9,790 research outputs found
Application of hydrogenation to low-temperature cleaning of the Si(001) surface in the processes of molecular-beam epitaxy: Investigation by STM, RHEED and HRTEM
Structural properties of the clean Si(001) surface obtained as a result of
low-temperature (470--650C) pre-growth annealings of silicon wafers in a
molecular-beam epitaxy chamber have been investigated. To decrease the cleaning
temperature, a silicon surface was hydrogenated in the process of a preliminary
chemical treatment in HF and NH_4F aqueous solutions. It has been shown that
smooth surfaces composed by wide terraces separated by monoatomic steps can be
obtained by dehydrogenation at the temperatures > 600C, whereas clean surfaces
obtained at the temperatures < 600C are rough. It has been found that there
exists a dependence of structural properties of clean surfaces on the
temperature of hydrogen thermal desorption and the process of the preliminary
chemical treatment. The frequency of detachment/attachment of Si dimers from/to
the steps and effect of the Ehrlich-Schwoebel barrier on ad-dimer migration
across steps have been found to be the most probable factors determining a
degree of the resultant surface roughness.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures; version accepted to J. Appl. Phy
A 3-D Track-Finding Processor for the CMS Level-1 Muon Trigger
We report on the design and test results of a prototype processor for the CMS
Level-1 trigger that performs 3-D track reconstruction and measurement from
data recorded by the cathode strip chambers of the endcap muon system. The
tracking algorithms are written in C++ using a class library we developed that
facilitates automatic conversion to Verilog. The code is synthesized into
firmware for field-programmable gate-arrays from the Xilinx Virtex-II series. A
second-generation prototype has been developed and is currently under test. It
performs regional track-finding in a 60 degree azimuthal sector and accepts 3
GB/s of input data synchronously with the 40 MHz beam crossing frequency. The
latency of the track-finding algorithms is expected to be 250 ns, including
geometrical alignment correction of incoming track segments and a final
momentum assignment based on the muon trajectory in the non-uniform magnetic
field in the CMS endcaps.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, proceedings for the conference on Computing in
High Energy and Nuclear Physics, March 24-28 2003, La Jolla, Californi
Ten-Dimensional Super-Twistors and Super-Yang-Mills
Four-dimensional super-twistors provide a compact covariant description of
on-shell N=4 d=4 super-Yang-Mills. In this paper, ten-dimensional
super-twistors are introduced which similarly provide a compact covariant
description of on-shell d=10 super-Yang-Mills. The super-twistor variables are
Z=(lambda^alpha, mu_alpha, Gamma^m) where lambda^alpha and mu_alpha are
constrained bosonic d=10 spinors and Gamma^m is a constrained fermionic d=10
vector. The Penrose map relates the twistor superfield Phi(Z) with the d=10
super-Yang-Mills vertex operator lambda^alpha A_alpha(x,theta) which appears in
the pure spinor formalism of the superstring, and the cubic super-Yang-Mills
amplitude is proportional to the super-twistor integral \int dZ Phi_1 Phi_2
Phi_3.Comment: 14 pages harvmac, added short clarificatio
Commissioning of the CSC Level 1 Trigger Optical Links at CMS
The Endcap Muon (EMU) Cathode Strip Chamber (CSC) detector at the CMS experiment at CERN has been fully installed and operational since summer of 2008. The system of 180 optical links connects the middle and upper levels of the CSC Level 1 Trigger chain. Design and commissioning of all optical links present several challenges, including reliable clock distribution, link synchronization and alignment, status monitoring and system testing. We gained an extensive experience conducting various tests, participating in local and global cosmic runs and in initial stage of the LHC operation. In this paper we present our hardware, firmware and software solutions and first results of the optical link commissioning
INTEGRAL detection of hard X-rays from NGC 6334: Nonthermal emission from colliding winds or an AGN?
We report the detection of hard X-ray emission from the field of the
star-forming region NGC 6334 with the the International Gamma-Ray Astrophysics
Laboratory INTEGRAL. The JEM-X monitor and ISGRI imager aboard INTEGRAL and
Chandra ACIS imager were used to construct 3-80 keV images and spectra of NGC
6334. The 3-10 keV and 10-35 keV images made with JEM-X show a complex
structure of extended emission from NGC 6334. The ISGRI source detected in the
energy ranges 20-40 keV and 40-80 keV coincides with the NGC 6334 ridge. The
20-60 keV flux from the source is (1.8+-0.37)*10(-11) erg cm(-2) s(-1).
Spectral analysis of the source revealed a hard power-law component with a
photon index about 1. The observed X-ray fluxes are in agreement with
extrapolations of X-ray imaging observations of NGC 6334 by Chandra ACIS and
ASCA GIS. The X-ray data are consistent with two very different physical
models. A probable scenario is emission from a heavily absorbed, compact and
hard Chandra source that is associated with the AGN candidate radio source NGC
6334B. Another possible model is the extended Chandra source of nonthermal
emission from NGC 6334 that can also account for the hard X-ray emission
observed by INTEGRAL. The origin of the emission in this scenario is due to
electron acceleration in energetic outflows from massive early type stars. The
possibility of emission from a young supernova remnant, as suggested by earlier
infrared observations of NGC 6334, is constrained by the non-detection of 44Ti
lines.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, Astronomy and Astrophysics (in press
(Super)twistors and (super)strings
The Lagrangian formulation of the D=4 bosonic string and superstring in terms
of the (super)twistors is considered. The (super)twistor form of the equations
of motion is derived and the kappa-symmetry transformation for the
supertwistors is given. It is shown that the covariant kappa-symmetry gauge
fixation results in the action quadratic in the (super)twistor variables.Comment: LaTeX, 17 page
Kaluza-Klein gauge and minimal integrable extension of OSp(4|6)/(SO(1,3) x U(3)) sigma-model
Basing upon experience from performing double-dimensional reduction of the
D=11 supermembrane on AdS_4 x S^7 background to Type IIA superstring on AdS_4 x
CP^3 we introduce Kaluza-Klein (partial) kappa-symmetry gauge as a vanishing
condition of the contribution to the D=11 supervielbein components tangent to
D=10 space-time proportional to the differential of the coordinate
parametrizing compact 11-th space-time dimension, that is identified with the
supermembrane world-volume compact dimension. For AdS_4 x S^7 supermembrane
Kaluza-Klein gauge removes half Grassmann coordinates associated with 8
space-time supersymmetries, broken by the AdS_4 x CP^3 superbackground, by
imposing D=3 (anti-)Majorana condition on them. The consideration relies on the
realization of osp(4|8) isometry superalgebra of the AdS_4 x S^7
superbackground as D=3 N=8 superconformal algebra. Requiring further vanishing
of the D=10 dilaton leaves in the sector of broken supersymmetries just two
Grassmann coordinates organized into D=3 (anti-)Majorana spinor that defines
minimal SL(2,R)-covariant extension of the OSp(4|6)/(SO(1,3)x U(3))
sigma-model. Among 4 possibilities of such a minimal extension we consider in
detail one, that corresponds to picking out D=3 Majorana coordinate related to
broken Poincare supersymmetry, and show that the AdS_4 x CP^3 superstring
equations of motion in this partial kappa-symmetry gauge are integrable. Also
the relation between the OSp(4|6)/(SO(1,3) x U(3)) sigma-model and the AdS_4 x
CP^3 superstring is revisited.Comment: LaTeX, 22 pages; v2: minor improvements in the text, typos corrected,
references adde
Mixed correlation function and spectral curve for the 2-matrix model
We compute the mixed correlation function in a way which involves only the
orthogonal polynomials with degrees close to , (in some sense like the
Christoffel Darboux theorem for non-mixed correlation functions). We also
derive new representations for the differential systems satisfied by the
biorthogonal polynomials, and we find new formulae for the spectral curve. In
particular we prove the conjecture of M. Bertola, claiming that the spectral
curve is the same curve which appears in the loop equations.Comment: latex, 1 figure, 55 page
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