4,235 research outputs found
Analytical investigation of magnetic field distributions around superconducting strips on ferromagnetic substrates
The complex-field approach is developed to derive analytical expressions of
the magnetic field distributions around superconducting strips on ferromagnetic
substrates (SC/FM strips). We consider the ferromagnetic substrates as ideal
soft magnets with an infinite magnetic permeability, neglecting the
ferromagnetic hysteresis. On the basis of the critical state model for a
superconducting strip, the ac susceptibility of a SC/FM
strip exposed to a perpendicular ac magnetic field is theoretically
investigated, and the results are compared with those for superconducting
strips on nonmagnetic substrates (SC/NM strips). The real part for
(where is the amplitude of the ac magnetic field,
is the critical current density, and is the thickness of the
superconducting strip) of a SC/FM strip is 3/4 of that of a SC/NM strip. The
imaginary part (or ac loss ) for of a SC/FM
strip is larger than that of a SC/NM strip, even when the ferromagnetic
hysteresis is neglected, and this enhancement of (or ) is due to
the edge effect of the ferromagnetic substrate.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Statistical Analysis of Surface Reconstruction Domains on InAs Wetting Layer Preceding Quantum Dot Formation
Surface of an InAs wetting layer on GaAs(001) preceding InAs quantum dot (QD) formation was observed at 300°C with in situ scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). Domains of (1 × 3)/(2 × 3) and (2 × 4) surface reconstructions were located in the STM image. The density of each surface reconstruction domain was comparable to that of subsequently nucleated QD precursors. The distribution of the domains was statistically investigated in terms of spatial point patterns. It was found that the domains were distributed in an ordered pattern rather than a random pattern. It implied the possibility that QD nucleation sites are related to the surface reconstruction domains
Molecular beam epitaxial growth of high-quality InSb on InP and GaAs substrates
Epitaxial layers of InSb were grown on InP and GaAs substrates by molecular beam epitaxy. The dependence of the epilayer quality on flux ratio, J sub Sb4/J sub In, was studied. Deviation from an optimum value of J sub Sb4/J sub In (approx. 2) during growth led to deterioration in the surface morphology and the electrical and crystalline qualities of the films. Room temperature electron mobilities as high as 70,000 and 53,000 sq cm /V-s were measured in InSb layers grown on InP and GaAs substrates, respectively. Unlike the previous results, the conductivity in these films is n-type even at T = 13 K, and no degradation of the electron mobility due to the high density of dislocations was observed. The measured electron mobilities (and carrier concentrations) at 77 K in InSb layers grown on InP and GaAs substrates are 110,000 sq cm/V-s (3 x 10(15) cm(-3)) and 55,000 sq cm/V-s (4.95 x 10(15) cm(-3)), respectively, suggesting their application to electronic devices at cryogenic temperatures
Spin and spin-spin correlations in chargino pair production at future linear e+e- colliders
A possibility to measure the spin and spin-spin correlations of a chargino
pair is investigated in the process electron positron -> chargino_1
anti-chargino_1 -> (neutralino_1 quark anti-quark) (neutralino_1 quark
anti-quark) at future linear-collider energies. The total and the differential
cross sections are calculated by the GRACE system which allows for the full
spin correlation. Experimental sensitivity of the measurements are examined by
assuming the limited detector resolution, the initial state radiation and the
beam-beam effect (beamstrahlung). It is found that generally the spin-spin
correlation can only be measured with a lower sensitivity than the chargino
spin itself. The dependence of the correlation measurements on the relevant
SUSY parameters can be seen for a light sneutrino case, but the situation
becomes worse for a heavier sneutrino.Comment: 23 pages, 7 figures, 6 tables; added reference for section
The spin-incoherent Luttinger liquid
In contrast to the well known Fermi liquid theory of three dimensions,
interacting one-dimensional and quasi one-dimensional systems of fermions are
described at low energy by an effective theory known as Luttinger liquid
theory. This theory is expressed in terms of collective many-body excitations
that show exotic behavior such as spin-charge separation. Luttinger liquid
theory is commonly applied on the premise that "low energy" describes both the
spin and charge sectors. However, when the interactions in the system are very
strong, as they typically are at low particle densities, the ratio of spin to
charge energy may become exponentially small. It is then possible at very low
temperatures for the energy to be low compared to the characteristic charge
energy, but still high compared to the characteristic spin energy. This energy
window of near ground-state charge degrees of freedom, but highly thermally
excited spin degrees of freedom is called a spin-incoherent Luttinger liquid.
The spin-incoherent Luttinger liquid exhibits a higher degree universality than
the Luttinger liquid and its properties are qualitatively distinct. In this
colloquium I detail some of the recent theoretical developments in the field
and describe experimental indications of such a regime in gated semiconductor
quantum wires.Comment: 21 pages, 18 figures. Updated references, corrected typo in Eq.(20)
in journal versio
Temperature-Dependent Site Control of InAs/GaAs (001) Quantum Dots Using a Scanning Tunneling Microscopy Tip During Growth
Site-controlled InAs nano dots were successfully fabricated by a STMBE system (in situ scanning tunneling microscopy during molecular beam epitaxy growth) at substrate temperatures from 50 to 430°C. After 1.5 ML of the InAs wetting layer (WL) growth by ordinal Stranski–Krastanov dot fabrication procedures, we applied voltage at particular sites on the InAs WL, creating the site where In atoms, which were migrating on the WL, favored to congregate. At 240°C, InAs nano dots (width: 20–40 nm, height: 1.5–2.0 nm) were fabricated. At 430°C, InAs nano dots (width: 16–20 nm, height: 0.75–1.5 nm) were also fabricated. However, these dots were remained at least 40 s and collapsed less than 1000 s. Then, we fabricated InAs nano dots (width: 24–150 nm, height: 2.8–28 nm) at 300°C under In and As4 irradiations. These were not collapsed and considered to high crystalline dots
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