295 research outputs found

    Spin-orbit effects on the Larmor dispersion relation in GaAs quantum wells

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    We have studied the relevance of spin-orbit coupling to the dispersion 00009 relation of the Larmor resonance observed in inelastic light scattering and electron-spin resonance experiments on GaAs quantum wells. We show that the spin-orbit interaction, here described by a sum of Dresselhaus and Bychkov-Rashba terms, couples Zeeman and spin-density excitations. We have evaluated its contribution to the spin splitting as a function of the magnetic field BB, and have found that in the small BB limit, the spin-orbit interaction does not contribute to the spin splitting, whereas at high magnetic fields it yields a BB independent contribution to the spin splitting given by 2(λR2λD2)2(\lambda_R^2-\lambda_D^2), with λR,D\lambda_{R,D} being the intensity of the Bychkov-Rashba and Dresselhaus spin-orbit terms.Comment: To be published in Physical Review

    Excited electron-bubble states in superfluid helium-4: a time-dependent density functional approach

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    We present a systematic study on the excited electron-bubble states in superfluid helium-4 using a time-dependent density functional approach. For the evolution of the 1P bubble state, two different functionals accompanied with two different time-development schemes are used, namely an accurate finite-range functional for helium with an adiabatic approximation for electron versus an efficient zero-range functional for helium with a real-time evolution for electron. We make a detailed comparison between the quantitative results obtained from the two methods, which allows us to employ with confidence the optimal method for suitable problems. Based on this knowledge, we use the finite-range functional to calculate the time-resolved absorption spectrum of the 1P bubble, which in principle can be experimentally determined, and we use the zero-range functional to real-time evolve the 2P bubble for several hundreds of picoseconds, which is theoretically interesting due to the break down of adiabaticity for this state. Our results discard the physical realization of relaxed, metastable 2P electron-bubblesComment: 16 pages, 12 figure

    From quantum dots to quantum wires: electronic structure of semiconductor nanorods

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    The transition bridge between zero-dimensional quantum dots and one-dimensional quantum wires is explored theoretically by means of the construction of the addition energy spectra of nanorods with different lengths. Spin density-functional theory supplemented with full configuration interaction calculations are carried out. The addition energy spectra are qualitatively related to the single particle correlation diagram. The transition from charge-density waves to spin-density waves, characterizing the Wigner crystallization in the low density limit is show

    Multipole modes and spin features in the Raman spectrum of nanoscopic quantum rings

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    We present a systematic study of ground state and spectroscopic properties of many-electron nanoscopic quantum rings. Addition energies at zero magnetic field (B) and electrochemical potentials as a function of B are given for a ring hosting up to 24 electrons. We find discontinuities in the excitation energies of multipole spin and charge density modes, and a coupling between the charge and spin density responses that allow to identify the formation of ferromagnetic ground states in narrow magnetic field regions. These effects can be observed in Raman experiments, and are related to the fractional Aharonov-Bohm oscillations of the energy and of the persistent current in the rin

    Anomaly Detection Based on Sensor Data in Petroleum Industry Applications

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    Anomaly detection is the problem of finding patterns in data that do not conform to an a priori expected behavior. This is related to the problem in which some samples are distant, in terms of a given metric, from the rest of the dataset, where these anomalous samples are indicated as outliers. Anomaly detection has recently attracted the attention of the research community, because of its relevance in real-world applications, like intrusion detection, fraud detection, fault detection and system health monitoring, among many others. Anomalies themselves can have a positive or negative nature, depending on their context and interpretation. However, in either case, it is important for decision makers to be able to detect them in order to take appropriate actions. The petroleum industry is one of the application contexts where these problems are present. The correct detection of such types of unusual information empowers the decision maker with the capacity to act on the system in order to correctly avoid, correct or react to the situations associated with them. In that application context, heavy extraction machines for pumping and generation operations, like turbomachines, are intensively monitored by hundreds of sensors each that send measurements with a high frequency for damage prevention. In this paper, we propose a combination of yet another segmentation algorithm (YASA), a novel fast and high quality segmentation algorithm, with a one-class support vector machine approach for efficient anomaly detection in turbomachines. The proposal is meant for dealing with the aforementioned task and to cope with the lack of labeled training data. As a result, we perform a series of empirical studies comparing our approach to other methods applied to benchmark problems and a real-life application related to oil platform turbomachinery anomaly detection.This work was partially funded by the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development projects CNPq BJT 407851/2012-7 and CNPq PVE 314017/2013-5 and projects MINECO TEC 2012-37832-C02-01, CICYT TEC 2011-28626-C02-02.Publicad

    Isospin phases of vertically coupled double quantum rings under the influence

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    Vertically coupled double quantum rings submitted to a perpendicular magnetic field B are addressed within the local spin-density-functional theory. We describe the structure of quantum ring molecules containing up to 40 electrons considering different inter-ring distances and intensities of the applied magnetic field. When the rings are quantum mechanically strongly coupled, only bonding states are occupied and the addition spectrum of the artificial molecules resembles that of a single-quantum ring, with some small differences appearing as an effect of the magnetic field. Despite the latter’s tendency to flatten the spectra, in the strong-coupling limit, some clear peaks are still found even when B 0 that can be interpretated from the single-particle energy levels similarly as in the zero magnetic field case, namely, in terms of closed-shell and Hund’s-rule configurations. By increasing the inter-ring distance, the occupation of the first antibonding orbitals washes out such structures and the addition spectra become flatter and irregular. In the weak-coupling regime, numerous isospin oscillations are found as functions of

    Helium in polygonal nanopores at zero temperature: Density functional theory calculations

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    We investigate adsorption of helium in nanoscopic polygonal pores at zero temperature using a finite-range density functional theory. The adsorption potential is computed by means of a technique denoted as the elementary source method. We analyze a rhombic pore with Cs walls, where we show the existence of multiple interfacial configurations at some linear densities, which correspond to metastable states. Shape transitions and hysterectic loops appear in patterns which are richer and more complex than in a cylindrical tube with the same transverse area
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