64,146 research outputs found
Potential contributions of noncontact atomic force microscopy for the future Casimir force measurements
Surface electric noise, i.e., the non-uniform distribution of charges and
potentials on a surface, poses a great experimental challenge in modern
precision force measurements. Such a challenge is encountered in a number of
different experimental circumstances. The scientists employing atomic force
microscopy (AFM) have long focused their efforts to understand the
surface-related noise issues via variants of AFM techniques, such as Kelvin
probe force microscopy or electric force microscopy. Recently, the physicists
investigating quantum vacuum fluctuation phenomena between two closely-spaced
objects have also begun to collect experimental evidence indicating a presence
of surface effects neglected in their previous analyses. It now appears that
the two seemingly disparate science communities are encountering effects rooted
in the same surface phenomena. In this report, we suggest specific experimental
tasks to be performed in the near future that are crucial not only for
fostering needed collaborations between the two communities, but also for
providing valuable data on the surface effects in order to draw the most
realistic conclusion about the actual contribution of the Casimir force (or van
der Waals force) between a pair of real materials.Comment: The paper appeared in the Proceedings to the 12th International
Conference on Noncontact Atomic Force Microscopy (NC-AFM 2009) and Casimir
2009 Satellite Worksho
Implementation of Particle Flow Algorithm and Muon Identification
We present the implementation of the Particle Flow Algorithm and the result
of the muon identification developed at the University of Iowa. We use Monte
Carlo samples generated for the benchmark LOI process with the Silicon Detector
design at the International Linear Collider. With the muon identification, an
improved jet energy resolution, good muon efficiency and purity are achieved.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, lcws08 at Chicag
Climate change impacts on hydrology and water resources of the Upper Blue Nile River Basin, Ethiopia
Climate change / Hydrology / River basins / Runoff / Precipitation / Models / Dams / Operating policies / Water power / Drought / Analysis / Africa / Ethiopia / Egypt / Sudan / Upper Blue Nile River Basin
Monte Carlo Study of Correlations in Quantum Spin Chains at Non-Zero Temperature
Antiferromagnetic Heisenberg spin chains with various spin values
() are studied numerically with the quantum Monte Carlo
method. Effective spin chains are realized by ferromagnetically coupling
antiferromagnetic spin chains with . The temperature dependence
of the uniform susceptibility, the staggered susceptibility, and the static
structure factor peak intensity are computed down to very low temperatures,
. The correlation length at each temperature is deduced from
numerical measurements of the instantaneous spin-spin correlation function. At
high temperatures, very good agreement with exact results for the classical
spin chain is obtained independent of the value of . For =2 chains which
have a gap , the correlation length and the uniform susceptibility in
the temperature range are well predicted by a semi-classical
theory due to Damle and Sachdev.Comment: LaTeX EPJ macr
Kinetic stabilization of Fe film on (4 by 2)-GaAs(100)
We grow Fe film on (4 by 2)-GaAs(100) at low temperature, (~ 130 K) and study
their chemical structure by photoelectron spectroscopy using synchrotron
radiation. We observe the effective suppression of As segregation and
remarkable reduction of alloy formation near the interface between Fe and
substrate. Hence, this should be a way to grow virtually pristine Fe film on
GaAs(100). Further, the Fe film is found stable against As segregation even
after warmed up to room temperature. There only forms very thin, ~ 8 angstrom
thick interface alloy. It is speculated that the interface alloy forms via
surface diffusion mediated by interface defects formed during the low
temperature growth of the Fe film. Further out-diffusion of both Ga and As are
suppressed because it should then proceed via inefficient bulk diffusion.Comment: 4 figure
Current and vorticity auto correlation functions in open microwave billiards
Using the equivalence between the quantum-mechanical probability density in a
quantum billiard and the Poynting vector in the corresponding microwave system,
current distributions were studied in a quantum dot like cavity, as well as in
a Robnik billiard with lambda=0.4, and an introduced ferrite cylinder. Spatial
auto correlation functions for currents and vorticity were studied and compared
with predictions from the random-superposition-of-plane-waves hypothesis. In
addition different types of vortex neighbour spacing distributions were
determined and compared with theory.Comment: PTP-LaTeX, 10 pages with 6 figures submitted to Progress of
Theoretical Physics Supplemen
Accurate determination of the scattering length of metastable Helium atoms using dark resonances between atoms and exotic molecules
We present a new measurement of the s-wave scattering length a of
spin-polarized helium atoms in the 2^3S_1 metastable state. Using two-photon
photoassociation spectroscopy and dark resonances we measure the energy
E_{v=14}= -91.35 +/- 0.06 MHz of the least bound state v=14 in the interaction
potential of the two atoms. We deduce a value of a = 7.512 +/- 0.005 nm, which
is at least one hundred times more precise than the best previous
determinations and is in disagreement with some of them. This experiment also
demonstrates the possibility to create exotic molecules binding two metastable
atoms with a lifetime of the order of 1 microsecond.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Brane gravity, massless bulk scalar and self-tuning of the cosmological constant
We show that a self-tuning mechanism of the cosmological constant could work
in 5D non-compact space-time with a symmetry in the presence of a
massless scalar field. The standard model matter fields live only on the 4D
brane. The change of vacuum energy on the brane (brane cosmological constant)
by, for instance, electroweak and QCD phase transitions, just gives rise to
dynamical shifts of the profiles of the background metric and the scalar field
in the extra dimension, keeping 4D space-time flat without any fine-tuning. To
avoid naked singularities in the bulk, the brane cosmological constant should
be negative. We introduce an additional brane-localized 4D Einstein-Hilbert
term so as to provide the observed 4D gravity with the non-compact extra
dimension. With a general form of brane-localized gravity term allowed by the
symmetries, the low energy Einstein gravity is successfully reproduced on the
brane at long distances. We show this phenomenon explicitly for the case of
vanishing bulk cosmological constant.Comment: 1+15 pages, no figure, Version to appear in PR
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