1,449 research outputs found
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Polarization control at the microscopic and electronic structure observatory
The new Microscopic and Electronic Structure Observatory (MAESTRO) at the Advanced Light Source (ALS) in Berkeley provides X-rays of variable polarization, produced by an elliptically polarized undulator (EPU), for angle resolved photoemission (ARPES) and photoemission electron microscopy (PEEM) experiments. The interpretation of photoemission data, in particular of dichroism effects in ARPES, requires the precise knowledge of the exact polarization state. Numerical simulations show that the first harmonics of the EPU at MAESTRO provides soft X-rays of almost 100% on axis polarization. However, the higher harmonics as well as the downstream optical elements of the beamline, have a considerable impact on the polarization of the light delivered to the experimental end-station. Employing a simple reflective polarimeter, the polarization is characterized for variable EPU and beamline settings and the overall degree of polarization in the MAESTRO end-stations is estimated to be on the order of 83%
Evidence for Weyl fermions in a canonical heavy-fermion semimetal YbPtBi
The manifestation of Weyl fermions in strongly correlated electron systems is
of particular interest. We report evidence for Weyl fermions in the heavy
fermion semimetal YbPtBi from electronic structure calculations, angle-resolved
photoemission spectroscopy, magnetotransport and calorimetric measurements. At
elevated temperatures where -electrons are localized, there are triply
degenerate points, yielding Weyl nodes in applied magnetic fields. These are
revealed by a contribution from the chiral anomaly in the magnetotransport,
which at low temperatures becomes negligible due to the influence of electronic
correlations. Instead, Weyl fermions are inferred from the topological Hall
effect, which provides evidence for a Berry curvature, and a cubic temperature
dependence of the specific heat, as expected from the linear dispersion near
the Weyl nodes. The results suggest that YbPtBi is a Weyl heavy fermion
semimetal, where the Kondo interaction renormalizes the bands hosting Weyl
points. These findings open up an opportunity to explore the interplay between
topology and strong electronic correlations.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, Supplementary Information available with open
access at https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-018-06782-
Closed-form solutions of the Schroedinger equation for a class of smoothed Coulomb potentials
An infinite family of closed-form solutions is exhibited for the Schroedinger
equation for the potential . Evidence is
presented for an approximate dynamical symmetry for large values of the angular
momentum .Comment: 13 pages LaTeX, uses included Institute of Physics style files, 3
PostScript figures. In press at J. Phys. B: At. Mol. Opt. Phys. (1997
A universal high energy anomaly in angle resolved photoemission spectra of high temperature superconductors - possible evidence of spinon and holon branches
A universal high energy anomaly in the single particle spectral function is
reported in three different families of high temperature superconductors by
using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. As we follow the dispersing
peak of the spectral function from the Fermi energy to the valence band
complex, we find dispersion anomalies marked by two distinctive high energy
scales, E_1=~ 0.38 eV and E_2=~0.8 eV. E_1 marks the energy above which the
dispersion splits into two branches. One is a continuation of the near
parabolic dispersion, albeit with reduced spectral weight, and reaches the
bottom of the band at the gamma point at ~0.5 eV. The other is given by a peak
in the momentum space, nearly independent of energy between E_1 and E_2. Above
E_2, a band-like dispersion re-emerges. We conjecture that these two energies
mark the disintegration of the low energy quasiparticles into a spinon and
holon branch in the high T_c cuprates.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
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Understanding the Mechanism of Electronic Defect Suppression Enabled by Nonidealities in Atomic Layer Deposition.
Silicon germanium (SiGe) is a multifunctional material considered for quantum computing, neuromorphic devices, and CMOS transistors. However, implementation of SiGe in nanoscale electronic devices necessitates suppression of surface states dominating the electronic properties. The absence of a stable and passive surface oxide for SiGe results in the formation of charge traps at the SiGe-oxide interface induced by GeOx. In an ideal ALD process in which oxide is grown layer by layer, the GeOx formation should be prevented with selective surface oxidation (i.e., formation of an SiOx interface) by controlling the oxidant dose in the first few ALD cycles of the oxide deposition on SiGe. However, in a real ALD process, the interface evolves during the entire ALD oxide deposition due to diffusion of reactant species through the gate oxide. In this work, this diffusion process in nonideal ALD is investigated and exploited: the diffusion through the oxide during ALD is utilized to passivate the interfacial defects by employing ozone as a secondary oxidant. Periodic ozone exposure during gate oxide ALD on SiGe is shown to reduce the integrated trap density (Dit) across the band gap by nearly 1 order of magnitude in Al2O3 (<6 × 1010 cm-2) and in HfO2 (<3.9 × 1011 cm-2) by forming a SiOx-rich interface on SiGe. Depletion of Ge from the interfacial layer (IL) by enhancement of volatile GeOx formation and consequent desorption from the SiGe with ozone insertion during the ALD growth process is confirmed by electron energy loss spectroscopy (STEM-EELS) and hypothesized to be the mechanism for reduction of the interfacial defects. In this work, the nanoscale mechanism for defect suppression at the SiGe-oxide interface is demonstrated, which is engineering of diffusion species in the ALD process due to facile diffusion of reactant species in nonideal ALD
Strictly One-Dimensional Electron System in Au Chains on Ge(001) Revealed By Photoelectron K-Space Mapping
Atomic nanowires formed by Au on Ge(001) are scrutinized for the band
topology of the conduction electron system by k-resolved photoemission. Two
metallic electron pockets are observed. Their Fermi surface sheets form
straight lines without undulations perpendicular to the chains within
experimental uncertainty. The electrons hence emerge as strictly confined to
one dimension. Moreover, the system is stable against a Peierls distortion down
to 10 K, lending itself for studies of the spectral function. Indications for
unusually low spectral weight at the chemical potential are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures - revised version with added Fig. 2e) and
additional reference
Semi-relativistic description of quasielastic neutrino reactions and superscaling in a continuum shell model
The so-called semi-relativistic expansion of the weak charged current in
powers of the initial nucleon momentum is performed to describe
charge-changing, quasielastic neutrino reactions at
intermediate energies. The quality of the expansion is tested by comparing with
the relativistic Fermi gas model using several choices of kinematics of
interest for ongoing neutrino oscillation experiments. The new current is then
implemented in a continuum shell model together with relativistic kinematics to
investigate the scaling properties of and cross
sections.Comment: 33 pages, 10 figures, to appear in PR
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