187 research outputs found
Deeply Penetrating Elastic and Coupled Surface Waves in Crystals
Deeply penetrating elastic and coupled surface waves (DPSW) in crystals are treated. It is
shown that the parameters of the DPSW are very sensitive to near-surface disturbances of the
acoustic and electromagnetic paraipeters of the crystal, which is essential for the technical
applications of DPSW.Zadanie pt. Digitalizacja i udostępnienie w Cyfrowym Repozytorium Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego kolekcji czasopism naukowych wydawanych przez Uniwersytet Łódzki nr 885/P-DUN/2014 zostało dofinansowane ze środków MNiSW w ramach działalności upowszechniającej naukę
On modulational instability and energy localization in anharmonic lattices at finite energy density
The localization of vibrational energy, induced by the modulational
instability of the Brillouin-zone-boundary mode in a chain of classical
anharmonic oscillators with finite initial energy density, is studied within a
continuum theory. We describe the initial localization stage as a gas of
envelope solitons and explain their merging, eventually leading to a single
localized object containing a macroscopic fraction of the total energy of the
lattice. The initial-energy-density dependences of all characteristic time
scales of the soliton formation and merging are described analytically. Spatial
power spectra are computed and used for the quantitative explanation of the
numerical results.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
Wandering breathers and self-trapping in weakly coupled nonlinear chains: classical counterpart of macroscopic tunneling quantum dynamics
We present analytical and numerical studies of phase-coherent dynamics of
intrinsically localized excitations (breathers) in a system of two weakly
coupled nonlinear oscillator chains. We show that there are two qualitatively
different dynamical regimes of the coupled breathers, either immovable or
slowly-moving: the periodic transverse translation (wandering) of low-amplitude
breather between the chains, and the one-chain-localization of high-amplitude
breather. These two modes of coupled nonlinear excitations, which involve large
number of anharmonic oscillators, can be mapped onto two solutions of a single
pendulum equation, detached by a separatrix mode. We also study two-chain
breathers, which can be considered as bound states of discrete breathers with
different symmetry and center locations in the coupled chains, and bifurcation
of the anti-phase two-chain breather into the one-chain one. Delocalizing
transition of 1D breather in 2D system of a large number of parallel coupled
nonlinear chains is described, in which the breather, initially excited in a
given chain, abruptly spreads its vibration energy in the whole 2D system upon
decreasing breather frequency or amplitude below the threshold one. The
threshold breather frequency is above the cut off phonon frequency in 2D
system, and the threshold breather amplitude scales as square root of the
inter-chain coupling constant. Delocalizing transition of discrete vibrational
breather in 2D and 3D systems of coupled nonlinear chains has an analogy with
delocalizing transition for Bose-Einstein condensates in 2D and 3D optical
lattices.Comment: 33 pages, 16 figure
Supersonic Discrete Kink-Solitons and Sinusoidal Patterns with "Magic" wavenumber in Anharmonic Lattices
The sharp pulse method is applied to Fermi-Pasta-Ulam (FPU) and Lennard-Jones
(LJ) anharmonic lattices. Numerical simulations reveal the presence of high
energy strongly localized ``discrete'' kink-solitons (DK), which move with
supersonic velocities that are proportional to kink amplitudes. For small
amplitudes, the DK's of the FPU lattice reduce to the well-known ``continuous''
kink-soliton solutions of the modified Korteweg-de Vries equation. For high
amplitudes, we obtain a consistent description of these DK's in terms of
approximate solutions of the lattice equations that are obtained by restricting
to a bounded support in space exact solutions with sinusoidal pattern
characterized by the ``magic'' wavenumber . Relative displacement
patterns, velocity versus amplitude, dispersion relation and exponential tails
found in numerical simulations are shown to agree very well with analytical
predictions, for both FPU and LJ lattices.Comment: Europhysics Letters (in print
Theory of oscillations in the STM conductance resulting from subsurface defects (Review Article)
In this review we present recent theoretical results concerning
investigations of single subsurface defects by means of a scanning tunneling
microscope (STM). These investigations are based on the effect of quantum
interference between the electron partial waves that are directly transmitted
through the contact and the partial waves scattered by the defect. In
particular, we have shown the possibility imaging the defect position below a
metal surface by means of STM. Different types of subsurface defects have been
discussed: point-like magnetic and non-magnetic defects, magnetic clusters in a
nonmagnetic host metal, and non-magnetic defects in a s-wave superconductor.
The effect of Fermi surface anisotropy has been analyzed. Also, results of
investigations of the effect of a strong magnetic field to the STM conductance
of a tunnel point contact in the presence of a single defect has been
presented.Comment: 31 pages, 10 figuers Submitted to Low. Temp. Phy
Conductance of a tunnel point-contact of noble metals in the presence of a single defect
In paper [1] (Avotina et al. Phys. Rev. B,74, 085411 (2006)) the effect of
Fermi surface anisotropy to the conductance of a tunnel point contact, in the
vicinity of which a single point-like defect is situated, has been investigated
theoretically. The oscillatory dependence of the conductance on the distance
between the contact and the defect has been found for a general Fermi surface
geometry. In this paper we apply the method developed in [1] to the calculation
of the conductance of noble metal contacts. An original algorithm, which
enables the computation of the conductance for any parametrically given Fermi
surface, is proposed. On this basis a pattern of the conductance oscillations,
which can be observed by the method of scanning tunneling microscopy, is
obtained for different orientations of the surface for the noble metals.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Wannier-Stark ladder in the linear absorption of a random system with scale-free disorder
We study numerically the linear optical response of a quasiparticle moving on a one-dimensional disordered lattice in the presence of a linear bias. The random site potential is assumed to be long-range correlated with a power-law spectral density S(k)similar to 1/k(alpha), alpha > 0. This type of correlation results in a phase of extended states at the band center, provided alpha is larger than a critical value alpha(c) [F. A. B. F. de Moura and M. L. Lyra, Phys. Rev. Lett. 81, 3735 (1998)]. The width of the delocalized phase can be tested by applying an external electric field: Bloch-like oscillations of a quasiparticle wave packet are governed by the two mobility edges, playing now the role of band edges [F. Dominguez-Adame , Phys. Rev. Lett. 91, 197402 (2003)]. We demonstrate that the frequency-domain counterpart of these oscillations, the so-called Wannier-Stark ladder, also arises in this system. When the phase of extended states emerges in the system, this ladder turns out to be a comb of doublets, for some range of disorder strength and bias. Linear optical absorption provides a tool to detect this level structure
Signature of Fermi surface anisotropy in point contact conductance in the presence of defects
In a previous paper (Avotina et al.,Phys. Rev. B Vol.71, 115430 (2005)) we
have shown that in principle it is possible to image the defect positions below
a metal surface by means of a scanning tunnelling microscope. The principle
relies on the interference of electron waves scattered on the defects, which
give rise to small but measurable conductance fluctuations. Whereas in that
work the band structure was assumed to be free-electron like, here we
investigate the effects of Fermi surface anisotropy. We demonstrate that the
amplitude and period of the conductance oscillations are determined by the
local geometry of the Fermi surface. The signal results from those points for
which the electron velocity is directed along the vector connecting the point
contact to the defect. For a general Fermi surface geometry the position of the
maximum amplitude of the conductance oscillations is not found for the tip
directly above the defect. We have determined optimal conditions for
determination of defect positions in metals with closed and open Fermi
surfaces.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figure
Tunable coupled surface acoustic cavities
We demonstrate the electric tuning of the acoustic field in acoustic microcavities(MCs) defined by a periodic arrangement of metal stripes within a surface acoustic delay line on LiNbO3 substrate. Interferometric measurements show the enhancement of the acoustic field distribution within a single MC, the presence of a"bonding" and"anti-bonding" modes for two strongly coupled MCs, as well as the positive dispersion of the"mini-bands" formed by five coupled MCs. The frequency and amplitude of the resonances can be controlled by the potential applied to the metal stripes
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