148 research outputs found
Gravitational waveforms from unequal-mass binaries with arbitrary spins under leading order spin-orbit coupling
The paper generalizes the structure of gravitational waves from orbiting
spinning binaries under leading order spin-orbit coupling, as given in the work
by K\"onigsd\"orffer and Gopakumar [PRD 71, 024039 (2005)] for single-spin and
equal-mass binaries, to unequal-mass binaries and arbitrary spin
configurations. The orbital motion is taken to be quasi-circular and the
fractional mass difference is assumed to be small against one. The emitted
gravitational waveforms are given in analytic form.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, submitted to PRD on 11 Sep. 200
Full-analytic frequency-domain 1pN-accurate gravitational wave forms from eccentric compact binaries
The article provides ready-to-use 1pN-accurate frequency-domain gravitational
wave forms for eccentric nonspinning compact binaries of arbitrary mass ratio
including the first post-Newtonian (1pN) point particle corrections to the
far-zone gravitational wave amplitude, given in terms of tensor spherical
harmonics. The averaged equations for the decay of the eccentricity and growth
of radial frequency due to radiation reaction are used to provide stationary
phase approximations to the frequency-domain wave forms.Comment: 28 pages, submitted to PR
Scanning-probe spectroscopy of semiconductor donor molecules
Semiconductor devices continue to press into the nanoscale regime, and new
applications have emerged for which the quantum properties of dopant atoms act
as the functional part of the device, underscoring the necessity to probe the
quantum structure of small numbers of dopant atoms in semiconductors[1-3].
Although dopant properties are well-understood with respect to bulk
semiconductors, new questions arise in nanosystems. For example, the quantum
energy levels of dopants will be affected by the proximity of nanometer-scale
electrodes. Moreover, because shallow donors and acceptors are analogous to
hydrogen atoms, experiments on small numbers of dopants have the potential to
be a testing ground for fundamental questions of atomic and molecular physics,
such as the maximum negative ionization of a molecule with a given number of
positive ions[4,5]. Electron tunneling spectroscopy through isolated dopants
has been observed in transport studies[6,7]. In addition, Geim and coworkers
identified resonances due to two closely spaced donors, effectively forming
donor molecules[8]. Here we present capacitance spectroscopy measurements of
silicon donors in a gallium-arsenide heterostructure using a scanning probe
technique[9,10]. In contrast to the work of Geim et al., our data show
discernible peaks attributed to successive electrons entering the molecules.
Hence this work represents the first addition spectrum measurement of dopant
molecules. More generally, to the best of our knowledge, this study is the
first example of single-electron capacitance spectroscopy performed directly
with a scanning probe tip[9].Comment: In press, Nature Physics. Original manuscript posted here; 16 pages,
3 figures, 5 supplementary figure
Direct observation of micron-scale ordered structure in a two-dimensional electron system
We have applied a novel scanned probe method to directly resolve the interior
structure of a GaAs/AlGaAs two-dimensional electron system in a tunneling
geometry. We find that the application of a perpendicular magnetic field can
induce surprising density modulations that are not static as a function of the
field. Near six and four filled Landau levels, stripe-like structures emerge
with a characteristic wave length ~2 microns. Present theories do not account
for ordered density modulations on this length scale.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Modifying the surface electronic properties of YBa2Cu3O7-delta with cryogenic scanning probe microscopy
We report the results of a cryogenic study of the modification of
YBa2Cu3O7-delta surface electronic properties with the probe of a scanning
tunneling microscope (STM). A negative voltage applied to the sample during STM
tunneling is found to modify locally the conductance of the native degraded
surface layer. When the degraded layer is removed by etching, the effect
disappears. An additional surface effect is identified using Scanning Kelvin
Probe Microscopy in combination with STM. We observe reversible surface
charging for both etched and unetched samples, indicating the presence of a
defect layer even on a surface never exposed to air.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. To appear in Superconductor Science and
Technolog
Modeling Subsurface Charge Accumulation Images of a Quantum Hall Liquid
Subsurface Charge Accumulation imaging is a cryogenic scanning probe
technique that has recently been used to spatially probe incompressible strips
formed in a two-dimensional electron system (2DES) at high magnetic fields. In
this paper, we present detailed numerical modeling of these data. At a basic
level, the method produces results that agree well with the predictions of
models based on simple circuit elements. Moreover, the modeling method is
sufficiently advanced to simulate the spatially resolved measurements. By
comparing directly the simulations to the experimentally measured data, we can
extract quantitatively local electronic features of the 2DES. In particular, we
deduce the electron density of states inside the incompressible strips and
electrical resistance across them.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
The effect of S-substitution at the O6-guanine site on the structure and dynamics of a DNA oligomer containing a G:T mismatch
The effect of S-substitution on the O6 guanine site of a 13-mer DNA duplex containing a G:T mismatch is studied using molecular dynamics. The structure, dynamic evolution and hydration of the S-substituted duplex are compared with those of a normal duplex, a duplex with Ssubstitution on guanine, but no mismatch and a duplex with just a G:T mismatch. The S-substituted mismatch leads to cell death rather than repair. One suggestion is that the G:T mismatch recognition protein recognises the S-substituted mismatch (GS:T) as G:T. This leads to a cycle of futile repair ending in DNA breakage and cell death. We find that some structural features of the helix are similar for the duplex with the G:T mismatch and that with the S-substituted mismatch, but differ from the normal duplex, notably the helical twist. These differences arise from the change in the hydrogen-bonding pattern of the base pair. However a marked feature of the S-substituted G:T mismatch duplex is a very large opening. This showed considerable variability. It is suggested that this enlarged opening would lend support to an alternative model of cell death in which the mismatch protein attaches to thioguanine and activates downstream damage-response pathways. Attack on the sulphur by reactive oxygen species, also leading to cell death, would also be aided by the large, variable opening
Imaging Coulomb Islands in a Quantum Hall Interferometer
In the Quantum Hall regime, near integer filling factors, electrons should
only be transmitted through spatially-separated edge states. However, in
mesoscopic systems, electronic transmission turns out to be more complex,
giving rise to a large spectrum of magnetoresistance oscillations. To explain
these observations, recent models put forward that, as edge states come close
to each other, electrons can hop between counterpropagating edge channels, or
tunnel through Coulomb islands. Here, we use scanning gate microscopy to
demonstrate the presence of quantum Hall Coulomb islands, and reveal the
spatial structure of transport inside a quantum Hall interferometer. Electron
islands locations are found by modulating the tunneling between edge states and
confined electron orbits. Tuning the magnetic field, we unveil a continuous
evolution of active electron islands. This allows to decrypt the complexity of
high magnetic field magnetoresistance oscillations, and opens the way to
further local scale manipulations of quantum Hall localized states
Superconducting proximity effect in clean ferromagnetic layers
We investigate superconducting proximity effect in clean ferromagnetic layers
with rough boundaries. The subgap density of states is formed by Andreev bound
states at energies which depend on trajectory length and the ferromagnetic
exchange field. At energies above the gap, the spectrum is governed by resonant
scattering states. The resulting density of states, measurable by tunneling
spectroscopy, exhibits a rich structure, which allows to connect the
theoretical parameters from experiments.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures (included
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