1,833 research outputs found
Transmission through a n interacting quantum dot in the Coulomb blockade regime
The influence of electron-electron (e-e) interactions on the transmission
through a quantum dot is investigated numerically for the Coulomb blockade
regime. For vanishing magnetic fields, the conductance peak height statistics
is found to be independent of the interactions strength. It is identical to the
statistics predicted by constant interaction single electron random matrix
theory and agrees well with recent experiments. However, in contrast to these
random matrix theories, our calculations reproduces the reduced sensitivity to
magnetic flux observed in many experiments. The relevant physics is traced to
the short range Coulomb correlations providing thus a unified explanation for
the transmission statistics as well as for the large conductance peak spacing
fluctuations observed in other experiments.Comment: Final version as publishe
Spatio-Temporal Low Count Processes with Application to Violent Crime Events
There is significant interest in being able to predict where crimes will
happen, for example to aid in the efficient tasking of police and other
protective measures. We aim to model both the temporal and spatial dependencies
often exhibited by violent crimes in order to make such predictions. The
temporal variation of crimes typically follows patterns familiar in time series
analysis, but the spatial patterns are irregular and do not vary smoothly
across the area. Instead we find that spatially disjoint regions exhibit
correlated crime patterns. It is this indeterminate inter-region correlation
structure along with the low-count, discrete nature of counts of serious crimes
that motivates our proposed forecasting tool. In particular, we propose to
model the crime counts in each region using an integer-valued first order
autoregressive process. We take a Bayesian nonparametric approach to flexibly
discover a clustering of these region-specific time series. We then describe
how to account for covariates within this framework. Both approaches adjust for
seasonality. We demonstrate our approach through an analysis of weekly reported
violent crimes in Washington, D.C. between 2001-2008. Our forecasts outperform
standard methods while additionally providing useful tools such as prediction
intervals
Spatial distribution of unidentified infrared bands and extended red emission in the compact galactic HII region Sh 152
We present visible and near IR images of the compact HII region Sh 152. Some
of these images reveal the presence of Extended Red Emission (ERE) around 698
nm and emission from Unidentified Infra Red Bands (UIRBs) at 3.3 and 6.2
micron. Other images show the near infrared (7-12 micron) continuous emission
of the nebula. The ERE emission is found to coincide with the ionized region
and significantly differ from the UIRBs location. Also some evidence is found
in favor of grains as carriers for ERE.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, to be published in the proceedings of the
colloquium "The universe as seen by ISO" help in Paris, October 20-23, 1998 ;
available in html format at http://www.obs-hp.fr/preprints.htm
Decay of Quasi-Particle in a Quantum Dot: the role of Energy Resolution
The disintegration of quasiparticle in a quantum dot due to the electron
interaction is considered. It was predicted recently that above the energy
\eps^{*} = \Delta(g/\ln g)^{1/2} each one particle peak in the spectrum is
split into many components ( and are the one particle level spacing
and conductance). We show that the observed value of \eps^{*} should depend
on the experimental resolution \delta \eps. In the broad region of variation
of \delta \eps the should be replaced by \ln(\Delta/ g\delta \eps).
We also give the arguments against the delocalization transition in the Fock
space. Most likely the number of satellite peaks grows continuously with
energy, being at \eps \sim \eps^{*}, but remains finite at \eps >
\eps^{*}. The predicted logarithmic distribution of inter-peak spacings may be
used for experimental confirmation of the below-Golden-Rule decay.Comment: 5 pages, REVTEX, 2 eps figures, version accepted for publication in
Phys. Rev. Let
Properties of low-lying states in a diffusive quantum dot and Fock-space localization
Motivated by an experiment by Sivan et al. (Europhys. Lett. 25, 605 (1994))
and by subsequent theoretical work on localization in Fock space, we study
numerically a hierarchical model for a finite many-body system of Fermions
moving in a disordered potential and coupled by a two-body interaction. We
focus attention on the low-lying states close to the Fermi energy. Both the
spreading width and the participation number depend smoothly on excitation
energy. This behavior is in keeping with naive expectations and does not
display Anderson localization. We show that the model reproduces essential
features of the experiment by Sivan et al.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Even-odd correlations in capacitance fluctuations of quantum dots
We investigate effects of short range interactions on the addition spectra of
quantum dots using a disordered Hubbard model. A correlation function \cS(q) is
defined on the inverse compressibility versus filling data, and computed
numerically for small lattices. Two regimes of interaction strength are
identified: the even/odd fluctuations regime typical of Fermi liquid ground
states, and a regime of structureless \cS(q) at strong interactions. We
propose to understand the latter regime in terms of magnetically correlated
localized spins.Comment: 3 pages, Revtex, Without figure
Energy Level Alignment at Molecule-Metal Interfaces from an Optimally-Tuned Range-Separated Hybrid Functional
The alignment of the frontier orbital energies of an adsorbed molecule with
the substrate Fermi level at metal-organic interfaces is a fundamental
observable of significant practical importance in nanoscience and beyond.
Typical density functional theory calculations, especially those using local
and semi-local functionals, often underestimate level alignment leading to
inaccurate electronic structure and charge transport properties. In this work,
we develop a new fully self-consistent predictive scheme to accurately compute
level alignment at certain classes of complex heterogeneous molecule-metal
interfaces based on optimally-tuned range-separated hybrid functionals.
Starting from a highly accurate description of the gas-phase electronic
structure, our method by construction captures important nonlocal surface
polarization effects via tuning of the long-range screened exchange in a
range-separated hybrid in a non-empirical and system-specific manner. We
implement this functional in a plane-wave code and apply it to several
physisorbed and chemisorbed molecule-metal interface systems. Our results are
in quantitative agreement with experiments, both the level alignment and work
function changes. Our approach constitutes a new practical scheme for accurate
and efficient calculations of the electronic structure of molecule-metal
interfaces.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figure
Calculation of dephasing times in closed quantum dots
Dephasing of one-particle states in closed quantum dots is analyzed within
the framework of random matrix theory and Master equation. Combination of this
analysis with recent experiments on the magnetoconductance allows for the first
time to evaluate the dephasing times of closed quantum dots. These dephasing
times turn out to depend on the mean level spacing and to be significantly
enhanced as compared with the case of open dots. Moreover, the experimental
data available are consistent with the prediction that the dephasing of
one-particle states in finite closed systems disappears at low enough energies
and temperatures.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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