5,000 research outputs found
Canonical-basis solution of the Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov equation on three-dimensional Cartesian mesh
A method is presented to obtain the canonical-form solutions of the HFB
equation for atomic nuclei with zero-range interactions like the Skyrme force.
It is appropriate to describe pairing correlations in the continuum in
coordinate-space representations. An improved gradient method is used for
faster convergences under constraint of orthogonality between orbitals. To
prevent high-lying orbitals to shrink into a spatial point, a repulsive
momentum dependent force is introduced, which turns out to unveil the nature of
high-lying canonical-basis orbitals. The asymptotic properties at large radius
and the relation with quasiparticle states are discussed for the obtained
canonical basis.Comment: 23 pages including 17 figures, REVTeX4, revised version, scheduled to
appear in Phys. Rev. C, Vol.69, No.
Deformed Hartree-Fock Calculation of Proton-Rich Nuclei
We perform Hartree-Fock+BCS calculations for even-even nuclei with 2 <= Z <=
82 and N ranging from outside the proton drip line to the experimental frontier
on the neutron-rich side. The ground state solutions are obtained for 737
nuclei, together with shape-coexistence solutions for 480 nuclei. Our method
features the Cartesian-mesh representation of single-particle wavefunctions,
which is advantageous in treating nucleon skins and exotic shapes. The results
are compared with those of the finite-range droplet model of Moller et al. as
well as the experimental values.Comment: 7 pages Latex, 5 postscript figures appended as uufil
Possible Verification of Tilted Anisotropic Dirac Cone in \alpha-(BEDT-TTF)_2 I_3 Using Interlayer Magnetoresistance
It is proposed that the presence of a tilted and anisotropic Dirac cone can
be verified using the interlayer magnetoresistance in the layered Dirac fermion
system, which is realized in quasi-two-dimensional organic compound
\alpha-(BEDT-TTF)_2 I_3. Theoretical formula is derived using the analytic
Landau level wave functions and assuming local tunneling of electrons. It is
shown that the resistivity takes the maximum in the direction of the tilt if
anisotropy of the Fermi velocity of the Dirac cone is small. The procedure is
described to determine the parameters of the tilt and anisotropy.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, corrected Fig.
Electric Conductivity of the Zero-gap Semiconducting State in Alpha-(BEDT-TTF)2I3 Salt
The electric conductivity which reveals the zero gap semiconducting (ZGS)
state has been investigated as the function of temperature and life time
in order to understand the ZGS state in quarter-filled
-(BEDT-TTF)I salt with four sites in the unit cell. By treating
as a parameter and making use of the one-loop approximation, it is found
that the conductivity is proportional to and for
and independent of and for . Further the
conductivity being independent of in the ZGS state is examined in terms of
Born approximation for the impurity cattering.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Effects of the Zero-Mode Landau Level on Inter-Layer Magnetoresistance in Multilayer Massless Dirac Fermion Systems
We report on the experimental results of interlayer magnetoresistance in
multilayer massless Dirac fermion system -(BEDT-TTF)I under
hydrostatic pressure and its interpretation. We succeeded in detecting the
zero-mode Landau level (n=0 Landau level) that is epected to appear at the
contact points of Dirac cones in the magnetic field normal to the
two-dimensional plane. The characteristic feature of zero-mode Landau carriers
including the Zeeman effect is clearly seen in the interlayer
magnetoresistance.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figure
Comment on ''Phase Diagram of LaSrCuO Probed in the Infrared: Imprints of Charge Stripe Excitations''
Recently Lucarelli {\it et al.} have reported\cite{lucarelli}
temperature-dependence of the in-plane optical reflectivity of
LaSrCuO over a wide doping range, focusing on the infrared
peaks at 30 cm (for =0.12), 250 cm and 510 cm. They
interpreted the first peak (30 cm) as a signature of charge stripe
ordering, while the latter two (250 cm and 510 cm) are attributed
to the polaronic charge excitations. However, careful readers would notice that
the reported spectra are largely different from those so far measured on the
same system. As we illustrate below, all these peaks are caused by an
uncontrolled leakage of the c-axis reflectivity into the measured spectra.Comment: 1 page, 1 figure, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Lett 91
(2003
Tilted-Cone Induced Cusps and Nonmonotonic Structures in Dynamical Polarization Function of Massless Dirac Fermions
The polarization function of electrons with the tilted Dirac cone found in
organic conductors is studied using the tilted Weyl equation. The dynamical
property is explored based on the analytical treatment of the particle-hole
excitation. It is shown that the polarization function as the function of both
the frequency and the momentum exhibits cusps and nonmonotonic structures. The
polarization function depends not only on the magnitude but also the direction
of the external momentum. These properties are characteristic of the tilted
Dirac cone, and are contrast to the isotropic case of grapheme. Further, the
results are applied to calculate the optical conductivity, the plasma frequency
and the screening of Coulomb interaction, which are also strongly influenced by
the tilted cone.Comment: 28 pages, 12 figures, to be published in Journal of the Physical
Society of Japan Vol. 79 (2010) No. 1
Development of a low-mass and high-efficiency charged particle detector
We developed a low-mass and high-efficiency charged particle detector for an
experimental study of the rare decay . The
detector is important to suppress the background with charged particles to the
level below the signal branching ratio predicted by the Standard Model
(O(10)). The detector consists of two layers of 3-mm-thick plastic
scintillators with wavelength shifting fibers embedded and Multi Pixel Photon
Counters for readout. We manufactured the counter and evaluated the performance
such as light yield, timing resolution, and efficiency. With this design, we
achieved the inefficiency per layer against penetrating charged particles to be
less than , which satisfies the requirement of the KOTO
experiment determined from simulation studies.Comment: 20 pages, 18 figure
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