398 research outputs found
Charge- And Angle-correlated Inelasticities In Collisions Of Bare Fast Carbon Ions With Neon
We have studied the detailed energy balance in collisions of 10-MeV C6+ ions with Ne. In these collisions, the Ne is multiply ionized and the C ion may emerge as either C6+ or C5+. Projectile energy loss and scattering angle for a given carbon-ion charge state were determined in a high-resolution magnetic spectrograph and were measured in coincidence with the formation of a given Ne recoil-ion charge state. The amount of energy transferred to the continuum electrons exceeds, by far, the sum of the values of the ionization potentials. © 1988 The American Physical Society
Time-dependent screening of a positive charge distribution in metals: Excitons on an ultra-short time scale
Experiments determining the lifetime of excited electrons in crystalline
copper reveal states which cannot be interpreted as Bloch states [S. Ogawa {\it
et al.}, Phys. Rev. B {\bf 55}, 10869 (1997)]. In this article we propose a
model which explains these states as transient excitonic states in metals. The
physical background of transient excitons is the finite time a system needs to
react to an external perturbation, in other words, the time which is needed to
build up a polarization cloud. This process can be probed with modern
ultra-short laser pulses. We calculate the time-dependent density-response
function within the jellium model and for real Cu. From this knowledge it is
possible within linear response theory to calculate the time needed to screen a
positive charge distribution and -- on top of this -- to determine excitonic
binding energies. Our results lead to the interpretation of the experimentally
detected states as transient excitonic states.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. B, Nov. 15, 2000, issue
2
Plasmon Lifetime in K: A Case Study of Correlated Electrons in Solids Amenable to Ab Initio Theory
On the basis of a new ab initio, all-electron response scheme, formulated
within time-dependent density-functional theory, we solve the puzzle posed by
the anomalous dispersion of the plasmon linewidth in K. The key damping
mechanism is shown to be decay into particle-hole pairs involving empty states
of d-symmetry. While the effect of many-particle correlations is small, the
correlations built into the "final-state" -d-bands play an important, and
novel, role ---which is related to the phase-space complexity associated with
these flat bands. Our case study of plasmon lifetime in K illustrates the
importance of ab initio paradigms for the study of excitations in
correlated-electron systems.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, for html browsing see http://web.utk.edu/~weik
Role of spontaneous and sensory orexin network dynamics in rapid locomotion initiation.
Appropriate motor control is critical for normal life, and requires hypothalamic hypocretin/orexin neurons (HONs). HONs are slowly regulated by nutrients, but also display rapid (subsecond) activity fluctuations in vivo. The necessity of these activity bursts for sensorimotor control and their roles in specific phases of movement are unknown. Here we show that temporally-restricted optosilencing of spontaneous or sensory-evoked HON bursts disrupts locomotion initiation, but does not affect ongoing locomotion. Conversely, HON optostimulation initiates locomotion with subsecond delays in a frequency-dependent manner. Using 2-photon volumetric imaging of activity of >300 HONs during sensory stimulation and self-initiated locomotion, we identify several locomotion-related HON subtypes, which distinctly predict the probability of imminent locomotion initiation, display distinct sensory responses, and are differentially modulated by food deprivation. By causally linking HON bursts to locomotion initiation, these findings reveal the sensorimotor importance of rapid spontaneous and evoked fluctuations in HON ensemble activity
Effect of Semicore Orbitals on the Electronic Band Gaps of Si, Ge, and GaAs within the GW Approximation
We study the effect of semicore states on the self-energy corrections and
electronic energy gaps of silicon, germanium and GaAs. Self-energy effects are
computed within the GW approach, and electronic states are expanded in a
plane-wave basis. For these materials, we generate {\it ab initio}
pseudopotentials treating as valence states the outermost two shells of atomic
orbitals, rather than only the outermost valence shell as in traditional
pseudopotential calculations. The resulting direct and indirect energy gaps are
compared with experimental measurements and with previous calculations based on
pseudopotential and ``all-electron'' approaches. Our results show that,
contrary to recent claims, self-energy effects due to semicore states on the
band gaps can be well accounted for in the standard valence-only
pseudopotential formalism.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Many-body GW calculations of ground-state properties: Quasi-2D electron systems and van der Waals forces
We present GW many-body results for ground-state properties of two simple but very distinct families of inhomogeneous systems in which traditional implementations of density-functional theory (DFT) fail drastically. The GW approach gives notably better results than the well-known random-phase approximation, at a similar computational cost. These results establish GW as a superior alternative to standard DFT schemes without the expensive numerical effort required by quantum Monte Carlo simulations
Ionic and electronic structure of sodium clusters up to N=59
We determined the ionic and electronic structure of sodium clusters with even
electron numbers and 2 to 59 atoms in axially averaged and three-dimensional
density functional calculations. A local, phenomenological pseudopotential that
reproduces important bulk and atomic properties and facilitates structure
calculations has been developed. Photoabsorption spectra have been calculated
for , , and to
. The consistent inclusion of ionic structure considerably
improves agreement with experiment. An icosahedral growth pattern is observed
for to . This finding is supported by
photoabsorption data.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. B 62. Version with figures in better quality
can be requested from the author
Spectra and total energies from self-consistent many-body perturbation theory
With the aim of identifying universal trends, we compare fully self-consistent electronic spectra and total energies obtained from the GW approximation with those from an extended GW Gamma scheme that includes a nontrivial vertex function and the fundamentally distinct Bethe-Goldstone approach based on the T matrix. The self-consistent Green's function G, as derived from Dyson's equation, is used not only in the self-energy but also to construct the screened interaction W for a model system. For all approximations we observe a similar deterioration of the spectrum, which is not removed by vertex corrections. In particular, satellite peaks are systematically broadened and move closer to the chemical potential. The corresponding total energies are universally raised, independent of the system parameters. Our results, therefore, suggest that any improvement in total energy due to self-consistency, such as for the electron gas in the GW approximation, may be fortuitous. [S0163-1829 (98)05040-1]
Electronic structure of the MO oxides (M=Mg, Ca, Ti, V) in the GW approximation
The quasiparticle band structures of nonmagnetic monoxides, MO (M=Mg, Ca, Ti,
and V), are calculated by the GW approximation. The band gap and the width of
occupied oxygen 2p states in insulating MgO and CaO agree with experimental
observation. In metallic TiO and VO, conduction bands originated from metal 3d
states become narrower. Then the partial densities of transition metal e_g and
t_2g states show an enhanced dip between the two. The effects of static
screening and dynamical correlation are discussed in detail in comparison with
the results of the Hartree-Fock approximation and the static Coulomb hole plus
screened exchange approximation. The d-d Coulomb interaction is shown to be
very much reduced by on-site and off-site d-electron screening in TiO and VO.
The dielectric function and the energy loss spectrum are also presented and
discussed in detail.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
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