3,216 research outputs found
SET based experiments for HTSC materials: II
The cuprates seem to exhibit statistics, dimensionality and phase transitions
in novel ways. The nature of excitations
[i.e. quasiparticle or collective], spin-charge separation, stripes [static
and dynamics], inhomogeneities, psuedogap, effect of impurity dopings [e.g. Zn,
Ni] and any other phenomenon in these materials must be consistently
understood. In this note we further discuss our original suggestion of using
Single Electron Tunneling Transistor
[SET] based experiments to understand the role of charge dynamics in these
systems. Assuming that SET operates as an efficient charge detection system we
can expect to understand the underlying physics of charge transport and charge
fluctuations in these materials for a range of doping. Experiments such as
these can be classed in a general sense as mesoscopic and nano characterization
of cuprates and related materials. In principle such experiments can show if
electron is fractionalized in cuprates as indicated by ARPES data. In contrast
to flux trapping experiments SET based experiments are more direct in providing
evidence about spin-charge separation. In addition a detailed picture of nano
charge dynamics in cuprates may be obtained.Comment: 10 pages revtex plus four figures; ICMAT 2001 Conference Symposium P:
P10-0
Multi-scale Renormalisation Group Improvement of the Effective Potential
Using the renormalisation group and a conjecture concerning the perturbation
series for the effective potential, the leading logarithms in the effective
potential are exactly summed for scalar and Yukawa theories.Comment: 19 pages, DIAS STP 94-09. Expanded to check large N limit, typo's
corrected, to appear in Phys Rev
The Anomalous Magnetic Moment of the Muon and Higgs-Mediated Flavor Changing Neutral Currents
In the two-Higgs doublet extension of the standard model, flavor-changing
neutral couplings arise naturally. In the lepton sector, the largest such
coupling is expected to be $\mu-\tau-\phi#. We consider the effects of this
coupling on the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon. The resulting bound on
the coupling, unlike previous bounds, is independent of the value of other
unknown couplings. It will be significantly improved by the upcoming E821
experiment at Brookhaven National Lab.Comment: 7 pages Latex, 2 figure
Band gap and band parameters of InN and GaN from quasiparticle energy calculations based on exact-exchange density-functional theory
We have studied the electronic structure of InN and GaN employing G0W0
calculations based on exact-exchange density-functional theory. For InN our
approach predicts a gap of 0.7 eV. Taking the Burnstein-Moss effect into
account, the increase of the apparent quasiparticle gap with increasing
electron concentration is in good agreement with the observed blue shift of the
experimental optical absorption edge. Moreover, the concentration dependence of
the effective mass, which results from the non-parabolicity of the conduction
band, agrees well with recent experimental findings. Based on the quasiparticle
band structure the parameter set for a 4x4 kp Hamiltonian has been derived.Comment: 3 pages including 3 figures; related publications can be found at
http://www.fhi-berlin.mpg.de/th/th.htm
Production, Collection and Utilization of Very Long-Lived Heavy Charged Leptons
If a fourth generation of leptons exists, both the neutrino and its charged
partner must be heavier than 45 GeV. We suppose that the neutrino is the
heavier of the two, and that a global or discrete symmetry prohibits
intergenerational mixing. In that case, non-renormalizable Planck scale
interactions will induce a very small mixing; dimension five interactions will
lead to a lifetime for the heavy charged lepton of years. Production
of such particles is discussed, and it is shown that a few thousands can be
produced and collected at a linear collider. The possible uses of these heavy
leptons is also briefly discussed.Comment: 9 pages Late
Holographic Electroweak Symmetry Breaking from D-branes
We observe several interesting phenomena in a technicolor-like model of
electroweak symmetry breaking based on the D4-D8-D8bar system of Sakai and
Sugimoto. The benefit of holographic models based on D-brane configurations is
that both sides of the holographic duality are well understood. We find that
the lightest technicolor resonances contribute negatively to the
Peskin-Takeuchi S-parameter, but heavy resonances do not decouple and lead
generically to large, positive values of S, consistent with standard estimates
in QCD-like theories. We study how the S parameter and the masses and decay
constants of the vector and axial-vector techni-resonances vary over a
one-parameter family of D8-brane configurations. We discuss possibilities for
the consistent truncation of the theory to the first few resonances and suggest
some generic predictions of stringy holographic technicolor models.Comment: REVTeX, 25 pages, 8 eps figures, version published in PR
Tree-unitarity bounds for THDM Higgs masses revisited
We have reconsidered theoretical upper bounds on the scalar boson masses
within the two-Higgs-doublet model (THDM), employing the well-known technical
condition of tree-level unitarity. Our treatment provides a modest extension
and generalization of some previous results of other authors. We present a
rather detailed discussion of the solution of the relevant inequalities and
offer some new analytic formulae as well as numerical values for the Higgs mass
bounds in question. A comparison is made with the earlier results on the
subject that can be found in the literature.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures; correction to typos; will appear in Eur. Phys.
J.
Power-law carrier dynamics in semiconductor nanocrystals at nanosecond time scales
We report the observation of power law dynamics on nanosecond to microsecond
time scales in the fluorescence decay from semiconductor nanocrystals, and draw
a comparison between this behavior and power-law fluorescence blinking from
single nanocrystals. The link is supported by comparison of blinking and
lifetime data measured simultaneously from the same nanocrystal. Our results
reveal that the power law coefficient changes little over the nine decades in
time from 10 ns to 10 s, in contrast with the predictions of some diffusion
based models of power law behavior.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, compressed for submission to Applied Physics
Letter
Triple gauge vertices at one-loop level in THDM
Renormalized triple gauge vertices (TGV) are examined within the
two-Higgs-doublet model of electroweak interactions. Deviations of the TGV from
their standard-model values are calculated at the one-loop level, in the
on-shell renormalization scheme. As a consistency check, UV divergence
cancellations anticipated on symmetry grounds are verified explicitly.
Dependence of the TGV finite parts on the masses of possible heavy Higgs
scalars is discussed briefly.Comment: 10pages, 13figure
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