4,852 research outputs found

    Electroweak radiative corrections to triple photon production at the ILC

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    In this paper, we present the precision predictions for three photon production in the standard model (SM) at the ILC including the full next-to-leading (NLO) electroweak (EW) corrections, high order initial state radiation (h.o.ISR) contributions and beamstrahlung effects. We present the LO and the NLO EW+h.o.ISR+beamstrahlung corrected total cross sections for various colliding energy when s200GeV\sqrt s \ge 200 {\rm GeV} and the kinematic distributions of final photons with s=500GeV\sqrt s = 500 {\rm GeV} at ILC, and find that the NLO EW corrections, the h.o.ISR contributions and the beamstrahlung effects are important in exploring the process e+eγγγe^+e^- \to \gamma\gamma\gamma.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Physics Letters

    Density Functional Study of Excess Fe in Fe1+x_{1+x}Te: Magnetism and Doping

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    The electronic and magnetic properties of the excess Fe in iron telluride Fe(1+x)_{(1+x)}Te are investigated by density functional calculations. We find that the excess Fe occurs with valence near Fe+^{+}, and therefore provides electron doping with approximately one carrier per Fe, and furthermore that the excess Fe is strongly magnetic. Thus it will provide local moments that interact with the plane Fe magnetism, and these are expected to persist in phases where the magnetism of the planes is destroyed for example by pressure or doping. These results are discussed in the context of superconductivity

    Empirical metallicity-dependent calibrations of effective temperature against colours for dwarfs and giants based on interferometric data

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    We present empirical metallicity-dependent calibrations of effective temperature against colours for dwarfs of luminosity classes IV and V and for giants of luminosity classes II and III, based on a collection from the literature of about two hundred nearby stars with direct effective temperature measurements of better than 2.5 per cent. The calibrations are valid for an effective temperature range 3,100 - 10,000 K for dwarfs of spectral types M5 to A0 and 3,100 - 5,700 K for giants of spectral types K5 to G5. A total of twenty-one colours for dwarfs and eighteen colours for giants of bands of four photometric systems, i.e. the Johnson (UBVRJIJJHKUBVR_{\rm J}I_{\rm J}JHK), the Cousins (RCICR_{\rm C}I_{\rm C}), the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS, grgr) and the Two Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS, JHKsJHK_{\rm s}), have been calibrated. Restricted by the metallicity range of the current sample, the calibrations are mainly applicable for disk stars ([Fe/H]1.0\,\gtrsim\,-1.0). The normalized percentage residuals of the calibrations are typically 2.0 and 1.5 per cent for dwarfs and giants, respectively. Some systematic discrepancies at various levels are found between the current scales and those available in the literature (e.g. those based on the infrared flux method IRFM or spectroscopy). Based on the current calibrations, we have re-determined the colours of the Sun. We have also investigated the systematic errors in effective temperatures yielded by the current on-going large scale low- to intermediate-resolution stellar spectroscopic surveys. We show that the calibration of colour (gKsg-K_{\rm s}) presented in the current work provides an invaluable tool for the estimation of stellar effective temperature for those on-going or upcoming surveys.Comment: 28 pages, 19 figures, 8 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Bis(2-methoxy­phenolato-κ2 O,O′)copper(II)

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    In the title compound, [Cu(C7H7O2)2], the asymmetric unit contains one and a half molecules with the central Cu(II) atoms situated on a general position and on a centre of inversion, respectively. Both Cu(II) atoms show a similar slightly distorted square-planar coordination, resulting from four O atoms of two 2-methoxyphenolate anions
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