7,284 research outputs found
A generic multibody simulation
Described is a dynamic simulation package which can be configured for orbital test scenarios involving multiple bodies. The rotational and translational state integration methods are selectable for each individual body and may be changed during a run if necessary. Characteristics of the bodies are determined by assigning components consisting of mass properties, forces, and moments, which are the outputs of user-defined environmental models. Generic model implementation is facilitated by a transformation processor which performs coordinate frame inversions. Transformations are defined in the initialization file as part of the simulation configuration. The simulation package includes an initialization processor, which consists of a command line preprocessor, a general purpose grammar, and a syntax scanner. These permit specifications of the bodies, their interrelationships, and their initial states in a format that is not dependent on a particular test scenario
Theory of the Stark Effect for P donors in Si
We develop a multi-valley effective mass theory for substitutional donors in
silicon in an inhomogeneous environment. Valley-orbit coupling is treated
perturbatively. We apply the theory to the Stark effect in Si:P. The method
becomes more accurate at high fields, and it is designed to give correct
experimental binding energies at zero field. Unexpectedly, the ground state
energy for the donor electron is found to increase with electric field as a
consequence of spectrum narrowing of the 1s manifold. Our results are of
particular importance for the Kane quantum computer.Comment: published versio
Nonuniqueness and derivative discontinuities in density-functional theories for current-carrying and superconducting systems
Current-carrying and superconducting systems can be treated within
density-functional theory if suitable additional density variables (the current
density and the superconducting order parameter, respectively) are included in
the density-functional formalism. Here we show that the corresponding conjugate
potentials (vector and pair potentials, respectively) are {\it not} uniquely
determined by the densities. The Hohenberg-Kohn theorem of these generalized
density-functional theories is thus weaker than the original one. We give
explicit examples and explore some consequences.Comment: revised version (typos corrected, some discussion added) to appear in
Phys. Rev.
Determination of Compton profiles at solid surfaces from first-principles calculations
Projected momentum distributions of electrons, i.e. Compton profiles above
the topmost atomic layer have recently become experimentally accessible by
kinetic electron emission in grazing-incidence scattering of atoms at
atomically flat single crystal metal surfaces. Sub-threshold emission by slow
projectiles was shown to be sensitive to high-momentum components of the local
Compton profile near the surface. We present a method to extract momentum
distribution, Compton profiles, and Wigner and Husimi phase space distributions
from ab-initio density-functional calculations of electronic structure. An
application for such distributions to scattering experiments is discussed.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PR
Molecular effects in the ionization of N, O and F by intense laser fields
In this paper we study the response in time of N, O and F to
laser pulses having a wavelength of 390nm. We find single ionization
suppression in O and its absence in F, in accordance with experimental
results at nm. Within our framework of time-dependent density
functional theory we are able to explain deviations from the predictions of
Intense-Field Many-Body -Matrix Theory (IMST). We confirm the connection of
ionization suppression with destructive interference of outgoing electron waves
from the ionized electron orbital. However, the prediction of ionization
suppression, justified within the IMST approach through the symmetry of the
highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO), is not reliable since it turns out
that, e.g. in the case of F, the electronic response to the laser pulse is
rather complicated and does not lead to dominant depletion of the HOMO.
Therefore, the symmetry of the HOMO is not sufficient to predict ionization
suppression. However, at least for F, the symmetry of the dominantly
ionized orbital is consistent with the non-suppression of ionization.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure
Quantum-Dot Cellular Automata using Buried Dopants
The use of buried dopants to construct quantum-dot cellular automata is
investigated as an alternative to conventional electronic devices for
information transport and elementary computation. This provides a limit in
terms of miniaturisation for this type of system as each potential well is
formed by a single dopant atom. As an example, phosphorous donors in silicon
are found to have good energy level separation with incoherent switching times
of the order of microseconds. However, we also illustrate the possibility of
ultra-fast quantum coherent switching via adiabatic evolution. The switching
speeds are numerically calculated and found to be 10's of picoseconds or less
for a single cell. The effect of decoherence is also simulated in the form of a
dephasing process and limits are estimated for operation with finite dephasing.
The advantages and limitations of this scheme over the more conventional
quantum-dot based scheme are discussed. The use of a buried donor cellular
automata system is also discussed as an architecture for testing several
aspects of buried donor based quantum computing schemes.Comment: Minor changes in response to referees comments. Improved section on
scaling and added plot of incoherent switching time
First principles calculation of vibrational Raman spectra in large systems: signature of small rings in crystalline SiO2
We present an approach for the efficient calculation of vibrational Raman
intensities in periodic systems within density functional theory. The Raman
intensities are computed from the second order derivative of the electronic
density matrix with respect to a uniform electric field. In contrast to
previous approaches, the computational effort required by our method for the
evaluation of the intensities is negligible compared to that required for the
calculation of vibrational frequencies. As a first application, we study the
signature of 3- and 4-membered rings in the the Raman spectra of several
polymorphs of SiO2, including a zeolite having 102 atoms per unit cell.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, revtex4 Minor corrections; accepted in Phys. Rev.
Let
Network inference using asynchronously updated kinetic Ising Model
Network structures are reconstructed from dynamical data by respectively
naive mean field (nMF) and Thouless-Anderson-Palmer (TAP) approximations. For
TAP approximation, we use two methods to reconstruct the network: a) iteration
method; b) casting the inference formula to a set of cubic equations and
solving it directly. We investigate inference of the asymmetric Sherrington-
Kirkpatrick (S-K) model using asynchronous update. The solutions of the sets
cubic equation depend of temperature T in the S-K model, and a critical
temperature Tc is found around 2.1. For T < Tc, the solutions of the cubic
equation sets are composed of 1 real root and two conjugate complex roots while
for T > Tc there are three real roots. The iteration method is convergent only
if the cubic equations have three real solutions. The two methods give same
results when the iteration method is convergent. Compared to nMF, TAP is
somewhat better at low temperatures, but approaches the same performance as
temperature increase. Both methods behave better for longer data length, but
for improvement arises, TAP is well pronounced.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Band structure analysis of the conduction-band mass anisotropy in 6H and 4H SiC
The band structures of 6H and 4H SiC calculated by means of the FP-LMTO
method are used to determine the effective mass tensors for their
conduction-band minima. The results are shown to be consistent with recent
optically detected cyclotron resonance measurements and predict an unusual band
filling dependence for 6H-SiC.Comment: 5 pages including 4 postscript figures incorporated with epsfig figs.
available as part 2: sicfig.uu self-extracting file to appear in Phys. Rev.
B: Aug. 15 (Rapid Communications
Statistical mechanics of Floquet systems: the pervasive problem of near degeneracies
The statistical mechanics of periodically driven ("Floquet") systems in
contact with a heat bath exhibits some radical differences from the traditional
statistical mechanics of undriven systems. In Floquet systems all quasienergies
can be placed in a finite frequency interval, and the number of near
degeneracies in this interval grows without limit as the dimension N of the
Hilbert space increases. This leads to pathologies, including drastic changes
in the Floquet states, as N increases. In earlier work these difficulties were
put aside by fixing N, while taking the coupling to the bath to be smaller than
any quasienergy difference. This led to a simple explicit theory for the
reduced density matrix, but with some major differences from the usual time
independent statistical mechanics. We show that, for weak but finite coupling
between system and heat bath, the accuracy of a calculation within the
truncated Hilbert space spanned by the N lowest energy eigenstates of the
undriven system is limited, as N increases indefinitely, only by the usual
neglect of bath memory effects within the Born and Markov approximations. As we
seek higher accuracy by increasing N, we inevitably encounter quasienergy
differences smaller than the system-bath coupling. We therefore derive the
steady state reduced density matrix without restriction on the size of
quasienergy splittings. In general, it is no longer diagonal in the Floquet
states. We analyze, in particular, the behavior near a weakly avoided crossing,
where quasienergy near degeneracies routinely appear. The explicit form of our
results for the denisty matrix gives a consistent prescription for the
statistical mechanics for many periodically driven systems with N infinite, in
spite of the Floquet state pathologies.Comment: 31 pages, 3 figure
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