14,970 research outputs found

    Itinerant-electron Ferromagnetism in W(Nb)O3-d

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    The crystal structure and the magnetic properties of the W1-xNbxO3-d, (x<0.03) system have been investigated. In contrast to the orthorhombic diamagnetic WO3, the material with x=0.01 is paramagnetic down to 5 K. Introducing of 2.5 at. % of Nb into WO3 leads to a tetragonal structure and to a weak itinerant ferromagnetic ordering below TC= 225 K. The saturation magnetic moment at 5 K is 1.07*10-3 mB, whereas the paramagnetic effective moment is 0.06 mB per mole. This high ratio indicates itinerant ferromagnetism in W0.975Nb0.025O3-d.Comment: accepted to Physica

    Donor binding energy and thermally activated persistent photoconductivity in high mobility (001) AlAs quantum wells

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    A doping series of AlAs (001) quantum wells with Si delta-modulation doping on both sides reveals different dark and post-illumination saturation densities, as well as temperature dependent photoconductivity. The lower dark two-dimensional electron density saturation is explained assuming deep binding energy of Delta_DK = 65.2 meV for Si-donors in the dark. Persistent photoconductivity (PPC) is observed upon illumination, with higher saturation density indicating shallow post-illumination donor binding energy. The photoconductivity is thermally activated, with 4 K illumination requiring post-illumination annealing to T = 30 K to saturate the PPC. Dark and post-illumination doping efficiencies are reported.Comment: The values of binding energy changed from previous versions because of a better understanding for the dielectric permittivity. Also, the Gamma - X donor states are better explaine

    Precision Spectroscopy of Molecular Hydrogen Ions: Towards Frequency Metrology of Particle Masses

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    We describe the current status of high-precision ab initio calculations of the spectra of molecular hydrogen ions (H_2^+ and HD^+) and of two experiments for vibrational spectroscopy. The perspectives for a comparison between theory and experiment at a level of 1 ppb are considered.Comment: 26 pages, 13 figures, 1 table, to appear in "Precision Physics of Simple Atomic Systems", Lecture Notes in Physics, Springer, 200

    Electromechanical Reliability Testing of Three-Axial Silicon Force Sensors

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    This paper reports on the systematic electromechanical characterization of a new three-axial force sensor used in dimensional metrology of micro components. The siliconbased sensor system consists of piezoresistive mechanicalstress transducers integrated in thin membrane hinges supporting a suspended flexible cross structure. The mechanical behavior of the fragile micromechanical structure isanalyzed for both static and dynamic load cases. This work demonstrates that the silicon microstructure withstands static forces of 1.16N applied orthogonally to the front-side of the structure. A statistical Weibull analysis of the measured data shows that these values are significantly reduced if the normal force is applied to the back of the sensor. Improvements of the sensor system design for future development cycles are derived from the measurement results.Comment: Submitted on behalf of TIMA Editions (http://irevues.inist.fr/tima-editions

    In-Medium Similarity Renormalization Group with Chiral Two- Plus Three-Nucleon Interactions

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    We use the recently proposed In-Medium Similarity Renormalization Group (IM-SRG) to carry out a systematic study of closed-shell nuclei up to \nuc{Ni}{56}, based on chiral two- plus three-nucleon interactions. We analyze the capabilities of the IM-SRG by comparing our results for the ground-state energy to Coupled Cluster calculations, as well as to quasi-exact results from the Importance-Truncated No-Core Shell Model. Using chiral two- plus three-nucleon Hamiltonians whose resolution scales are lowered by free-space SRG evolution, we obtain good agreement with experimental binding energies in \nuc{He}{4} and the closed-shell oxygen isotopes, while the calcium and nickel isotopes are somewhat overbound.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Non-Fermi-liquid scattering rates and anomalous band dispersion in ferropnictides

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    Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) is used to study the band dispersion and the quasiparticle scattering rates in two ferropnictides systems. Our ARPES results show linear-in-energy dependent scattering rates which are constant in a wide range of control parameter and which depend on the orbital character of the bands. We demonstrate that the linear energy dependence gives rise to weakly dispersing band with a strong mass enhancement when the band maximum crosses the chemical potential. In the superconducting phase the related small effective Fermi energy favors a Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS)\,\cite{Bardeen1957}-Bose-Einstein (BE)\,\cite{Bose1924} crossover state.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures Supplement 4 pages, 6 figure

    Experimentally exploring compressed sensing quantum tomography

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    In the light of the progress in quantum technologies, the task of verifying the correct functioning of processes and obtaining accurate tomographic information about quantum states becomes increasingly important. Compressed sensing, a machinery derived from the theory of signal processing, has emerged as a feasible tool to perform robust and significantly more resource-economical quantum state tomography for intermediate-sized quantum systems. In this work, we provide a comprehensive analysis of compressed sensing tomography in the regime in which tomographically complete data is available with reliable statistics from experimental observations of a multi-mode photonic architecture. Due to the fact that the data is known with high statistical significance, we are in a position to systematically explore the quality of reconstruction depending on the number of employed measurement settings, randomly selected from the complete set of data, and on different model assumptions. We present and test a complete prescription to perform efficient compressed sensing and are able to reliably use notions of model selection and cross-validation to account for experimental imperfections and finite counting statistics. Thus, we establish compressed sensing as an effective tool for quantum state tomography, specifically suited for photonic systems.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure

    Nearest-neighbour Attraction Stabilizes Staggered Currents in the 2D Hubbard Model

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    Using a strong-coupling approach, we show that staggered current vorticity does not obtain in the repulsive 2D Hubbard model for large on-site Coulomb interactions, as in the case of the copper oxide superconductors. This trend also persists even when nearest-neighbour repulsions are present. However, staggered flux ordering emerges {\bf only} when attractive nearest-neighbour Coulomb interactions are included. Such ordering opens a gap along the (π,0)(0,π)(\pi,0)-(0,\pi) direction and persists over a reasonable range of doping.Comment: 5 pages with 5 .eps files (Typos in text are corrected

    A Quantum Monte Carlo Method and Its Applications to Multi-Orbital Hubbard Models

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    We present a framework of an auxiliary field quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) method for multi-orbital Hubbard models. Our formulation can be applied to a Hamiltonian which includes terms for on-site Coulomb interaction for both intra- and inter-orbitals, intra-site exchange interaction and energy differences between orbitals. Based on our framework, we point out possible ways to investigate various phase transitions such as metal-insulator, magnetic and orbital order-disorder transitions without the minus sign problem. As an application, a two-band model is investigated by the projection QMC method and the ground state properties of this model are presented.Comment: 10 pages LaTeX including 2 PS figures, to appear in J.Phys.Soc.Jp

    Phase transitions in spin-orbital coupled model for pyroxene titanium oxides

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    We study the competing phases and the phase transition phenomena in an effective spin-orbital coupled model derived for pyroxene titanium oxides ATiSi2O6 (A=Na, Li). Using the mean-field-type analysis and the numerical quantum transfer matrix method, we show that the model exhibits two different ordered states, the spin-dimer and orbital-ferro state and the spin-ferro and orbital-antiferro state. The transition between two phases is driven by the relative strength of the Hund's-rule coupling to the onsite Coulomb repulsion and/or by the external magnetic field. The ground-state phase diagram is determined. There is a keen competition between orbital and spin degrees of freedom in the multicritical regime, which causes large fluctuations and significantly affects finite-temperature properties in the paramagnetic phase.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, proceedings submitted to SPQS200
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