4,402 research outputs found
A simple method for the Kramers-Kronig analysis of reflectance spectra measured with diamond anvil cell
When the optical reflectance spectrum of a sample under high pressure is
studied with a diamond anvil cell, it is measured at a sample/diamond
interface. Due to the large refractive index of diamond, the resulting
reflectance Rd(w) may substantially differ from that measured in vacuum. To
obtain optical constants from Rd(w), therefore, the usual Kramers-Kronig (KK)
transform cannot be straightforwardly applied, and either a spectral fitting or
a modified KK transform has been used. Here we describe an alternative method
to perform KK analysis on Rd(w). This method relies on the usual KK transform
with an appropriate cutoff and extrapolation to Rd(w), and may offer a simpler
approach to obtain infrared conductivity from measured Rd(w).Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of 6th WIRMS
Conference (J. Phys. Conf. Ser.
High-Symmetry Polarization Domains in Low-Symmetry Ferroelectrics
We present experimental evidence for hexagonal domain faceting in the
ferroelectric polymer PVDF-TrFE films having the lower orthorhombic
crystallographic symmetry. This effect can arise from purely electrostatic
depolarizing forces. We show that in contrast to magnetic bubble shape domains
where such type of deformation instability has a predominantly elliptical
character, the emergence of more symmetrical circular harmonics is favored in
ferroelectrics with high dielectric constant
Theory for Magnetic Anisotropy of Field-Induced Insulator-to-Metal Transition in Cubic Kondo Insulator YbB_{12}
Magnetization and energy gap of Kondo insulator YbB_{12} are calculated
theoretically based on the previously proposed tight-binding model composed of
Yb 5d and 4f orbitals. It is found that magnetization
curves are almost isotropic, naturally expected from the cubic symmetry, but
that the gap-closing field has an anisotropy: the gap closes faster for the
field in (100) direction than in (110) and (111) directions, in accord with the
experiments. This is qualitatively understood by considering the maximal
eigenvalues of the total angular momentum operators projected on each direction
of the magnetic field. But the numerical calculation based on the band model
yields better agreement with the experiment.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Indirect and direct energy gaps in the Kondo semiconductor YbB12
Optical conductivity [] of the Kondo semiconductor YbB
has been measured over wide ranges of temperature (=8690 K) and photon
energy ( 1.3 meV). The data reveal the
entire crossover of YbB from a metallic electronic structure at high
into a semiconducting one at low . Associated with the gap development in
, a clear onset is newly found at =15 meV for 20 K. The onset energy is identified as the gap width of YbB
appearing in . This gap in \sigma(\omega)\sigma(\omega)$ is interpreted as arising from the direct gap. The
absorption coefficient around the onset and the mIR peak indeed show
characteristic energy dependences expected for indirect and direct optical
transitions in conventional semiconductors.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Characterization of the differentially methylated region of the Impact gene that exhibits Glires-specific imprinting
Comparative genomic analysis of the Impact locus, which is imprinted in Glires but not in other mammals, reveals features required for genomic imprinting
Strange filamentary structures ("fireballs") around a merger galaxy in the Coma cluster of galaxies
We found an unusual complex of narrow blue filaments, bright blue knots, and
H-alpha emitting filaments and clouds, which morphologically resembled a
complex of ``fireballs,'' extending up to 80 kpc south from an E+A galaxy RB199
in the Coma cluster. The galaxy has a highly disturbed morphology indicative of
a galaxy--galaxy merger remnant. The narrow blue filaments extend in straight
shapes toward the south from the galaxy, and several bright blue knots are
located at the southern ends of the filaments. The Rc band absolute magnitudes,
half light radii and estimated masses of the bright knots are -12 - -13 mag,
200 - 300 pc and 10^6-7 Msolar, respectively. Long, narrow H-alpha emitting
filaments are connected at the south edge of the knots. The average color of
the fireballs is B - Rc = 0.5, which is bluer than RB199 (B - R = 0.99),
suggesting that most of the stars in the fireballs were formed within several
times 10^8 yr. The narrow blue filaments exhibit almost no H-alpha emission.
Strong H-alpha and UV emission appear in the bright knots. These
characteristics indicate that star formation recently ceased in the blue
filaments and now continues in the bright knots. The gas stripped by some
mechanism from the disk of RB199 may be traveling in the intergalactic space,
forming stars left along its trajectory. The most plausible fireball formation
mechanism is ram pressure stripping by high-speed collision between the galaxy
and the hot intra-cluster medium. The fireballs may be a snapshot of diffuse
intra-cluster population formation, or halo star population formation in a
cluster galaxy.Comment: 13 pages, 14 figures, submitted to Ap
Photogenerated Carriers in SrTiO3 Probed by Mid-Infrared Absorption
Infrared absorption spectra of SrTiO have been measured under
above-band-gap photoexcitations to study the properties of photogenerated
carriers, which should play important roles in previously reported photoinduced
phenomena in SrTiO. A broad absorption band appears over the entire
mid-infrared region under photoexcitation. Detailed energy, temperature, and
excitation power dependences of the photoinduced absorption are reported. This
photo-induced absorption is attributed to the intragap excitations of the
photogenerated carriers. The data show the existence of a high density of
in-gap states for the photocarriers, which extends over a wide energy range
starting from the conduction and valence band edges.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp
A new species of the cheilostome bryozoan Chiastosella in the Southern Ocean, past and present
0000-0001-7279-715XThe attached document is the author('s) final accepted version of the journal article. You are advised to consult the publisher's version if you wish to cite from it
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