17,186 research outputs found
Static dielectric response and Born effective charge of BN nanotubes from {\it ab initio} finite electric field calculations
{\it Ab initio} investigations of the full static dielectric response and
Born effective charge of BN nanotubes (BN-NTs) have been performed for the
first time using finite electric field method. It is found that the ionic
contribution to the static dielectric response of BN-NTs is substantial and
also that a pronounced chirality-dependent oscillation is superimposed on the
otherwise linear relation between the longitudinal electric polarizability and
the tube diameter (), as for a thin dielectric cylinderical shell. In
contrast, the transverse dielectric response of the BN-NTs resemble the
behavior of a thin (non-ideal) conducting cylindrical shell of a diameter of
\AA, with a screening factor of 2 for the inner electric field. The
medium principal component of the Born effective charge corresponding
to the transverse atomic displacement tangential to the BN-NT surface, has a
pronounced -dependence (but independent of chirality), while the large
longitudinal component exhibits a clear chirality dependence (but
nearly -independent), suggesting a powerful way to characterize the diameter
and chirality of a BN-NT.Comment: submitted to PR
Planetary Formation Scenarios Revistied: Core-Accretion Versus Disk Instability
The core-accretion and disk instability models have so far been used to
explain planetary formation. These models have different conditions, such as
planet mass, disk mass, and metallicity for formation of gas giants. The
core-accretion model has a metallicity condition ([Fe/H] > −1.17 in the
case of G-type stars), and the mass of planets formed is less than 6 times that
of the Jupiter mass MJ. On the other hand, the disk instability model does not
have the metallicity condition, but requires the disk to be 15 times more
massive compared to the minimum mass solar nebulae model. The mass of planets
formed is more than 2MJ. These results are compared to the 161 detected planets
for each spectral type of the central stars. The results show that 90% of the
detected planets are consistent with the core-accretion model regardless of the
spectral type. The remaining 10% are not in the region explained by the
core-accretion model, but are explained by the disk instability model. We
derived the metallicity dependence of the formation probability of gas giants
for the core-accretion model. Comparing the result with the observed fraction
having gas giants, they are found to be consistent. On the other hand, the
observation cannot be explained by the disk instability model, because the
condition for gas giant formation is independent of the metallicity.
Consequently, most of planets detected so far are thought to have been formed
by the core-accretion process, and the rest by the disk instability process.Comment: accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
Phonon-driven ultrafast exciton dissociation at donor-acceptor polymer heterojunctions
A quantum-dynamical analysis of phonon-driven exciton dissociation at polymer
heterojunctions is presented, using a hierarchical electron-phonon model
parameterized for three electronic states and 24 vibrational modes. Two
interfering decay pathways are identified: a direct charge separation, and an
indirect pathway via an intermediate bridge state. Both pathways depend
critically on the dynamical interplay of high-frequency C=C stretch modes and
low-frequency ring-torsional modes. The ultrafast, highly non-equilibrium
dynamics is consistent with time-resolved spectroscopic observations
Analysis of quantum conductance of carbon nanotube junctions by the effective mass approximation
The electron transport through the nanotube junctions which connect the
different metallic nanotubes by a pair of a pentagonal defect and a heptagonal
defect is investigated by Landauer's formula and the effective mass
approximation. From our previous calculations based on the tight binding model,
it has been known that the conductance is determined almost only by two
parameters,i.e., the energy in the unit of the onset energy of more than two
channels and the ratio of the radii of the two nanotubes. The conductance is
calculated again by the effective mass theory in this paper and a simple
analytical form of the conductance is obtained considering a special boundary
conditions of the envelop wavefunctions. The two scaling parameters appear
naturally in this treatment. The results by this formula coincide fairly well
with those of the tight binding model.
The physical origin of the scaling law is clarified by this approach.Comment: RevTe
Electron Correlations in the Quasi-Two-Dimensional Organic Conductor -(BEDT-TTF)I investigated by C NMR
We report a C-NMR study on the ambient-pressure metallic phase of the
layered organic conductor -(BEDT-TTF)I [BEDT-TTF:
bisethylenedithio-tetrathiafulvalene], which is expected to connect the physics
of correlated electrons and Dirac electrons under pressure. The orientation
dependence of the NMR spectra shows that all BEDT-TTF molecules in the unit
cell are to be seen equivalent from a microscopic point of view. This feature
is consistent with the orthorhombic symmetry of the BEDT-TTF sublattice and
also indicates that the monoclinic sublattice, which should make three
molecules in the unit cell nonequivalent, is not practically influential on the
electronic state in the conducting BEDT-TTF layers at ambient pressure. There
is no signature of charge disproportionation in opposition to most of the
-type BEDT-TTF salts.
The analyses of NMR Knight shift, , and the nuclear spin-lattice
relaxation rate, , revealed that the degree of electron correlation,
evaluated by the Korringa ratio [)], is in an
intermediate regime. However, NMR relaxation rate is enhanced above
200K, which possibly indicates that the system enters into a quantum
critical regime of charge-order fluctuations as suggested theoretically.Comment: 19pages, 6figure
Topological Phases in Graphitic Cones
The electronic structure of graphitic cones exhibits distinctive topological
features associated with the apical disclinations. Aharonov-Bohm
magnetoconductance oscillations (period Phi_0) are completely absent in rings
fabricated from cones with a single pentagonal disclination. Close to the apex,
the local density of states changes qualitatively, either developing a cusp
which drops to zero at the Fermi energy, or forming a region of nonzero density
across the Fermi energy, a local metalization of graphene.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX 4, 3 PostScript figure
Where Are the Baryons? II: Feedback Effects
Numerical simulations of the intergalactic medium have shown that at the
present epoch a significant fraction (40-50%) of the baryonic component should
be found in the (T~10^6K) Warm-Hot Intergalactic Medium (WHIM) - with several
recent observational lines of evidence indicating the validity of the
prediction. We here recompute the evolution of the WHIM with the following
major improvements: (1) galactic superwind feedback processes from galaxy/star
formation are explicitly included; (2) major metal species (O V to O IX) are
computed explicitly in a non-equilibrium way; (3) mass and spatial dynamic
ranges are larger by a factor of 8 and 2, respectively, than in our previous
simulations. Here are the major findings: (1) galactic superwinds have dramatic
effects, increasing the WHIM mass fraction by about 20%, primarily through
heating up warm gas near galaxies with density 10^{1.5}-10^4 times the mean
density. (2) the fraction of baryons in WHIM is increased modestly from the
earlier work but is ~40-50%. (3) the gas density of the WHIM is broadly peaked
at a density 10-20 times the mean density, ranging from underdense regions to
regions that are overdense by 10^3-10^4. (4) the median metallicity of the WHIM
is 0.18 Zsun for oxygen with 50% and 90% intervals being (0.040,0.38) and
(0.0017,0.83).Comment: 44 pages, 17 figures, high res version at
http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~cen/baryonII.ps.g
Quantum Phonon Optics: Coherent and Squeezed Atomic Displacements
In this paper we investigate coherent and squeezed quantum states of phonons.
The latter allow the possibility of modulating the quantum fluctuations of
atomic displacements below the zero-point quantum noise level of coherent
states. The expectation values and quantum fluctuations of both the atomic
displacement and the lattice amplitude operators are calculated in these
states---in some cases analytically. We also study the possibility of squeezing
quantum noise in the atomic displacement using a polariton-based approach.Comment: 6 pages, RevTe
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