21,268 research outputs found
The Impact of Transiting Planet Science on the Next Generation of Direct-Imaging Planet Searches
Within the next five years, a number of direct-imaging planet search
instruments, like the VLT SPHERE instrument, will be coming online. To
successfully carry out their programs, these instruments will rely heavily on
a-priori information on planet composition, atmosphere, and evolution.
Transiting planet surveys, while covering a different semi-major axis regime,
have the potential to provide critical foundations for these next-generation
surveys. For example, improved information on planetary evolutionary tracks may
significantly impact the insights that can be drawn from direct-imaging
statistical data. Other high-impact results from transiting planet science
include information on mass-to-radius relationships as well as atmospheric
absorption bands. The marriage of transiting planet and direct-imaging results
may eventually give us the first complete picture of planet migration,
multiplicity, and general evolution.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, IAU Transiting Planets Proceedings, in pres
Quantum Phonon Optics: Coherent and Squeezed Atomic Displacements
In this paper we investigate coherent and squeezed quantum states of phonons.
The latter allow the possibility of modulating the quantum fluctuations of
atomic displacements below the zero-point quantum noise level of coherent
states. The expectation values and quantum fluctuations of both the atomic
displacement and the lattice amplitude operators are calculated in these
states---in some cases analytically. We also study the possibility of squeezing
quantum noise in the atomic displacement using a polariton-based approach.Comment: 6 pages, RevTe
Analysis of quantum conductance of carbon nanotube junctions by the effective mass approximation
The electron transport through the nanotube junctions which connect the
different metallic nanotubes by a pair of a pentagonal defect and a heptagonal
defect is investigated by Landauer's formula and the effective mass
approximation. From our previous calculations based on the tight binding model,
it has been known that the conductance is determined almost only by two
parameters,i.e., the energy in the unit of the onset energy of more than two
channels and the ratio of the radii of the two nanotubes. The conductance is
calculated again by the effective mass theory in this paper and a simple
analytical form of the conductance is obtained considering a special boundary
conditions of the envelop wavefunctions. The two scaling parameters appear
naturally in this treatment. The results by this formula coincide fairly well
with those of the tight binding model.
The physical origin of the scaling law is clarified by this approach.Comment: RevTe
Topological Phases in Graphitic Cones
The electronic structure of graphitic cones exhibits distinctive topological
features associated with the apical disclinations. Aharonov-Bohm
magnetoconductance oscillations (period Phi_0) are completely absent in rings
fabricated from cones with a single pentagonal disclination. Close to the apex,
the local density of states changes qualitatively, either developing a cusp
which drops to zero at the Fermi energy, or forming a region of nonzero density
across the Fermi energy, a local metalization of graphene.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX 4, 3 PostScript figure
Disorder-induced phonon self-energy of semiconductors with binary isotopic composition
Self-energy effects of Raman phonons in isotopically disordered
semiconductors are deduced by perturbation theory and compared to experimental
data. In contrast to the acoustic frequency region, higher-order terms
contribute significantly to the self-energy at optical phonon frequencies. The
asymmetric dependence of the self-energy of a binary isotope system on the concentration of the heavier isotope mass x can be explained by
taking into account second- and third-order perturbation terms. For elemental
semiconductors, the maximum of the self-energy occurs at concentrations with
, depending on the strength of the third-order term. Reasonable
approximations are imposed that allow us to derive explicit expressions for the
ratio of successive perturbation terms of the real and the imaginary part of
the self-energy. This basic theoretical approach is compatible with Raman
spectroscopic results on diamond and silicon, with calculations based on the
coherent potential approximation, and with theoretical results obtained using
{\it ab initio} electronic theory. The extension of the formalism to binary
compounds, by taking into account the eigenvectors at the individual
sublattices, is straightforward. In this manner, we interpret recent
experimental results on the disorder-induced broadening of the TO (folded)
modes of SiC with a -enriched carbon sublattice.
\cite{Rohmfeld00,Rohmfeld01}Comment: 29 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables, submitted to PR
Atom Interferometry tests of the isotropy of post-Newtonian gravity
We present a test of the local Lorentz invariance of post-Newtonian gravity
by monitoring Earth's gravity with a Mach-Zehnder atom interferometer that
features a resolution of about 8*10^(-9)g/Hz^(1/2), the highest reported thus
far. Expressed within the standard model extension (SME) or Nordtvedt's
anisotropic universe model, the analysis limits four coefficients describing
anisotropic gravity at the ppb level and three others, for the first time, at
the 10ppm level. Using the SME we explicitly demonstrate how the experiment
actually compares the isotropy of gravity and electromagnetism.Comment: Added outlook, corrected typos; to appear in PRL. 4 pages, 3 figure
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