22,001 research outputs found
Resummations in Hot Scalar Electrodynamics
The gauge-boson sector of perturbative scalar electrodynamics is investigated
in detail as a testing ground for resummation methods in hot gauge theories. It
also serves as a simple non-trivial reference system for the non-Abelian gluon
plasma. The complete next-to-leading order contributions to the polarization
tensor are obtained within the resummation scheme of Braaten and Pisarski. The
simpler scheme proposed recently by Arnold and Espinosa is shown to apply to
static quantities only, whereas Braaten-Pisarski resummation turns out to need
modification for collective phenomena close to the light-cone. Finally, a
recently proposed resummation of quasi-particle damping contributions is
assessed critically.Comment: 53 p. LaTeX, 7 figs. (2 in LaTeX, 5 EPS appended as uu-encoded file),
ITP-UH-01/94 & DESY 94-03
Renormalization of impurity scattering in one-dimensional interacting electron systems in magnetic field
We study the renormalization of a single impurity potential in
one-dimensional interacting electron systems in the presence of magnetic field.
Using the bosonization technique and Bethe ansatz solutions, we determine the
renormalization group flow diagram for the amplitudes of scattering of up- and
down-spin electrons by the impurity in a quantum wire at low electron density
and in the Hubbard model at less than half filling. In the absence of magnetic
field the repulsive interactions are known to enhance backscattering and make
the impurity potential impenetrable in the low-energy limit. On the contrary,
we show that in a strong magnetic field the interaction may suppress the
backscattering of majority-spin electrons by the impurity potential in the
vicinity of the weak-potential fixed point. This implies that in a certain
temperature range the impurity becomes almost transparent for the majority-spin
electrons while it is impenetrable for the minority-spin ones. The impurity
potential can thus have a strong spin-filtering effect.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures; v2: a typo corrected and a reference added; v3:
published version, Sec.II revised with an additional explanatory subsection,
comments on the case of more than half-filling added, typos corrected, a
reference update
Third edge for a graphene nanoribbon: A tight-binding model calculation
The electronic and transport properties of an extended linear defect embedded
in a zigzag nanoribbon of realistic width are studied, within a tight binding
model approach. Our results suggest that such defect profoundly modify the
properties of the nanoribbon, introducing new conductance quantization values
and modifying the conductance quantization thresholds. The linear defect along
the nanoribbon behaves as an effective third edge of the system, which shows a
metallic behavior, giving rise to new conduction pathways that could be used in
nanoscale circuitry as a quantum wire.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures. Two new figures and a few references adde
High-Resolution X-ray Spectroscopy of the Interstellar Medium: Structure at the Oxygen Absorption Edge
(Abbrev.) We present high-resolution spectroscopy of the oxygen K-shell
interstellar absorption edge in 7 X-ray binaries using the HETGS onboard
Chandra. Using the brightest sources as templates, we found a best-fit model of
2 absorption edges and 5 Gaussian absorption lines. All of these features can
be explained by the recent predictions of K-shell absorption from neutral and
ionized atomic oxygen. We identify the K alpha and K beta absorption lines from
neutral oxygen, as well as the S=3/2 absorption edge. The expected S=1/2 edge
is not detected in these data due to overlap with instrumental features. We
also identify the K alpha absorption lines from singly and doubly ionized
oxygen. The OI K alpha absorption line is used as a benchmark with which to
adjust the absolute wavelength scale for theoretical predictions of the
absorption cross-sections. We find that shifts of 30-50 mA are required,
consistent with differences previously noticed from comparisons of the theory
with laboratory measurements. Significant oxygen features from dust or
molecular components, as suggested in previous studies, are not required by our
HETGS spectra. With these spectra, we can begin to measure the large-scale
properties of the ISM. We place a limit on the velocity dispersion of the
neutral lines of <200 km s^{-1}, consistent with measurements at other
wavelengths. We also make the first measurement of the oxygen ionization
fractions in the ISM. We constrain the interstellar ratio of OII/OI to ~0.1 and
the ratio of OIII/OI to <0.1.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal (Vol. 612, September 1 issue
Finite-Temperature Charge-Ordering Transition and Fluctuation Effects in Quasi-One-Dimensional Electron Systems at Quarter Filling
Finite-temperature charge-ordering phase transition in quasi one-dimensional
(1D) molecular conductors is investigated theoretically, based on a quasi 1D
extended Hubbard model at quarter filling with interchain Coulomb repulsion
. The interchain term is treated within mean-field approximation
whereas the 1D fluctuations in the chains are fully taken into account by the
bosonization theory. Three regions are found depending on how the charge
ordered state appears at finite temperature when is introduced:
(i) weak-coupling region where the system transforms from a metal to a charge
ordered insulator with finite transition temperature at a finite critical value
of ,
(ii) an intermediate region where this transition occurs by infinitesimal
due to the stability of inherent 1D fluctuation, and
(iii) strong-coupling region where the charge ordered state is realized
already in the purely 1D case, of which the transition temperature becomes
finite with infinitesimal . Analytical formula for the
dependence of the transition temperature is derived for each region.Comment: 4 pages, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp
A Frustrated 3-Dimensional Antiferromagnet: Stacked Layers
We study a frustrated 3D antiferromagnet of stacked layers. The
intermediate 'quantum spin liquid' phase, present in the 2D case, narrows with
increasing interlayer coupling and vanishes at a triple point. Beyond this
there is a direct first-order transition from N{\' e}el to columnar order.
Possible applications to real materials are discussed.Comment: 11 pages,7 figure
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An efficient route to 1,3,5-triazido-2,4,6-tricyanobenzene
An efficient synthetic route starting from 1,3,5-trimethylbenzene is described for binary 1,3,5- triazido-2,4,6-tricyanobenzene. Besides 1,3,5-triazido-2,4,6-tricyanobenzene, all intermediates have been isolated and fully characterized
Handling and analysis of ices in cryostats and glove boxes in view of cometary samples
Comet nucleus sample return mission and other return missions from planets and satellites need equipment for handling and analysis of icy samples at low temperatures under vacuum or protective gas. Two methods are reported which were developed for analysis of small icy samples and which are modified for larger samples in cometary matter simulation experiments (KOSI). A conventional optical cryostat system was modified to allow for transport of samples at 5 K, ion beam irradiation, and measurement in an off-line optical spectrophotometer. The new system consists of a removable window plug containing nozzles for condensation of water and volatiles onto a cold finger. This plug can be removed in a vacuum system, changed against another plug (e.g., with other windows (IR, VIS, VUV) or other nozzles). While open, the samples can be treated under vacuum with cooling by manipulators (cut, removal, sample taking, irradiation with light, photons, or ions). After bringing the plug back, the samples can be moved to another site of analysis. For handling the 30 cm diameter mineral-ice samples from the KOSI experiments an 80x80x80 cm glove box made out of plexiglass was used. The samples were kept in a liquid nitrogen bath, which was filled from the outside. A stream a dry N2 and evaporating gas from the bath purified the glove box from impurity gases and, in particular, H2O, which otherwise would condense onto the samples
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