59,647 research outputs found
The ubiquitous 1100 charge ordering in organic charge-transfer solids
Charge and spin-orderings in the 1/4-filled organic CT solids are of strong
interest, especially in view of their possible relations to organic
superconductivity. We show that the charge order (CO) in both 1D and 2D CT
solids is of the ...1100... type, in contradiction to mean field prediction of
>...1010... CO. We present detailed computations for metal-insulator and
magnetic insulator-insulator transitions in the theta-ET materials. Complete
agreement with experiments in several theta systems is found. Similar
comparisons between theory and experiments in TCNQ, TMTTF, TMTSF, and ET
materials prove the ubiquity of this phenomenon.Comment: 3 pages, 4 eps figures; ICSM 200
Electrode thickness measurement of a Si(Li) detector for the SIXA array
Cathode electrodes of the Si(Li) detector elements of the SIXA X-ray
spectrometer array are formed by gold-palladium alloy contact layers. The
equivalent thickness of gold in one element was measured by observing the
characteristic L-shell X-rays of gold excited by monochromatised synchrotron
radiation with photon energies above the L3 absorption edge of gold. The
results obtained at 4 different photon energies below the L2 edge yield an
average value of 22.4(35) nm which is consistent with the earlier result
extracted from detection efficiency measurements.
PACS: 29.40.Wk; 85.30.De; 07.85.Nc; 95.55.Ka
Keywords: Si(Li) detectors, X-ray spectrometers, X-ray fluorescence, detector
calibration, gold electrodes, synchrotron radiationComment: 10 pages, 4 PostScript figures, uses elsart.sty, submitted to Nucl.
Instrum. Meth.
Investigation of a 2-Colour Undulator FEL Using Puffin
Initial studies of a 2-colour FEL amplifier using one monoenergetic electron
beam are presented. The interaction is modelled using the unaveraged, broadband
FEL code Puffin. A series of undulator modules are tuned to generate two
resonant frequencies along the FEL interaction and a self-consistent 2-colour
FEL interaction at widely spaced non-harmonic wavelengths at 1nm and 2.4nm is
demonstrated.Comment: Submitted to The 35th International Free-Electron Laser Conference,
Manhattan, New York (2013
Gluon fusion contribution to W+W- + jet production
We describe the computation of the process that contributes
to the production of two -bosons and a jet at the CERN Large Hadron Collider
(LHC). While formally of next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) in QCD, this
process can be evaluated separately from the bulk of NNLO QCD corrections
because it is finite and gauge-invariant. It is also enhanced by the large
gluon flux and by selection cuts employed in the Higgs boson searches in the
decay channel , as was first pointed out by Binoth {\it et al.}
in the context of production. For cuts employed by the ATLAS
collaboration, we find that the gluon fusion contribution to
enhances the background by about ten percent and can lead to moderate
distortions of kinematic distributions which are instrumental for the ongoing
Higgs boson searches at the LHC. We also release a public code to compute the
NLO QCD corrections to this process, in the form of an add-on to the package
{\tt MCFM}.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, 3 table
Parton Distributions for Event Generators
In this paper, conventional Global QCD analysis is generalized to produce
parton distributions optimized for use with event generators at the LHC. This
optimization is accomplished by combining the constraints due to existing
hard-scattering experimental data with those from anticipated cross sections
for key representative SM processes at LHC (by the best available theory) as
joint input to the global analyses. The PDFs obtained in these new type of
global analyses using matrix elements calculated in any given order will be
best suited to work with event generators of that order, for predictions at the
LHC. This is most useful for LO event generators at present. Results obtained
from a few candidate PDF sets (labeled as CT09MCS, CT09MC1 and CT09MC2) for LO
event generators produced in this way are compared with those from other
approaches.Comment: 35 pages, 19 figures, and 4 table
A rapidly expanding Bose-Einstein condensate: an expanding universe in the lab
We study the dynamics of a supersonically expanding ring-shaped Bose-Einstein
condensate both experimentally and theoretically. The expansion redshifts
long-wavelength excitations, as in an expanding universe. After expansion,
energy in the radial mode leads to the production of bulk topological
excitations -- solitons and vortices -- driving the production of a large
number of azimuthal phonons and, at late times, causing stochastic persistent
currents. These complex nonlinear dynamics, fueled by the energy stored
coherently in one mode, are reminiscent of a type of "preheating" that may have
taken place at the end of inflation.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
Collision and Diffusion in Microwave Breakdown of Nitrogen Gas in and around Microgaps
The microwave induced breakdown of N2 gas in microgaps was modeled using the
collision frequency between electrons and neutral molecules and the effective
electric field concept. Low pressure breakdown at the threshold electric field
occurs outside the gap, but at high pressures it is found to occur inside the
microgap with a large threshold breakdown electric field corresponding to a
very large electron oscillation amplitude. Three distinct pressure regimes are
apparent in the microgap breakdown: a low pressure multipactor branch, a
mid-pressure Paschen branch, both of which occur in the space outside the
microgap, and a high pressure diffusion-drift branch, which occurs inside the
microgap. The Paschen and diffusion-drift branches are divided by a sharp
transition and each separately fits the collision frequency model. There is
evidence that considerable electron loss to the microgap faces accompanies the
diffusion-drift branch in microgaps.Comment: 4 figure
An extended model of the quantum free-electron laser
Previous models of the quantum regime of operation of the Free Electron Laser
(QFEL) have performed an averaging and the application of periodic boundary
conditions to the coupled Maxwell - Schrodinger equations over short, resonant
wavelength intervals of the interaction. Here, an extended, one-dimensional
model of the QFEL interaction is presented in the absence of any such averaging
or application of periodic boundary conditions, the absence of the latter
allowing electron diffusion processes to be modeled throughout the pulse. The
model is used to investigate how both the steady-state (CW) and pulsed regimes
of QFEL operation are affected. In the steady-state regime it is found that the
electrons are confined to evolve as a 2-level system, similar to the previous
QFEL models. In the pulsed regime Coherent Spontaneous Emission (CSE) due to
the shape of the electron pulse current distribution is shown to be present in
the QFEL regime for the first time. However, unlike the classical case, CSE in
the QFEL is damped by the effects of quantum diffusion of the electron
wavefunction. Electron recoil from the QFEL interaction can also cause a
diffusive drift between the recoiled and non-recoiled parts of the electron
pulse wavefunction, effectively removing the recoiled part from the primary
electron-radiation interaction.Comment: Submitted to Optics Expres
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