852 research outputs found
The process of irreversible nucleation in multilayer growth. II. Exact results in one and two dimensions
We study irreversible dimer nucleation on top of terraces during epitaxial
growth in one and two dimensions, for all values of the step-edge barrier. The
problem is solved exactly by transforming it into a first passage problem for a
random walker in a higher-dimensional space. The spatial distribution of
nucleation events is shown to differ markedly from the mean-field estimate
except in the limit of very weak step-edge barriers. The nucleation rate is
computed exactly, including numerical prefactors.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.
FUTURE SPACE EXPLORATION: FROM REFERENCE SCENARIO DEFINITION TO KEY TECHNOLOGIES ROADMAPS
The human exploration of multiple deep space destinations (e.g. Cis-lunar, NEAs), in view of the final challenge of sending astronauts to Mars, represents a current and consistent study domain especially in terms of its possible scenarios and mission architectures assessments, as proved by the numerous on-going activities about this topic and moreover by the Global Exploration Roadmap. After exploring and analysing different possible solutions to identify the most flexible path, a detailed characterization of one out of several Design Reference Missions (DRM) represents a necessity in order to evaluate the feasibility and affordability of deep space exploration missions, specifically in terms of enabling technological capabilities. A human expedition to a NEA, milestone of the GER ‘Asteroid Next' scenario, is considered the mission that would offer the largest suite of benefits in terms of scientific return, operational experience and familiarity on human deep space missions, test of technologies and assessment of human factors for future long-duration expeditions (including planetary bodies), evaluation of In-Situ Resource Utilization (ISRU) and, more specifically, opportunity to test asteroid collision avoidance techniques. The study started from the identification and analysis of feasible evolutionary scenarios for Deep Space Exploration. Different destinations were considered as targets, with particular attention to Earth-Moon Lagrangian points, NEA and Mars as an alternative path to a Moon campaign. In the frame of the scenario selected as the preferable one, a DRM to a NEA (reference target) was defined in detail in terms of architecture and mission elements, as well as of the subsystems composing them. Successively, the critical subsystems and the relevant key technologies were investigated in detail, from their status-of-the-art up to an assessment of their development roadmaps. They shall enable the DRM and support the whole scenario. The paper describes the process that was followed within the study and reports the major obtained results, in terms of scenarios and mission analysis. Furthermore the key technologies that were identified are listed and described highlighting the derived roadmaps for their development according to the reference scenario
The process of irreversible nucleation in multilayer growth. I. Failure of the mean-field approach
The formation of stable dimers on top of terraces during epitaxial growth is
investigated in detail. In this paper we focus on mean-field theory, the
standard approach to study nucleation. Such theory is shown to be unsuitable
for the present problem, because it is equivalent to considering adatoms as
independent diffusing particles. This leads to an overestimate of the correct
nucleation rate by a factor N, which has a direct physical meaning: in average,
a visited lattice site is visited N times by a diffusing adatom. The dependence
of N on the size of the terrace and on the strength of step-edge barriers is
derived from well known results for random walks. The spatial distribution of
nucleation events is shown to be different from the mean-field prediction, for
the same physical reason. In the following paper we develop an exact treatment
of the problem.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Distributed optimal control of a nonstandard system of phase field equations
We investigate a distributed optimal control problem for a phase field model
of Cahn-Hilliard type. The model describes two-species phase segregation on an
atomic lattice under the presence of diffusion; it has been recently introduced
by the same authors in arXiv:1103.4585v1 [math.AP] and consists of a system of
two highly nonlinearly coupled PDEs. For this reason, standard arguments of
optimal control theory do not apply directly, although the control constraints
and the cost functional are of standard type. We show that the problem admits a
solution, and we derive the first-order necessary conditions of optimality.Comment: Key words: distributed optimal control, nonlinear phase field
systems, first-order necessary optimality condition
Semiconductor-based Geometrical Quantum Gates
We propose an implementation scheme for holonomic, i.e., geometrical, quantum
information processing based on semiconductor nanostructures. Our quantum
hardware consists of coupled semiconductor macroatoms addressed/controlled by
ultrafast multicolor laser-pulse sequences. More specifically, logical qubits
are encoded in excitonic states with different spin polarizations and
manipulated by adiabatic time-control of the laser amplitudes . The two-qubit
gate is realized in a geometric fashion by exploiting dipole-dipole coupling
between excitons in neighboring quantum dots.Comment: 4 Pages LaTeX, 3 Figures included. To appear in PRB (Rapid Comm.
Irreversible nucleation in molecular beam epitaxy: From theory to experiments
Recently, the nucleation rate on top of a terrace during the irreversible
growth of a crystal surface by MBE has been determined exactly. In this paper
we go beyond the standard model usually employed to study the nucleation
process, and we analyze the qualitative and quantitative consequences of two
important additional physical ingredients: the nonuniformity of the
Ehrlich-Schwoebel barrier at the step-edge, because of the existence of kinks,
and the steering effects, due to the interaction between the atoms of the flux
and the substrate. We apply our results to typical experiments of second layer
nucleation.Comment: 11 pages. Table I corrected and one appendix added. To be published
in Phys. Rev. B (scheduled issue: 15 February 2003
Potencial applications of automated video-image analysis in the pelagic and demersal environment including the deep-sea
Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
Spin-based quantum information processing with semiconductor quantum dots and cavity QED
A quantum information processing scheme is proposed with semiconductor
quantum dots located in a high-Q single mode QED cavity. The spin degrees of
freedom of one excess conduction electron of the quantum dots are employed as
qubits. Excitonic states, which can be produced ultrafastly with optical
operation, are used as auxiliary states in the realization of quantum gates. We
show how properly tailored ultrafast laser pulses and Pauli-blocking effects,
can be used to achieve a universal encoded quantum computing.Comment: RevTex, 2 figure
The generalised scaling function: a systematic study
We describe a procedure for determining the generalised scaling functions
at all the values of the coupling constant. These functions describe
the high spin contribution to the anomalous dimension of large twist operators
(in the sector) of SYM. At fixed , can be
obtained by solving a linear integral equation (or, equivalently, a linear
system with an infinite number of equations), whose inhomogeneous term only
depends on the solutions at smaller . In other words, the solution can be
written in a recursive form and then explicitly worked out in the strong
coupling regime. In this regime, we also emphasise the peculiar convergence of
different quantities ('masses', related to the ) to the unique mass gap
of the nonlinear sigma model and analyse the first next-to-leading order
corrections.Comment: Latex version, journal version (with explanatory appendices and more
references
Polarized deep inelastic scattering at high energies and parity violating structure functions
A comprehensive analysis of deep inelastic scattering of polarized charged
leptons on polarized nucleons is presented; weak interaction contributions,
both in neutral and charged current processes, are taken into account and the
parity violating polarized nucleon structure functions are studied. Possible
ways of their measurements and their interpretations in the parton model are
discussed.Comment: (slightly modified version, includes a few new references and
corrects few misprints for publication), 14 pages in TeX (needs harvmac) no
figure, DFTT 80/9
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