33,344 research outputs found

    Higgs(general) at ATLAS

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    The ATLAS Higgs results are reviewed using Run-2 data taken at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV with up to an integrated luminosity of 80 fb−1^{-1}. So far, the data are consistent with the standard model expectations. ATLAS now has observed the Higgs Yukawa coupling to the third generation fermions with H→ττH\rightarrow \tau\tau, ttH, and H→bbH\rightarrow b b in the VH process. The Higgs boson will continue to provide an important probe for new physics and beyond.Comment: Proceeding for International Workshop on Top Quark Physics, Bad Neuenahr, Germany September 16-21 2018. 5 pages with 9 figure

    Modeling the underlying mechanisms for organic memory devices: Tunneling, electron emission and oxygen adsorbing

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    We present a combined experimental and theoretical study to get insight into both memory and negative differential resistance (NDR) effect in organic memory devices. The theoretical model we propose is simply a one-dimensional metallic island array embedding within two electrodes. We use scattering operator method to evaluate the tunneling current among the electrode and islands to establish the basic bistable I-V curves for several devices. The theoretical results match the experiments very well, and both memory and NDR effect could be understood comprehensively. The experimental correspondence, say, the experiment of changing the pressure of oxygen, is addressed as well.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Detecting the orbital character of the spin fluctuation in the Iron-based superconductors with the resonant inelastic X-ray scattering spectroscopy

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    The orbital distribution of the spin fluctuation in the iron-based superconductors(IBSs) is the key information needed to understand the magnetism, superconductivity and electronic nematicity in these multi-orbital systems. In this work, we propose that the resonant inelastic X-ray scattering(RIXS) technique can be used to probe selectively the spin fluctuation on different Fe 3d3d orbitals. In particular, the spin fluctuation on the three t2gt_{2g} orbitals, namely, the 3dxz3d_{xz}, 3dyz3d_{yz} and the 3dxy3d_{xy} orbital, can be selectively probed in the σ→π′\sigma\rightarrow\pi' scattering geometry by aligning the direction of the outgoing photon in the yy, xx and zz direction. Such orbital-resolved information on the spin fluctuation is invaluable for the study of the orbital-selective physics in the IBSs and can greatly advance our understanding on the relation between orbital ordering and spin nematicity in the IBSs and the orbital-selective pairing mechanism in these multi-orbital systems.Comment: 6 pages with new and more informative figures, the explicit form of the RIXS matrix element is provided, and the discussion part has been rewritte

    Vanishing pseudogap around (Ï€,0)(\pi,0) in an electron-doped high-Tc\mathrm{T_{c}} superconductor: a simple picture

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    Recent ARPES measurement on electron-doped cuprate Pr1.3−xLa0.7CexCuO4\mathrm{Pr}_{1.3-x}\mathrm{La}_{0.7}\mathrm{Ce}_{x}\mathrm{CuO}_{4} finds that the pseudogap along the boundary of the antiferromagnetic Brillouin zone(AFBZ) exhibits dramatic momentum dependence. In particular, the pseudogap vanishes in a finite region around the anti-nodal point, in which a single broadened peak emerges at the un-renormalized quasiparticle energy. Such an observation is argued to be inconsistent with the antiferromagnetic(AFM) band-folding picture, which predicts a constant pseudogap along the AFBZ boundary. On the other hand, it is claimed that the experimental results are consistent with the prediction of the cluster dynamical mean field theory(CDMFT) simulation on the Hubbard model, in which the pseudogap is interpreted as a s-wave splitting between the Hubbard bands and the in-gap states. Here we show that the observed momentum dependence of the pseudogap is indeed consistent with AFM band-folding picture, provided that we assume the existence of a strongly momentum dependent quasiparticle scattering rate. More specifically, we show that the quasiparticle scattering rate acts to reduce the spectral gap induced by AFM band-folding effect. The new quasiparticle poles corresponding to the AF-split bands can even be totally eliminated when the scattering rate exceeds the bare band folding gap, leaving the system with a single pole at the un-renormalized quasiparticle energy. We predict that the pseudogap should close in a square root fashion as we move toward (π,0)(\pi,0) along the AFBZ boundary. Our results illustrates again that the quasiparticle scattering rate can play a much more profound role than simply broadening the quasiparticle peak in the quasiparticle dynamics of strongly correlated electron systems.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, new references adde
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