5,722 research outputs found
Self-assembly of parallel atomic wires and periodic clusters of silicon on a vicinal Si(111) surface
Silicon self-assembly at step edges in the initial stage of homoepitaxial
growth on a vicinal Si(111) surface is studied by scanning tunneling microscopy
(STM). The resulting atomic structures change dramatically from a parallel
array of 0.7 nm wide wires to one dimensionally aligned periodic clusters of
the diameter ~ 2 nm and periodicity 2.7 nm in the very narrow range of growth
temperatures between 400 and 300 C. These nanostructures are expected to play
an important role in future development of silicon quantum computers.
Mechanisms leading to such distinct structures are discussed.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Lett. Numbers of pages and
figures are 13 and 3, respectivel
Algebraic structure of the Feynman propagator and a new correspondence for canonical transformations
We investigate the algebraic structure of the Feynman propagator with a
general time-dependent quadratic Hamiltonian system. Using the Lie-algebraic
technique we obtain a normal-ordered form of the time-evolution operator, and
then the propagator is easily derived by a simple ``Integration Within Ordered
Product" (IWOP) technique.It is found that this propagator contains a classical
generating function which demonstrates a new correspondence between classical
and quantum mechanics
Three-nucleon interactions: A frontier in nuclear structure
Three-nucleon interactions are a frontier in understanding and predicting the
structure of strongly-interacting matter in laboratory nuclei and in the
cosmos. We present results and discuss the status of first calculations with
microscopic three-nucleon interactions beyond light nuclei. This coherent
effort is possible due to advances based on effective field theory and
renormalization group methods in nuclear physics.Comment: 7 pages, 11 figures, talk at International Symposium on New Facet of
Three-Nucleon Force (FM50), Tokyo, October, 200
Tidally Triggered Star Formation in Close Pairs of Galaxies: Major and Minor Interactions
We study star formation in a sample of 345 galaxies in 167 pairs and compact
groups drawn from the original CfA2 Redshift Survey and from a follow-up search
for companions. We construct our sample with attention to including pairs with
luminosity contrast |\Delta m_R| >= 2. These 57 galaxies with |\Delta m_R| >= 2
provide a set of nearby representative cases of minor interactions, a central
feature of the hierarchical galaxy formation model. Here we report the
redshifts and positions of the 345 galaxies in our sample, and of 136 galaxies
in apparent pairs that are superpositions. In the pairs sample as a whole,
there are strong correlations between the equivalent width of the H\alpha
emission line and the projected spatial and the line-of-sight velocity
separation of the pair. For pairs of small luminosity contrast, |\Delta m_R| <
2, the member galaxies show a correlation between the equivalent width of
H\alpha and the projected spatial separation of the pair. However, for pairs
with large luminosity contrast, |\Delta m_R| >= 2, we detect no correlation
between the equivalent width of H\alpha and the projected spatial separation.
The relative luminosity of the companion galaxy is more important in a
gravitational tidal interaction than the intrinsic luminosity of the galaxy.
Central star formation across the entire pairs sample depends strongly on the
luminosity ratio, |\Delta m_R|, a reasonable proxy for the mass ratio of the
pair; pairs composed of similarly luminous galaxies produce the strongest
bursts of star formation. Pairs with |\Delta m_R| >= 2 rarely have EW(H\alpha)
>~ 70 Ang.Comment: Minor revisions following journal proof
The 2000 outburst of the recurrent nova CI Aquilae: optical spectroscopy
We present low- and medium resolution spectra of the recurrent nova CI
Aquilae taken at 14 epochs in May and June, 2000. The overall appearance is
similar to other U Sco-type recurrent novae (U Sco, V394 CrA). Medium
resolution (R=7000-10000) hydrogen and iron profiles suggest an early expansion
velocity of 2000-2500 km/s. The H\alpha evolution is followed from Dt = -0.6 d
to +53 d, starting from a nearly Gaussian shape to a double peaked profile
through strong P-Cyg profiles. The interstellar component of the sodium D line
and two diffuse interstellar bands put constraints on the interstellar
reddening which is estimated to be E(B-V)=0.85\pm0.3. The available visual and
CCD-V observations are used to determine t0,t2 and t3. The resulting parameters
are: t0=2451669.5\pm0.1, t2=30\pm1 d, t3=36\pm1 d. The recent lightcurve is
found to be generally similar to that observed in 1917 with departures as large
as 1-2 mag in certain phases. This behaviour is also typical for the U Sco
subclass.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Development of natto with germination-defective mutants of Bacillus subtilis (natto)
The original publication is available at www.springerlink.comArticleAPPLIED MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY. 82(4):741-748 (2009)journal articl
Microstructural influences on stress migration in electroplated Cu metallization
科研費報告書収録論文(課題番号:13450281・基盤研究(B)(2) ・H13~H15/研究代表者:小池, 淳一/超高速LSI用Cu配線におけるボイド形成機構の研究
The Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Survey (SXDS) -VII. Clustering Segregation with Ultraviolet and Optical Luminosities of Lyman-Break Galaxies at z~3
We investigate clustering properties of Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs) at z~3
based on deep multi-waveband imaging data from optical to near-infrared
wavelengths in the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field. The LBGs are selected by U-V
and V-z' colors in one contiguous area of 561 arcmin^2 down to z'=25.5. We
study the dependence of the clustering strength on rest-frame UV and optical
magnitudes, which can be indicators of star formation rate and stellar mass,
respectively. The correlation length is found to be a strong function of both
UV and optical magnitudes with brighter galaxies being more clustered than
faint ones in both cases. Furthermore, the correlation length is dependent on a
combination of UV and optical magnitudes in the sense that galaxies bright in
optical magnitude have large correlation lengths irrespective of UV magnitude,
while galaxies faint in optical magnitude have correlation lengths decreasing
with decreasing UV brightness. These results suggest that galaxies with large
stellar masses always belong to massive halos in which they can have various
star formation rates, while galaxies with small stellar masses reside in less
massive halos only if they have low star formation rates. There appears to be
an upper limit to the stellar mass and the star formation rate which is
determined by the mass of hosting dark halos.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Tidally-Triggered Star Formation in Close Pairs of Galaxies
We analyze new optical spectra of a sample of 502 galaxies in close pairs and
n-tuples, separated by <= 50/h kpc. We extracted the sample objectively from
the CfA2 redshift survey, without regard to the surroundings of the tight
systems. We probe the relationship between star formation and the dynamics of
the systems of galaxies. The equivalent widths of H\alpha (EW(H\alpha) and
other emission lines anti-correlate strongly with pair spatial separation
(\Delta D) and velocity separation. We use the measured EW(H\alpha) and the
starburst models of Leitherer et al. to estimate the time since the most recent
burst of star for- mation began for each galaxy. In the absence of a large
contribution from an old stellar population to the continuum around H\alpha,
the observed \Delta D -- EW(H\alpha) correlation signifies that starbursts with
larger separations on the sky are, on average, older. By matching the dynamical
timescale to the burst timescale, we show that the data support a simple
picture in which a close pass initiates a starburst; EW(H\alpha) decreases with
time as the pair separation increases, accounting for the anti-correlation.
This picture leads to a method for measuring the duration and the initial mass
function of interaction-induced starbursts: our data are compatible with the
starburst and orbit models in many respects, as long as the starburst lasts
longer than \sim10^8 years and the delay between the close pass and the
initiation of the starburst is less than a few \times 10^7 years. If there is
no large contribution from an old stellar population to the continuum around
H\alpha the Miller-Scalo and cutoff (M <= 30 M_\sun) Salpeter initial mass
functions fit the data much better than a standard Salpeter IMF. (Abridged.)Comment: 43 pages, 22 figures, to appear in the ApJ; we correct an error which
had minor effects on numerical values in the pape
- …