fields for particles and strings. In order to enable us to define affine connections that are invariant under all the symmetries of the structure group, we describe torsionful geometries with independent torsion tensors. A characteristic feature of the non-Lorentzian geometries we consider is that some of the torsion tensors are so-called ‘intrinsic torsion’ tensors. Setting some components of these intrinsic torsion tensors to zero leads to constraints on the geometry. For both particles and strings, we discuss various such constraints that can be imposed consistently with the structure group symmetries. In this way, we reproduce several results in the literature.</p
On Maximal Massive 3D Supergravity
We construct, at the linearized level, the three-dimensional (3D) N = 4
supersymmetric "general massive supergravity" and the maximally supersymmetric
N = 8 "new massive supergravity". We also construct the maximally
supersymmetric linearized N = 7 topologically massive supergravity, although we
expect N = 6 to be maximal at the non-linear level.Comment: 33 page
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