3,022 research outputs found
Weak localization of bulk channels in topological insulator thin film
Weak antilocalization (WAL) is expected whenever strong spin-orbit coupling
or scattering comes into play. Spin-orbit coupling in the bulk states of a
topological insulator is very strong, enough to result in the topological phase
transition. However, the recently observed WAL in topological insulators seems
to have an ambiguous origin from the bulk states. Starting from the effective
model for three-dimensional topological insulators, we find that the lowest
two-dimensional (2D) bulk subbands of a topological insulator thin film can be
described by the modified massive Dirac model. We derive the
magnetoconductivity formula for both the 2D bulk subbands and surface bands.
Because with Relatively large gap, the 2D bulk subbands may lie in the regimes
where the unitary behavior or even weak localization (WL) is also expected,
instead of always WAL. As a result, the bulk states may contribute small
magnetoconductivity or even compensate the WAL from the surface states.
Inflection in magnetoconductivity curves may appear when the bulk WL channels
outnumber the surface WAL channels, providing a signature of the weak
localization from the bulk states.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
A complete FFT-based decomposition formalism for the redshift-space bispectrum
To fully extract cosmological information from nonlinear galaxy distribution
in redshift space, it is essential to include higher-order statistics beyond
the two-point correlation function. In this paper, we propose a new
decomposition formalism for computing the anisotropic bispectrum in redshift
space and for measuring it from galaxy samples. Our formalism uses tri-polar
spherical harmonic decomposition with zero total angular momentum to compress
the 3D modes distribution in the redshift-space bispectrum. This approach
preserves three fundamental properties of the Universe: statistical
homogeneity, isotropy, and parity-symmetry, allowing us to efficiently separate
the anisotropic signal induced by redshift-space distortions (RSDs) and the
Alcock-Paczy\'{n}ski (AP) effect from the isotropic bispectrum. The relevant
expansion coefficients in terms of the anisotropic signal are reduced to one
multipole index , and the modes are induced only by the RSD or AP
effects. Our formalism has two advantages: (1) we can make use of Fast Fourier
Transforms (FFTs) to measure the bispectrum; (2) it gives a simple expression
to correct for the survey geometry, i.e., the survey window function. As a
demonstration, we measure the decomposed bispectrum from the Baryon Oscillation
Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) Data Release 12, and, for the first time, present a
detection of the anisotropic bispectrum in the mode.Comment: 23 pages, 13 figure
The Glashow resonance as a discriminator of UHE cosmic neutrinos originating from p-gamma and p-p collisions
We re-examine the interesting possibility of utilizing the Glashow resonance
(GR) channel nu_ebar + e^- to W^- to anything to discriminate between the UHE
cosmic neutrinos originating from p-gamma and pp collisions in an optically
thin source of cosmic rays. We propose a general parametrization of the initial
neutrino flavor composition by allowing the ratios Phi^{p gamma}_{pi^-}/Phi^{p
gamma}_{pi^+} and Phi^{pp}_{pi^-}/Phi^{pp}_{pi^+} to slightly deviate from
their conventional values. A relationship between the typical source parameter
kappa = (Phi^{p gamma}_{pi^+} + Phi^{p gamma}_{pi^-})/(Phi^{pp}_{pi^+} +
Phi^{pp}_{pi^-} + Phi^{p gamma}_{pi^+} + Phi^{p gamma}_{pi^-}) and the working
observable of the GR R_0 = Phi^T_{nu_ebar}/ (Phi^T_{nu_mu} + Phi^T_{nu_mu}) at
a neutrino telescope is derived, and the numerical dependence of R_0 on kappa
is illustrated by taking account of the latest experimental data on three
neutrino mixing angles. It is shown that a measurement of R_0 is in principle
possible to identify the pure p-gamma interaction (kappa =1), the pure pp
interaction (kappa =0) or a mixture of both of them (0 < kappa < 1) at a given
source of UHE cosmic neutrinos. The event rate of the GR signal against the
background is also estimated.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, final version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Supernova bound on keV-mass sterile neutrinos reexamined
Active-sterile neutrino mixing is strongly constrained for m_s > 100 keV to
avoid excessive energy losses from supernova cores. For smaller m_s, matter
effects suppress the effective mixing angle except for a resonant range of
energies where it is enhanced. We study the case of \nu_tau-\nu_s-mixing where
a \nu_tau-\bar\nu_tau asymmetry builds up due to the strong excess of \nu_s
over \bar\nu_s emission or vice versa, reducing the overall emission rate. In
the warm dark matter range m_s < 10 keV the mixing angle is essentially
unconstrained.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; minor changes, references updated, matches the
published versio
Using spin bias to manipulate and measure quantum spin in quantum dots
A double-quantum-dot coupled to electrodes with spin-dependent splitting of
chemical potentials (spin bias) is investigated theoretically by means of the
Green's functions formalism. By applying a large spin bias, the quantum spin in
a quantum dot (the dot 1) can be manipulated in a fully electrical manner. To
noninvasively monitor the manipulation of the quantum spin in the dot 1, it is
proposed that the second quantum dot (the dot 2) is weakly coupled to the dot
1. In the presence of the exchange interaction between the two dots, the
polarized spin in the dot 1 behaves like an effective magnetic field and weakly
polarizes the spin in the nearby quantum dot 2. By applying a very small spin
bias to the dot 2, the spin-dependent transport through the dot 2 can be
probed, allowing the spin polarization in the dot 1 to be identified
nondestructively. These two steps form a complete scheme to manipulate a
trapped spin while permitting this manipulation to be monitored in the
double-dot system using pure electric approaches
State Concentration Exponent as a Measure of Quickness in Kauffman-type Networks
We study the dynamics of randomly connected networks composed of binary
Boolean elements and those composed of binary majority vote elements. We
elucidate their differences in both sparsely and densely connected cases. The
quickness of large network dynamics is usually quantified by the length of
transient paths, an analytically intractable measure. For discrete-time
dynamics of networks of binary elements, we address this dilemma with an
alternative unified framework by using a concept termed state concentration,
defined as the exponent of the average number of t-step ancestors in state
transition graphs. The state transition graph is defined by nodes corresponding
to network states and directed links corresponding to transitions. Using this
exponent, we interrogate the dynamics of random Boolean and majority vote
networks. We find that extremely sparse Boolean networks and majority vote
networks with arbitrary density achieve quickness, owing in part to long-tailed
in-degree distributions. As a corollary, only relatively dense majority vote
networks can achieve both quickness and robustness.Comment: 6 figure
Spin resolved Hall effect driven by spin-orbit coupling
Spin and electric Hall currents are calculated numerically in a
two-dimensional mesoscopic system with Rashba and Dresselhaus spin-orbit
coupling by means of the Landauer-Buttiker formalism. It is found that both
electric and spin Hall currents circulate when two spin-orbit couplings
coexist, while the electric Hall conductance vanishes if either one is absent.
The electric and spin Hall conductances are suppressed in strong disorder, but
survive in weak disorder. Physically it can be understood that the spinomotive
transverse "force" generated by spin-orbit coupling is responsible for the
formation of the spin Hall current and the lack of transverse reflection
symmetry is the origin of the electric Hall current.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
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