8,532 research outputs found

    The second order nonlinear conductance of a two-dimensional mesoscopic conductor

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    We have investigated the weakly non-linear quantum transport properties of a two-dimensional quantum conductor. We have developed a numerical scheme which is very general for this purpose. The nonlinear conductance is computed by explicitly evaluating the various partial density of states, the sensitivity and the characteristic potential. Interesting spatial structure of these quantities are revealed. We present detailed results concerning the crossover behavior of the second order nonlinear conductance when the conductor changes from geometrically symmetrical to asymmetrical. Other issues of interests such as the gauge invariance are also discussed.Comment: LaTe

    3′,6′-Bis(ethyl­amino)-2′,7′-dimethyl-2-{[2-[(E)-3,4-methyl­enedioxy­benzyl­idene­amino]eth­yl}spiro­[isoindoline-1,9′-xanthen]-3-one

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    The title compound, C36H36N4O4, was prepared as a spiro­lactam ring formation of the rhodamine dye for comparison with a ring-opened form. The xanthene ring system is approximately planar [r.m.s. deviations from planarity = 0.023 (9) Å for the xanthene ring]. The dihedral angles formed by the spiro­lactam and 1,3-benzodioxole rings with the xanthene ring system are 86.8 (1) and 74.3 (1)°, respectively

    Poly[[triaqua­(μ3-pyridine-2,4,6-tri­car­boxyl­ato)gadolinium(III)] monohydrate]

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    The title compound, {[Gd(C8H2NO6)(H2O)3]·H2O}n, was obtained in water under hydro­thermal conditions. The GdIII ions are nine-coordinated by two O and one N atoms from one pyridine-2,4,6-tricarboxyl­ate ligand, two O atoms from another ligand, one O atom from a third ligand and three coordinated water mol­ecules. Each ligand binds three metal centers. Two-dimensional layers are formed through the Gd—O bonds and the layers are linked by O—H⋯O hydrogen bonds, forming a three-dimensional network

    NLO QCD corrections to Single Top and W associated production at the LHC with forward detector acceptances

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    In this paper we study the Single Top and W boson associated photoproduction via the main reaction pppγppW±t+Y\rm pp\rightarrow p\gamma p\rightarrow pW^{\pm}t+Y at the 14 TeV Large Hadron Collider (LHC) up to next-to-leading order (NLO) QCD level assuming a typical LHC multipurpose forward detector. We use the Five-Flavor-Number Schemes (5FNS) with massless bottom quark assumption in the whole calculation. Our results show that the QCD NLO corrections can reduce the scale uncertainty. The typical K-factors are in the range of 1.15 to 1.2 which lead to the QCD NLO corrections of 15% to 20% correspond to the leading-order (LO) predictions with our chosen parameters.Comment: 41pages, 12figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1106.2890 by other author

    Fractional Quantum Hall Effect in Topological Flat Bands with Chern Number Two

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    Recent theoretical works have demonstrated various robust Abelian and non-Abelian fractional topological phases in lattice models with topological flat bands carrying Chern number C=1. Here we study hard-core bosons and interacting fermions in a three-band triangular-lattice model with the lowest topological flat band of Chern number C=2. We find convincing numerical evidence of bosonic fractional quantum Hall effect at the ν=1/3\nu=1/3 filling characterized by three-fold quasi-degeneracy of ground states on a torus, a fractional Chern number for each ground state, a robust spectrum gap, and a gap in quasihole excitation spectrum. We also observe numerical evidence of a robust fermionic fractional quantum Hall effect for spinless fermions at the ν=1/5\nu=1/5 filling with short-range interactions.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures, with Supplementary Materia

    Non-Abelian Quantum Hall Effect in Topological Flat Bands

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    Inspired by recent theoretical discovery of robust fractional topological phases without a magnetic field, we search for the non-Abelian quantum Hall effect (NA-QHE) in lattice models with topological flat bands (TFBs). Through extensive numerical studies on the Haldane model with three-body hard-core bosons loaded into a TFB, we find convincing numerical evidence of a stable ν=1\nu=1 bosonic NA-QHE, with the characteristic three-fold quasi-degeneracy of ground states on a torus, a quantized Chern number, and a robust spectrum gap. Moreover, the spectrum for two-quasihole states also shows a finite energy gap, with the number of states in the lower energy sector satisfying the same counting rule as the Moore-Read Pfaffian state.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figure
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