9,515 research outputs found

    Why is the bulk resistivity of topological insulators so small?

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    As-grown topological insulators (TIs) are typically heavily-doped nn-type crystals. Compensation by acceptors is used to move the Fermi level to the middle of the band gap, but even then TIs have a frustratingly small bulk resistivity. We show that this small resistivity is the result of band bending by poorly screened fluctuations in the random Coulomb potential. Using numerical simulations of a completely compensated TI, we find that the bulk resistivity has an activation energy of just 0.15 times the band gap, in good agreement with experimental data. At lower temperatures activated transport crosses over to variable range hopping with a relatively large localization length.Comment: 4+ pages, 3 figures; published versio

    Populations of Pear Thrips, \u3ci\u3eTaeniothrips Inconsequens\u3c/i\u3e (Thysanoptera: Thripidae) in Sugar Maple Stands in Vermont: 1989-2005

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    Development of an effective IPM strategy for pear thrips, Taeniothrips inconsequens (Uzel) (Thysanoptera: Thripidae), a pest of sugar maple, Acer saccharum Marshall, demands an understanding of their population fluctuations over time. Pear thrips populations were monitored using a standardized soil sampling method every fall from 1989 – 2005 in 14 counties of Vermont (U.S.). Data from individual sites were combined into north, central and south regions. High numbers of thrips emerged from soil sampled in 1989, 1990, 1993 and 2001, particularly in the north region (Washington, Lamoille, and Franklin counties). The central and south regions had lower pear thrips populations over all years. These results provide, for the first time, fundamental knowledge of pear thrips populations across a wide geographical area of Vermont and will assist in the design of suitable control strategies for pear thrips in the future

    A Rich Population of X-ray Emitting Wolf-Rayet Stars in the Galactic Starburst Cluster Westerlund 1

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    Recent optical and IR studies have revealed that the heavily-reddened starburst cluster Westerlund 1 (Wd 1) contains at least 22 Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars, comprising the richest WR population of any galactic cluster. We present results of a senstive Chandra X-ray observation of Wd 1 which detected 12 of the 22 known WR stars and the mysterious emission line star W9. The fraction of detected WN stars is nearly identical to that of WC stars. The WN stars WR-A and WR-B as well as W9 are exceptionally luminous in X-rays and have similar hard heavily-absorbed spectra with strong Si XIII and S XV emission lines. The luminous high-temperature X-ray emission of these three stars is characteristic of colliding wind binary systems but their binary status remains to be determined. Spectral fits of the X-ray bright sources WR-A and W9 with isothermal plane-parallel shock models require high absorption column densities log NH_{H} = 22.56 (cm−2^{-2}) and yield characteristic shock temperatures kT_shock ~ 3 keV (T ~ 35 MK).Comment: ApJL, 2006, in press (3 figures, 1 table

    Anomalously large capacitance of a plane capacitor with a two-dimensional electron gas

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    In electronic devices where a two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) comprises one or both sides of a plane capacitor, the resulting capacitance CC can be larger than the "geometric capacitance" CgC_g determined by the physical separation dd between electrodes. This larger capacitance is known to result from the Coulomb correlations between individual electrons within the low density 2DEG, which lead to a negative thermodynamic density of states (negative compressibility). Experiments on such systems generally operate in the regime where the average spacing between electrons n−1/2n^{-1/2} in the 2DEG is smaller than dd, and these experiments observe C>CgC > C_g by only a few percent. A recent experiment [1], however, has observed CC larger than CgC_g by almost 40% while operating in the regime nd2<<1nd^2 << 1. In this paper we argue that at nd2<<1nd^2 << 1 correlations between the electronic charge of opposite electrodes become important. We develop a theory of the capacitance for the full range of nd2nd^2. We show that, in the absence of disorder, the capacitance can be 4d/a4d/a times larger than the geometric value, where a<<da << d is the electron Bohr radius. Our results compare favorably with the experiment of Ref. [1] without the use of adjustable parameters.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures; revised discussion of the zero density limit; some typos fixe

    Coulomb gap triptychs, 2\sqrt{2} effective charge, and hopping transport in periodic arrays of superconductor grains

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    In granular superconductors, individual grains can contain bound Cooper pairs while the system as a whole is strongly insulating. In such cases the conductivity is determined by electron hopping between localized states in individual grains. Here we examine a model of hopping conductivity in such an insulating granular superconductor, where disorder is assumed to be provided by random charges embedded in the insulating gaps between grains. We use computer simulations to calculate the single-electron and electron pair density of states at different values of the superconducting gap Δ\Delta, and we identify "triptych" symmetries and scaling relations between them. At a particular critical value of Δ\Delta, one can define an effective charge 2e\sqrt{2}e that characterizes the density of states and the hopping transport. We discuss the implications of our results for magnetoresistance and tunneling experiments.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure

    Ionic conductivity on a wetting surface

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    Recent experiments measuring the electrical conductivity of DNA molecules highlight the need for a theoretical model of ion transport along a charged surface. Here we present a simple theory based on the idea of unbinding of ion pairs. The strong humidity dependence of conductivity is explained by the decrease in the electrostatic self-energy of a separated pair when a layer of water (with high dielectric constant) is adsorbed to the surface. We compare our prediction for conductivity to experiment, and discuss the limits of its applicability.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; one section and two illustrations added; figures updated and discussion added; typo fixe

    Coulomb gap in the one-particle density of states in three-dimensional systems with localized electrons

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    The one-particle density of states (1P-DOS) in a system with localized electron states vanishes at the Fermi level due to the Coulomb interaction between electrons. Derivation of the Coulomb gap uses stability criteria of the ground state. The simplest criterion is based on the excitonic interaction of an electron and a hole and leads to a quadratic 1P-DOS in the three-dimensional (3D) case. In 3D, higher stability criteria, including two or more electrons, were predicted to exponentially deplete the 1P-DOS at energies close enough to the Fermi level. In this paper we show that there is a range of intermediate energies where this depletion is strongly compensated by the excitonic interaction between single-particle excitations, so that the crossover from quadratic to exponential behavior of the 1P-DOS is retarded. This is one of the reasons why such exponential depletion was never seen in computer simulations.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figur
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