3,930 research outputs found
Chemical Stabilization of Perovskite Solar Cells with Functional Fulleropyrrolidines.
While perovskite solar cells have invigorated the photovoltaic research community due to their excellent power conversion efficiencies (PCEs), these devices notably suffer from poor stability. To address this crucial issue, a solution-processable organic chemical inhibition layer (OCIL) was integrated into perovskite solar cells, resulting in improved device stability and a maximum PCE of 16.3%. Photoenhanced self-doping of the fulleropyrrolidine mixture in the interlayers afforded devices that were advantageously insensitive to OCIL thickness, ranging from 4 to 190 nm. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) indicated that the fulleropyrrolidine mixture improved device stability by stabilizing the metal electrode and trapping ionic defects (i.e., I-) that originate from the perovskite active layer. Moreover, degraded devices were rejuvenated by repeatedly peeling away and replacing the OCIL/Ag electrode, and this repeel and replace process resulted in further improvement to device stability with minimal variation of device efficiency
The 2011 Outburst of Recurrent Nova T Pyx: X-ray Observations Expose the White Dwarf Mass and Ejection Dynamics
The recurrent nova T Pyx underwent its sixth historical outburst in 2011, and
became the subject of an intensive multi-wavelength observational campaign. We
analyze data from the Swift and Suzaku satellites to produce a detailed X-ray
light curve augmented by epochs of spectral information. X-ray observations
yield mostly non-detections in the first four months of outburst, but both a
super-soft and hard X-ray component rise rapidly after Day 115. The super-soft
X-ray component, attributable to the photosphere of the nuclear-burning white
dwarf, is relatively cool (~45 eV) and implies that the white dwarf in T Pyx is
significantly below the Chandrasekhar mass (~1 M_sun). The late turn-on time of
the super-soft component yields a large nova ejecta mass (>~10^-5 M_sun),
consistent with estimates at other wavelengths. The hard X-ray component is
well fit by a ~1 keV thermal plasma, and is attributed to shocks internal to
the 2011 nova ejecta. The presence of a strong oxygen line in this thermal
plasma on Day 194 requires a significantly super-solar abundance of oxygen and
implies that the ejecta are polluted by white dwarf material. The X-ray light
curve can be explained by a dual-phase ejection, with a significant delay
between the first and second ejection phases, and the second ejection finally
released two months after outburst. A delayed ejection is consistent with
optical and radio observations of T Pyx, but the physical mechanism producing
such a delay remains a mystery.Comment: Re-submitted to ApJ after revision
Positivity of Entropy in the Semi-Classical Theory of Black Holes and Radiation
Quantum stress-energy tensors of fields renormalized on a Schwarzschild
background violate the classical energy conditions near the black hole.
Nevertheless, the associated equilibrium thermodynamical entropy by
which such fields augment the usual black hole entropy is found to be positive.
More precisely, the derivative of with respect to radius, at fixed
black hole mass, is found to vanish at the horizon for {\it all} regular
renormalized stress-energy quantum tensors. For the cases of conformal scalar
fields and U(1) gauge fields, the corresponding second derivative is positive,
indicating that has a local minimum there. Explicit calculation
shows that indeed increases monotonically for increasing radius and
is positive. (The same conclusions hold for a massless spin 1/2 field, but the
accuracy of the stress-energy tensor we employ has not been confirmed, in
contrast to the scalar and vector cases). None of these results would hold if
the back-reaction of the radiation on the spacetime geometry were ignored;
consequently, one must regard as arising from both the radiation
fields and their effects on the gravitational field. The back-reaction, no
matter how "small",Comment: 19 pages, RevTe
High Energy Colliders as Black Hole Factories: The End of Short Distance Physics
If the fundamental Planck scale is of order a TeV, as the case in some
extra-dimensions scenarios, future hadron colliders such as the Large Hadron
Collider will be black hole factories. The non-perturbative process of black
hole formation and decay by Hawking evaporation gives rise to spectacular
events with up to many dozens of relatively hard jets and leptons, with a
characteristic ratio of hadronic to leptonic activity of roughly 5:1. The total
transverse energy of such events is typically a sizeable fraction of the beam
energy. Perturbative hard scattering processes at energies well above the
Planck scale are cloaked behind a horizon, thus limiting the ability to probe
short distances. The high energy black hole cross section grows with energy at
a rate determined by the dimensionality and geometry of the extra dimensions.
This dependence therefore probes the extra dimensions at distances larger than
the Planck scale.Comment: Latex, 28 pages. v4: minor changes, largely to agree with published
version; appendix added comparing convention
Effective Potential of a Black Hole in Thermal Equilibrium with Quantum Fields
Expectation values of one-loop renormalized thermal equilibrium stress-energy
tensors of free conformal scalars, spin- fermions and U(1) gauge
fields on a Schwarzschild black hole background are used as sources in the
semi-classical Einstein equation. The back-reaction and new equilibrium metric
are solved for at for each spin field. The nature of the modified
black hole spacetime is revealed through calculations of the effective
potential for null and timelike orbits. Significant novel features affecting
the motions of both massive and massless test particles show up at lowest order
in , where is the renormalized black hole mass,
and is the Planck mass. Specifically, we find the tendency for
\underline{stable} circular photon orbits, an increase in the black hole
capture cross sections, and the existence of a gravitationally repulsive region
associated with the black hole which is generated from the U(1) back-reaction.
We also consider the back-reaction arising from multiple fields, which will be
useful for treating a black hole in thermal equilibrium with field ensembles
belonging to gauge theories.Comment: 25 pages (not including seven figures), VAND-TH-93-6. Typed in Latex,
uses RevTex macro
The optical spectrum of a large isolated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon: hexa-peri-hexabenzocoronene, C42H18
The first optical spectrum of an isolated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon
large enough to survive the photophysical conditions of the interstellar medium
is reported. Vibronic bands of the first electronic transition of the all
benzenoid polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon hexa-peri-hexabenzocoronene were
observed in the 4080-4530 Angstrom range by resonant 2-color 2-photon
ionization spectroscopy. The strongest feature at 4264 Angstrom is estimated to
have an oscillator strength of f=1.4x10^-3, placing an upper limit on the
interstellar abundance of this polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon at 4x10^12
cm^-2, accounting for a maximum of ~0.02% of interstellar carbon. This study
opens up the possibility to rigorously test neutral polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons as carriers of the diffuse interstellar bands in the near future.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure. Fixed a typo on the frequency of the 'b' ban
Gauge Field Back-reaction on a Black Hole
The order fluctuations of gauge fields in the vicinity of a blackhole
can create a repulsive antigravity region extending out beyond the renormalized
Schwarzschild horizon. If the strength of this repulsive force increases as
higher orders in the back-reaction are included, the formation of a
wormhole-like object could occur.Comment: 17 pages, three figures available on request, in RevTe
Orbital dependent nucleonic pairing in the lightest known isotopes of tin
By studying the 109Xe-->105Te-->101Sn superallowed alpha-decay chain, we
observe low-lying states in 101Sn, the one-neutron system outside doubly magic
100Sn. We find that the spins of the ground state (J = 7=2) and first excited
state (J = 5=2) in 101Sn are reversed with respect to the traditional level
ordering postulated for 103Sn and the heavier tin isotopes. Through simple
arguments and state-of-the-art shell model calculations we explain this
unexpected switch in terms of a transition from the single-particle regime to
the collective mode in which orbital-dependent pairing correlations, dominate.Comment: 5 pages 3 figure
Black hole thermodynamics and information loss in two dimensions
Black hole evaporation is investigated in a (1+1)-dimensional model of
quantum gravity. Quantum corrections to the black hole entropy are computed,
and the fine-grained entropy of the Hawking radiation is studied. A generalized
second law of thermodynamics is formulated, and shown to be valid under
suitable conditions. It is also shown that, in this model, a black hole can
consume an arbitrarily large amount of information.Comment: 89 pages and 8 figures, jnl.tex and epsf.te
- …
