614 research outputs found
Room-temperature continuous wave lasing in deep-subwavelength metallic cavities under electrical injection
Plasmonic nanolasers and spasers continue to attract a great deal of interest from the physics and nanophotonics community, with the experimental observation of lasing as a focus of research. We report the observation of continuous wave lasing in metallic cavities of deep subwavelength sizes under electrical injection, operating at room temperature. The volume of the nanolaser is as small as 0.42¿3, where ¿ = 1.55 µm is the lasing wavelength. This demonstration will help answer the question of how small a nanolaser can be made, and will likely stimulate a wide range of fundamental studies in basic laser physics and quantum optics on truly subwavelength scales. In addition, such nanolasers may lead to many potential applications, such as on-chip integrated photonic systems for communication, computing, and detection
Families of N=2 Strings
In a given 4d spacetime bakcground, one can often construct not one but a
family of distinct N=2 string theories. This is due to the multiple ways N=2
superconformal algebra can be embedded in a given worldsheet theory. We
formulate the principle of obtaining different physical theories by gauging
different embeddings of the same symmetry algebra in the same ``pre-theory.''
We then apply it to N=2 strings and formulate the recipe for finding the
associated parameter spaces of gauging. Flat and curved target spaces of both
(4,0) and (2,2) signatures are considered. We broadly divide the gauging
choices into two classes, denoted by alpha and beta, and show them to be
related by T-duality. The distinction between them is formulated topologically
and hinges on some unique properties of 4d manifolds. We determine what their
parameter spaces of gauging are under certain simplicity ansatz for generic
flat spaces (R^4 and its toroidal compactifications) as well as some curved
spaces. We briefly discuss the spectra of D-branes for both alpha and beta
families.Comment: 66+1 pages, 2 tables, latex 2e, hyperref. ver2: typos corrected,
reference adde
Uniaxial Phase Transition in Si : Ab initio Calculations
Based on a previously proposed thermodynamic analysis, we study the relative
stabilities of five Si phases under uniaxial compression using ab initio
methods. The five phases are diamond, beta-tin, sh, sc, and hcp structures. The
possible phase-transition patterns were investigated by considering the phase
transitions between any two chosen phases of the five phases. By analyzing the
different conributions to the relative pahse stability, we identified the most
important factors in reducing the phase-transition pressures at uniaxial
compression. We also show that it is possible to have phase transitions occur
only when the phases are under uniaxial compression, in spite of no phase
transition when under hydrostatic commpression. Taking all five phases into
consideration, the phase diagram at uniaxial compression was constructed for
pressures under 20 GPa. The stable phases were found to be diamond, beta-tin
and sh structures, i.e. the same as those when under hydrostatic condition.
According to the phase diagram, direct phase transition from the diamond to the
sh phase is possible if the applied uniaxial pressures, on increasing, satisfy
the condition of Px>Pz. Simiilarly, the sh-to-beta-tin transition on
increeasing pressures is also possible if the applied uniaxial pressures are
varied from the condition of Px>Pz, on which the phase of sh is stable, to that
of Px<Pz, on which the beta-tin is stable
Effects of metallic spacer in layered superconducting Sr2(MgTi)O3FeAs
The highly two-dimensional superconducting system
Sr2(MgTi)O3FeAs, recently synthesized in the range of 0.2 < y <
0.5, shows an Mg concentration-dependent . Reducing the Mg concentration
from y=0.5 leads to a sudden increase in , with a maximum ~40 K at
y=0.2. Using first principles calculations, the unsynthesized stoichiometric
y=0 and the substoichiometric y=0.5 compounds have been investigated. For the
50% Mg-doped phase (y=0.5), Sr2(MgTi)O3 layers are completely
insulating spacers between FeAs layers, leading to the fermiology such as that
found for other Fe pnictides. At y=0, representing a phase with metallic
Sr2TiO3 layers, the -centered Fe-derived Fermi surfaces (FSs)
considerably shrink or disappear. Instead, three -centered Ti FSs
appear, and in particular two of them have similar size, like in MgB2.
Interestingly, FSs have very low Fermi velocity in large fractions: the lowest
being 0.6 cm/s. Furthermore, our fixed spin moment calculations
suggest the possibility of magnetic ordering, with magnetic Ti and nearly
nonmagnetic Fe ions. These results indicate a crucial role of
Sr2(MgTi)O3 layers in this superconductivity.Comment: 7 pages; Proceedings of ICSM-201
Optimization of inhomogeneous electron correlation factors in periodic solids
A method is presented for the optimization of one-body and inhomogeneous
two-body terms in correlated electronic wave functions of Jastrow-Slater type.
The most general form of inhomogeneous correlation term which is compatible
with crystal symmetry is used and the energy is minimized with respect to all
parameters using a rapidly convergent iterative approach, based on Monte Carlo
sampling of the energy and fitting energy fluctuations. The energy minimization
is performed exactly within statistical sampling error for the energy
derivatives and the resulting one- and two-body terms of the wave function are
found to be well-determined. The largest calculations performed require the
optimization of over 3000 parameters. The inhomogeneous two-electron
correlation terms are calculated for diamond and rhombohedral graphite. The
optimal terms in diamond are found to be approximately homogeneous and
isotropic over all ranges of electron separation, but exhibit some
inhomogeneity at short- and intermediate-range, whereas those in graphite are
found to be homogeneous at short-range, but inhomogeneous and anisotropic at
intermediate- and long-range electron separation.Comment: 23 pages, 15 figures, 1 table, REVTeX4, submitted to PR
Structure and dynamics of Rh surfaces
Lattice relaxations, surface phonon spectra, surface energies, and work
functions are calculated for Rh(100) and Rh(110) surfaces using
density-functional theory and the full-potential linearized augmented plane
wave method. Both, the local-density approximation and the generalized gradient
approximation to the exchange-correlation functional are considered. The force
constants are obtained from the directly calculated atomic forces, and the
temperature dependence of the surface relaxation is evaluated by minimizing the
free energy of the system. The anharmonicity of the atomic vibrations is taken
into account within the quasiharmonic approximation. The importance of
contributions from different phonons to the surface relaxation is analyzed.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, scheduled to appear in Phys. Rev. B, Feb. 15
(1998). Other related publications can be found at
http://www.rz-berlin.mpg.de/th/paper.htm
How good is regional climate model version 4 in simulating the monsoon onset over Kerala?
This study assesses the performance of regional climate model version 4 (RegCM4) in simulating the monsoon onset over Kerala (MOK). It also examines any possible relationship between the onset dates with the summer monsoon rainfall over India as whole as well as each grid points of the India land points and also the moisture inflow into Indian subcontinent. A 30-year long simulation starting from 1979 till 2008 was carried out with the lateral boundary forcings provided by European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasts Reanalysis (ERA-interim) at 25 km horizontal resolution. The simulated climatological MOK date is found to be 28th May, while as per the India Meteorological Department, climatological normal onset date is 1st June. The model has performed well in simulating the inter-annual variation of MOK during the study period. The correlation coefficient between model simulated and observed MOK is 0.83 significant at 95% confidence level. In both model and observations, the MOK is weakly correlated with All India Summer Monsoon Rainfall. Again, the model skill was examined through equitable threat score (ETS). The ETS score is high for normal (0.48) and delayed (0.42) onset years, while the score is very low in early onset years. The spatial patterns of rainfall over central India are very similar in early and normal onset years. The model has performed well in reproducing the moisture inflow in to the Indian subcontinent from all the directions in most of the years, but there is no one-to-one relation between different categories of MOK years with total rainfall and net moisture inflow. Based on this study, it is found that RegCM4 reproduces different aspects of MOK reasonably well
Ab initio study of the beta$-tin->Imma->sh phase transitions in silicon and germanium
We have investigated the structural sequence of the high-pressure phases of
silicon and germanium. We have focussed on the cd->beta-tin->Imma->sh phase
transitions. We have used the plane-wave pseudopotential approach to the
density-functional theory implemented within the Vienna ab-initio simulation
package (VASP). We have determined the equilibrium properties of each structure
and the values of the critical parameters including a hysteresis effect at the
phase transitions. The order of the phase transitions has been obtained
alternatively from the pressure dependence of the enthalpy and of the internal
structure parameters. The commonly used tangent construction is shown to be
very unreliable. Our calculations identify a first-order phase transition from
the cd to the beta-tin and from the Imma to the sh phase, and they indicate the
possibility of a second-order phase-transition from the beta-tin to the Imma
phase. Finally, we have derived the enthalpy barriers between the phases.Comment: 12 pages, 16 figure
An Effective-Medium Tight-Binding Model for Silicon
A new method for calculating the total energy of Si systems is presented. The
method is based on the effective-medium theory concept of a reference system.
Instead of calculating the energy of an atom in the system of interest a
reference system is introduced where the local surroundings are similar. The
energy of the reference system can be calculated selfconsistently once and for
all while the energy difference to the reference system can be obtained
approximately. We propose to calculate it using the tight-binding LMTO scheme
with the Atomic-Sphere Approximation(ASA) for the potential, and by using the
ASA with charge-conserving spheres we are able to treat open system without
introducing empty spheres. All steps in the calculational method is {\em ab
initio} in the sense that all quantities entering are calculated from first
principles without any fitting to experiment. A complete and detailed
description of the method is given together with test calculations of the
energies of phonons, elastic constants, different structures, surfaces and
surface reconstructions. We compare the results to calculations using an
empirical tight-binding scheme.Comment: 26 pages (11 uuencoded Postscript figures appended), LaTeX,
CAMP-090594-
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