267 research outputs found
Eccentricity and elliptic flow in pp collisions at the LHC
High-multiplicity proton–proton collisions at the LHC may exhibit collective phenomena such as elliptic flow. We study this issue using DIPSY, a brand-new Monte Carlo event generator which features almost-NLO BFKL dynamics and describes the transverse shape of the proton including all fluctuations. We predict the eccentricity of the collision as a function of the multiplicity and estimate the magnitude of elliptic flow. We suggest that flow can be signaled by a sign change in the four-particle azimuthal correlation
Fluctuations, Saturation, and Diffractive Excitation in High Energy Collisions
Diffractive excitation is usually described by the Good--Walker formalism for
low masses, and by the triple-Regge formalism for high masses. In the
Good--Walker formalism the cross section is determined by the fluctuations in
the interaction. In this paper we show that by taking the fluctuations in the
BFKL ladder into account, it is possible to describe both low and high mass
excitation by the Good--Walker mechanism. In high energy collisions the
fluctuations are strongly suppressed by saturation, which implies that pomeron
exchange does not factorise between DIS and collisions. The Dipole Cascade
Model reproduces the expected triple-Regge form for the bare pomeron, and the
triple-pomeron coupling is estimated.Comment: 20 pages, 12 figure
Gate-tunable black phosphorus spin valve with nanosecond spin lifetimes
Two-dimensional materials offer new opportunities for both fundamental
science and technological applications, by exploiting the electron spin. While
graphene is very promising for spin communication due to its extraordinary
electron mobility, the lack of a band gap restricts its prospects for
semiconducting spin devices such as spin diodes and bipolar spin transistors.
The recent emergence of 2D semiconductors could help overcome this basic
challenge. In this letter we report the first important step towards making 2D
semiconductor spin devices. We have fabricated a spin valve based on ultra-thin
(5 nm) semiconducting black phosphorus (bP), and established fundamental spin
properties of this spin channel material which supports all electrical spin
injection, transport, precession and detection up to room temperature (RT).
Inserting a few layers of boron nitride between the ferromagnetic electrodes
and bP alleviates the notorious conductivity mismatch problem and allows
efficient electrical spin injection into an n-type bP. In the non-local spin
valve geometry we measure Hanle spin precession and observe spin relaxation
times as high as 4 ns, with spin relaxation lengths exceeding 6 um. Our
experimental results are in a very good agreement with first-principles
calculations and demonstrate that Elliott-Yafet spin relaxation mechanism is
dominant. We also demonstrate that spin transport in ultra-thin bP depends
strongly on the charge carrier concentration, and can be manipulated by the
electric field effect
Electronic Spin Transport in Dual-Gated Bilayer Graphene
The elimination of extrinsic sources of spin relaxation is key in realizing
the exceptional intrinsic spin transport performance of graphene. Towards this,
we study charge and spin transport in bilayer graphene-based spin valve devices
fabricated in a new device architecture which allows us to make a comparative
study by separately investigating the roles of substrate and polymer residues
on spin relaxation. First, the comparison between spin valves fabricated on
SiO2 and BN substrates suggests that substrate-related charged impurities,
phonons and roughness do not limit the spin transport in current devices. Next,
the observation of a 5-fold enhancement in spin relaxation time in the
encapsulated device highlights the significance of polymer residues on spin
relaxation. We observe a spin relaxation length of ~ 10 um in the encapsulated
bilayer with a charge mobility of 24000 cm2/Vs. The carrier density dependence
of spin relaxation time has two distinct regimes; n<4 x 1012 cm-2, where spin
relaxation time decreases monotonically as carrier concentration increases, and
n>4 x 1012 cm-2, where spin relaxation time exhibits a sudden increase. The
sudden increase in the spin relaxation time with no corresponding signature in
the charge transport suggests the presence of a magnetic resonance close to the
charge neutrality point. We also demonstrate, for the first time, spin
transport across bipolar p-n junctions in our dual-gated device architecture
that fully integrates a sequence of encapsulated regions in its design. At low
temperatures, strong suppression of the spin signal was observed while a
transport gap was induced, which is interpreted as a novel manifestation of
impedance mismatch within the spin channel
Spin Relaxation in Single Layer Graphene with Tunable Mobility
Graphene is an attractive material for spintronics due to theoretical
predictions of long spin lifetimes arising from low spin-orbit and hyperfine
couplings. In experiments, however, spin lifetimes in single layer graphene
(SLG) measured via Hanle effects are much shorter than expected theoretically.
Thus, the origin of spin relaxation in SLG is a major issue for graphene
spintronics. Despite extensive theoretical and experimental work addressing
this question, there is still little clarity on the microscopic origin of spin
relaxation. By using organic ligand-bound nanoparticles as charge reservoirs to
tune mobility between 2700 and 12000 cm2/Vs, we successfully isolate the effect
of charged impurity scattering on spin relaxation in SLG. Our results
demonstrate that while charged impurities can greatly affect mobility, the spin
lifetimes are not affected by charged impurity scattering.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
Odderon in baryon-baryon scattering from the AdS/CFT correspondence
Based on the AdS/CFT correspondence, we present a holographic description of
various C-odd exchanges in high energy baryon-baryon and baryon-antibaryon
scattering, and calculate their respective contributions to the difference in
the total cross sections. We predict that, due to the warp factor of AdS_5, the
total cross section in pp collisions is larger than in p\bar{p} collisions at
asymptotically high energies.Comment: 23 pages, v2: minor changes, to be published in JHE
Correlation of small-x gluons in impact parameter space
In the framework of the QCD dipole model at high energy, we present an
analytic evaluation of the dipole pair density in two limits in which the
parent dipole is much larger/smaller than the distance between the two child
dipoles. Due to conformal symmetry, the two limits give an identical result.
The power-law correlation between dipoles explicitly breaks the factorization
of target-averaged scattering amplitudes.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures; some comments and references added, accepted by
Nucl. Phys.
Strongly anisotropic spin relaxation in graphene/transition metal dichalcogenide heterostructures at room temperature
Graphene has emerged as the foremost material for future two-dimensional
spintronics due to its tuneable electronic properties. In graphene, spin
information can be transported over long distances and, in principle, be
manipulated by using magnetic correlations or large spin-orbit coupling (SOC)
induced by proximity effects. In particular, a dramatic SOC enhancement has
been predicted when interfacing graphene with a semiconducting transition metal
dechalcogenide, such as tungsten disulphide (WS). Signatures of such an
enhancement have recently been reported but the nature of the spin relaxation
in these systems remains unknown. Here, we unambiguously demonstrate
anisotropic spin dynamics in bilayer heterostructures comprising graphene and
WS. By using out-of-plane spin precession, we show that the spin lifetime
is largest when the spins point out of the graphene plane. Moreover, we observe
that the spin lifetime varies over one order of magnitude depending on the spin
orientation, indicating that the strong spin-valley coupling in WS is
imprinted in the bilayer and felt by the propagating spins. These findings
provide a rich platform to explore coupled spin-valley phenomena and offer
novel spin manipulation strategies based on spin relaxation anisotropy in
two-dimensional materials
The Gluonic Field of a Heavy Quark in Conformal Field Theories at Strong Coupling
We determine the gluonic field configuration sourced by a heavy quark
undergoing arbitrary motion in N=4 super-Yang-Mills at strong coupling and
large number of colors. More specifically, we compute the expectation value of
the operator tr[F^2+...] in the presence of such a quark, by means of the
AdS/CFT correspondence. Our results for this observable show that signals
propagate without temporal broadening, just as was found for the expectation
value of the energy density in recent work by Hatta et al. We attempt to shed
some additional light on the origin of this feature, and propose a different
interpretation for its physical significance. As an application of our general
results, we examine when the quark undergoes oscillatory motion,
uniform circular motion, and uniform acceleration. Via the AdS/CFT
correspondence, all of our results are pertinent to any conformal field theory
in 3+1 dimensions with a dual gravity formulation.Comment: 1+38 pages, 16 eps figures; v2: completed affiliation; v3: corrected
typo, version to appear in JHE
Deep Inelastic Scattering in Conformal QCD
We consider the Regge limit of a CFT correlation function of two vector and
two scalar operators, as appropriate to study small-x deep inelastic scattering
in N=4 SYM or in QCD assuming approximate conformal symmetry. After clarifying
the nature of the Regge limit for a CFT correlator, we use its conformal
partial wave expansion to obtain an impact parameter representation encoding
the exchange of a spin j Reggeon for any value of the coupling constant. The
CFT impact parameter space is the three-dimensional hyperbolic space H3, which
is the impact parameter space for high energy scattering in the dual AdS space.
We determine the small-x structure functions associated to the exchange of a
Reggeon. We discuss unitarization from the point of view of scattering in AdS
and comment on the validity of the eikonal approximation.
We then focus on the weak coupling limit of the theory where the amplitude is
dominated by the exchange of the BFKL pomeron. Conformal invariance fixes the
form of the vector impact factor and its decomposition in transverse spin 0 and
spin 2 components. Our formalism reproduces exactly the general results predict
by the Regge theory, both for a scalar target and for gamma*-gamma* scattering.
We compute current impact factors for the specific examples of N=4 SYM and QCD,
obtaining very simple results. In the case of the R-current of N=4 SYM, we show
that the transverse spin 2 component vanishes. We conjecture that the impact
factors of all chiral primary operators of N=4 SYM only have components with 0
transverse spin.Comment: 44+16 pages, 7 figures. Some correction
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