30,172 research outputs found

    Absorption and Direct Processes in Chaotic Wave Scattering

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    Recent results on the scattering of waves by chaotic systems with losses and direct processes are discussed. We start by showing the results without direct processes nor absorption. We then discuss systems with direct processes and lossy systems separately. Finally the discussion of systems with both direct processes and loses is given. We will see how the regimes of strong and weak absorption are modified by the presence of the direct processes.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, Condensed Matter Physics (IV Mexican Meeting on Mathematical and Experimental Physics), Edited by M. Martinez-Mares and J. A. Moreno-Raz

    Bounds on quark mass matrices elements due to measured properties of the mixing matrix and present values of the quark masses

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    We obtain constraints on possible structures of mass matrices in the quark sector by using as experimental restrictions the determined values of the quark masses at the MZM_Z energy scale, the magnitudes of the quark mixing matrix elements VudV_{\rm ud}, VusV_{\rm us}, VcdV_{\rm cd}, and VcsV_{\rm cs}, and the Jarlskog invariant J(V)J(V). Different cases of specific mass matrices are examined in detail. The quality of the fits for the Fritzsch and Stech type mass matrices is about the same with χ2/dof=4.23/3=1.41\chi^2/{\rm dof}=4.23/3=1.41 and χ2/dof=9.10/4=2.28\chi^2/{\rm dof}=9.10/4=2.28, respectively. The fit for a simple generalization (one extra parameter) of the Fritzsch type matrices, in the physical basis, is much better with χ2/dof=1.89/4=0.47\chi^2/{\rm dof}=1.89/4=0.47. For comparison we also include the results using the quark masses at the 2 GeV energy scale. The fits obtained at this energy scale are similar to that at MZM_Z energy scale, implying that our results are unaffected by the evolution of the quark masses from 2 to 91 GeV.Comment: Evolution effects include

    On the use of bianisotropic huygens' metasurfaces to build leaky-wave antennas

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    The Electromagnetics AcademyHuygens' metasurfaces are considered a powerful tool to achieve anomalous electromagnetic field transformations. They consist of an artifcial surface built of pairs of collocated electric and magetic dipoles that force the boundary conditions for the desired transformation to be ful lled [1]. Despite their possibilities, the achievable transformations must ful l some conditions. In [2] it was shown that Huygens' metasurfaces with passive and lossless particles can achieve an arbitrary field transformation provided that the power is conserved at each point of the metasurface and there is wave impedance matching. However, it was shown in [3], that by introducing bianisotropy of the omega-type, the matching condition can be suppressed, which allows the control of both the transmission and rejection coe cients on the metasurface.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tech

    Compositional analysis of InAs-GaAs-GaSb heterostructures by low-loss electron energy loss spectroscopy

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    As an alternative to Core-Loss Electron Energy Loss Spectroscopy, Low-Loss EELS is suitable for compositional analysis of complex heterostructures, such as the InAs-GaAs-GaSb system, since in this energy range the edges corresponding to these elements are better defined than in Core-Loss. Furthermore, the analysis of the bulk plasmon peak, which is present in this energy range, also provides information about the composition. In this work, compositional information in an InAs-GaAs-GaSb heterostructure has been obtained from Low-Loss EEL spectra

    Electron dynamics in intentionally disordered semiconductor superlattices

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    We study the dynamical behavior of disordered quantum-well-based semiconductor superlattices where the disorder is intentional and short-range correlated. We show that, whereas the transmission time of a particle grows exponentially with the number of wells in an usual disordered superlattice for any value of the incident particle energy, for specific values of the incident energy this time increases linearly when correlated disorder is included. As expected, those values of the energy coincide with a narrow subband of extended states predicted by the static calculations of Dom\'{\i}nguez-Adame {\em et al.} [Phys. Rev. B {\bf 51}, 14 ,359 (1994)]; such states are seen in our dynamical results to exhibit a ballistic regime, very close to the WKB approximation of a perfect superlattice. Fourier transform of the output signal for an incident Gaussian wave packet reveals a dramatic filtering of the original signal, which makes us confident that devices based on this property may be designed and used for nanotechnological applications. This is more so in view of the possibility of controllingthe outp ut band using a dc electric field, which we also discuss. In the conclusion we summarize our results and present an outlook for future developments arising from this work.Comment: 10 pagex, RevTex, 13 Postscript figures. Physical Review B (in press

    Semiclassical and Quantum Black Holes and their Evaporation, de Sitter and Anti-de Sitter Regimes, Gravitational and String Phase Transitions

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    An effective string theory in physically relevant cosmological and black hole space times is reviewed. Explicit computations of the quantum string entropy, partition function and quantum string emission by black holes (Schwarzschild, rotating, charged, asymptotically flat, de Sitter dS and AdS space times) in the framework of effective string theory in curved backgrounds provide an amount of new quantum gravity results as: (i) gravitational phase transitions appear with a distinctive universal feature: a square root branch point singularity in any space time dimensions. This is of the type of the de Vega - Sanchez transition for the thermal self-gravitating gas of point particles. (ii) There are no phase transitions in AdS alone. (iii) For dSdS background, upper bounds of the Hubble constant H are found, dictated by the quantum string phase transition.(iv) The Hawking temperature and the Hagedorn temperature are the same concept but in different (semiclassical and quantum) gravity regimes respectively. (v) The last stage of black hole evaporation is a microscopic string state with a finite string critical temperature which decays as usual quantum strings do in non-thermal pure quantum radiation (no information loss).(vi) New lower string bounds are given for the Kerr-Newman black hole angular momentum and charge, which are entirely different from the upper classical bounds. (vii) Semiclassical gravity states undergo a phase transition into quantum string states of the same system, these states are duals of each other in the precise sense of the usual classical-quantum (wave-particle) duality, which is universal irrespective of any symmetry or isommetry of the space-time and of the number or the kind of space-time dimensions.Comment: review paper, no figures. to appear in Int Jour Mod Phys
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