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Institute
- Fakultät für Physik und Astronomie (79) (remove)
Sonstige beteiligte Institutionen
EU-Project number / Contract (GA) number
- 614623 (1)
Holotomography is an extension of computed tomography where samples with low X-ray absorption can be investigated with higher contrast. In order to achieve this, the imaging system must yield an optical resolution of a few micrometers or less, which reduces the measurement area (field of view = FOV) to a few mm at most. If the sample size, however, exceeds the field of view (called local tomography or region of interest = ROI CT), filter problems arise during the CT reconstruction and phase retrieval in holotomography. In this paper, we will first investigate the practical impact of these filter problems and discuss approximate solutions. Secondly, we will investigate the effectiveness of a technique we call “multiscalar holotomography”, where, in addition to the ROI CT, a lower resolution non-ROI CT measurement is recorded. This is used to avoid the filter problems while simultaneously reconstructing a larger part of the sample, albeit with a lower resolution in the additional area.
Herstellung und Charakterisierung spintronischer und caloritronischer (Ga,Mn)As-Nanostrukturen
(2014)
Die elektronischen Bauteile, die aus unserer technischen Welt kaum wegzuddenken sind, werden immer kleiner. Aktuelle ICs bestehen zum Beispiel aus Milliarden von Transistoren, von denen jeder einzelne kleiner als 100nm (dem 100-stel des typischen Durchmessers eines Menschenhaars) ist. Dass die Entwicklung auch zukünftig weiter dem Trend des Mooreschen Gesetzes folgen wird, gilt hierbei als unbestritten.
Die interessanteste Fragestellung der Halbleiter- und Nanostrukturforschung in diesem Zusammenhang ist: Kann man die weitere Entwicklung der Informations- und Kommunikationstechnik dadurch erreichen, dass man die Miniaturisierung der Transistoren in Mikroprozessoren und Speicherbauelementen weiter vorantreibt oder ist man auf gänzlich neue Wege angewiesen?
Bei der weitergehenden Miniaturisierung ist die größte Hürde darin zu suchen, ob man in der
Lage sein wird die Verbrauchsleistung dieser Bauelemente weiter zu reduzieren, um die Überhitzung der Bauteile in den Griff zu bekommen und nicht zuletzt auch, um Energie zu sparen.
Die heutige Elektronik hat ihre Grundlagen in den 60er Jahren. Diese Art der Elektronik ist jedoch hinsichtlich der Effizienzsteigerungen und vor allem der Wärmeentwicklung an ihre Grenzen gestoßen. Hauptursache für diese problematische Wärmeentwicklung sind die elektrischen Verbindungen, die die Informationen zwischen der halbleiterbasierten Datenverarbeitung und den metallischen Speicherelementen hin und hertransportieren. Obwohl diese elektrischen Verbindungen zum aktuellen Zeitpunkt aus der Computerarchitektur nicht weg zu denken sind, ist es eines der Hauptziele diese Verbindungen nicht mehr verwenden zu müssen. Dies kann jedoch nur erreicht werden, wenn es gelingt, die Speicherelemente und Datenverarbeitung in einem einzigen Element (Halbleiter) zu vereinen.
Bisher wurde die Ladung eines Elektrons für die Verarbeitung von elektrischen Informationen
bzw. Zuständen benutzt. Was wäre jedoch, wenn man diese bisherige Basis völlig ändert? Der
Spin der Elektronen ist ein viel effektiverer Informationsträger als die Ladung der Elektronen
selbst, nicht zuletzt deshalb, weil die Veränderung des Spins eines Elektrons im Vergleich zu
dessen Bewegung einen weitaus geringeren Energiebetrag benötigt [1]. Die Technik, die zusätzlich zur Informationsverarbeitung durch makroskopische Elektronenströme den viel effektiveren Spin-Quantenzustand der Elektronen oder Löcher als Freiheitsgrad nutzt, ist die sogenannte Spintronik1. Die Spinfreiheitsgrade eröffnen, wegen der längeren Phasenkohärenzlänge, im Vergleich zu den orbitalen Freiheitsgraden, völlig neue Wege für zukünftige Entwicklungen wie z.B. den Quantencomputer. Damit wäre die Entwicklung niederenergetischer Bauelemente möglich, die fast keine Wärmeentwicklung aufweisen. Wegen dieser vielen Vorteile hat sich die Spintronik in Rekordzeit von einer interessanten wissenschaftlichen Beobachtung in Rekordzeit zu einer marktbewegenden Anwendung weiterentwickelt (Nobelpreis 2007). Seinen Anfang nahm diese Entwicklung 1988 mit der Entdeckung des GMR-Effekts. Nach nur 9 Jahren wurden 1997 erste Festplatten-Leseköpfe eingesetzt, die sich diesen Effekt zu Nutze machten. Leseköpfe, die den Riesenmagnetwiderstand nutzen, waren nunmehr um ein Vielfaches empfindlicher als es die konventionelle Technik zugelassen hätte. Die Speicherdichte und damit die Kapazitäten der Festplatten konnte somit erheblich gesteigert und Festplatten mit zuvor nie gekannter Speicherkapazität preiswert produziert werden. Seit dieser Zeit rückt der Elektronenspin immer weiter in den Brennpunkt von Forschung und Entwicklung.
Da sich der elektrische Widerstand von Halbleitern in einem weiten Bereich manipulieren lässt
(was für ferromagnetische Metalle nicht der Fall ist), werden logische Bauelemente aus halbleitenden Materialien hergestellt. Im Gegensatz dazu sind ferromagnetische Metalle sehr gute Kandidaten für die Speicherung von Informationen. Dies liegt vor allem daran, dass zufällige Magnetfelder viel schwächer sind, als zufällige elektrische Felder, was ferromagnetische Systeme wesentlich unanfälliger macht. Daher sind die magnetischen Speicher nicht flüchtig und zudem müssen deren Informationsgehalte nicht wie bei DRAM immer wieder aufgefrischt werden. Um die jeweiligen Vorteile der Materialklassen – die magnetisch energiesparende sowie dauerhafte Speicherfähigkeit der Metalle und die logischen Operationen der Halbleiter – miteinander kombinieren zu können und damit neuartige Bauelemente wie z.B. MRAMs (logische Operationen und dauerhafte Speicherung) zu bauen, sind ferromagnetischen Halbleiter unverzichtbar. Auf dieser Basis könnten Speicherelemente und Datenverarbeitung in einem einzigen Element (Halbleiter) dargestellt werden. Zugleich braucht man aber auch neue Wege, um diese Speicher zu magnetisieren und später auslesen zu können. Ein weiterer Vorteil liegt zudem darin, dass hierzu kein Einsatz beweglicher Teile notwendig ist. Die Magnetisierungskontrolle muss aber temperaturunabhängig sein!
Der am besten erforschte ferromagnetische Halbleiter ist (Ga,Mn)As, der deswegen die Modellrolle einnimmt und als Prototyp für alle ferromagnetischen Halbleiter dient. Die Kopplung seiner magnetischen und halbleitenden Eigenschaften durch Spin-Bahn-Wechselwirkung ist die Ursache vieler neuer Transportphänomene in diesem Materialsystem. Diese Phänomene sind vielfach die Grundlage für neuartige Anwendungen, Bauteildesigns und Wirkprinzipien.
Das Ziel dieser Arbeit ist es, die interessanten Anisotropien in (Ga,Mn)As, die von der sehr starken Spin-Bahn-Kopplung im Valenzband herrühren zu nutzen, sowie neue spinbezogene Effekte in verschiedenen magnetischen Bauelementen zu realisieren.
Die vorliegende Arbeit gliedert sich wie folgt: In Kapitel 1 wird auf die grundlegenden Eigenschaften des (Ga,Mn)As und einige neuartige Spineffekten, die dieses Material mit sich bringt, eingegangen. Das zur Erzeugung dieser Effekte notwendige fertigungstechnische Wissen, für die lithografische Erzeugung der spintronisch bzw. caloritronisch aktiven Nanostrukturen, wird im Kapitel 2 beschrieben.
Um mit dieser Welt der Spineffekte „kommunizieren“ und die Effekte kontrollieren zu können,
sind entsprechend angepasste und funktionsfähige Kontaktierungen notwendig. Mit der detaillierten Herstellung und Analyse dieser Kontakte beschäftigt sich das Kapitel 3. Es wurden
zwei Arten von Kontakten hergestellt und bei den Proben eingesetzt: in situ (innerhalb der
MBE-Wachstumskammer) und ex situ. Zusammenfassend lässt sich sagen, dass bei der ex situ-Probenpräparation, die Reproduzierbarkeit der Kontakte, besonders bei logisch magnetischen Elementen, nicht gewährleistet werden konnte. Bei funktionierender Kontaktierung war das magnetische Verhalten dann jedoch stets gleich. Bei den in situ-Kontakten war zwar einerseits das elektrische Verhalten reproduzierbar und sehr gut, aber das magnetische Verhalten war nicht zufriedenstellend, da die Relaxation nicht vollständig stattfand.
Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit konnten die ex situ-Kontakte optimiert werden. Dabei wurde auf die
Problematiken bereits existierender Proben eingegangen und es wurden verschiedene Lösungsan sätze dafür gefunden. So konnte z.B. gezeigt werden, dass die Haftungsprobleme hauptsächlich auf dem unsaubere Oberflächen zurückzuführen sind. Jede Schicht, die zwischen aufgedampfter Metallschicht und dem dotierten Halbleiter bestehen bleibt, unabhängig davon, ob es sich dabei um eine oxidierte Schicht, Lackreste oder eine, zum Teil verarmte Schicht handelt, beeinträchtigt die Funktionalität der Kontakte. Je kleiner die Dimension der Kontakte, desto stärker wirkt sich die unsaubere Oberfläche aus. So konnte gezeigt werden, dass ab einer Größe von ca. 500nm_500nm die Zuverlässigkeit der Kontakte elementar von der Reinheit der Oberflächen und deren Homogenität beeinflusst wird. Zur Abwendung dieser Komplikationen werden verschiedene Lösungsansätze vorgeschlagen. Wird die Oberfläche mit hochenergetischen Ionen versetzt, verarmt deren Dotierung, was zu einer massiven Änderung der Leitfähigkeit führt. Daher wurden entweder völlig andere Prozessparameter zur Reinigung eingesetzt, die den dotierten HL nicht verarmen oder einer der nasschemischen Schritte wurde so angepasst, dass die extrem verarmte Schicht der HL-Oberfläche entfernt wurde.
Die einfachsten spintronischen Bauelemente (Streifen) und magnetischen Logikelemente sowie
deren Ergebnisse werden im Kapitel 4 diskutiert.
Hier wurde eindeutig gezeigt, dass die Streifen bei niedrigen Stromdichten nicht völlig uniaxial
sind, während bei erhöhten Stromdichten die Uniaxialität immer dominanter wird. Dies war
jedoch zu erwarten, da bei erhöhten Stromdichten die Temperatur auch ansteigt und da, bei
erhöhter Temperatur, die biaxiale Anisotropie mit M4, die uniaxiale aber jedoch nur mit M2
abfällt – die dominante Anisotropie wechselt folglich von biaxial zu uniaxial [2]. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden die Grundlagen gelegt, um Speicherelemente und Datenverarbeitung in einem einzigen Halbleiter (Ga,Mn)As herzustellen. Auf Basis dieser Arbeit und den dabei gewonnenen litographischen Erkentnissen wurden, in nachfolgenden Arbeiten, solche Bauelemente realisiert [3].
Spin-Kaloritronik:
Wie schon Eingangs erwähnt, wird im Allgemeinen davon ausgegangen, dass die Miniaturisierung der zukünftigen Elektronik weitergeführt werden kann. Bei stetiger Verkleinerung der Strukturen kommt es in heutigen Anwendungen zu immer größeren Problemen bei der Wärmeabfuhr. Die Folgen der Temperaturdifferenzen innerhalb der Strukturen führen dabei zu sog. Hotspots oder sogar Materialschäden. Temperaturunterschiede müssen aber nicht nur negative Auswirkungen
haben. So wurde an einem ferromagnetischen System aus Nickel, Eisen und Platin der sogenannte Spin-Seebeck-Effekt gemessen, bei dem die Elektronen in den Regionen verschiedener Temperatur unterschiedliche Spinpolarisationen zeigen [4].
Eine Batterie, die diesen spinpolarisierten Strom nutzt, könnte einen entscheidenden Fortschritt
in der Spintronik bedeuten. Dieser Bereich der Forschung an thermoelektrischen Effekten, bei
denen ferromagnetische Materialien involviert sind, wird auch „spin-caloritronics“ genannt [5].
Die Kapitel 5 und 6 beschäftigen sich mit einer neuartigen Klasse spintronischer Bauteile. whärend das Kapitel 5 sich mit einer neuartigen Klasse spintronischer Bauteile, für die von uns
als Bezeichnung TAMT („tunnel anisotropic magneto thermopower“) eingeführt wurde, beschäftigt, wird in Kapitel 6 an einem veränderten Probenlayout der Nernst-Effekt nachgewiesen.
Die Geometrie wurde in beiden fällen so gewählt und hergestellt, dass durch die Anisotropien
des (Ga,Mn)As die beiden thermoelektrische Effekte (Seebeck- und Nernst-Effekt) auf einen
n+-p+-Übergang übertragen werden konnten. Durch einen Strom, in einem mit Silizium hoch
dotierten GaAs-Heizkanal, kann jeweils ein vertikaler Temperaturgradient erzeugt werden. Die
hierbei entstehenden Thermospannungen wurden durch eine vollständige elektrische Charaktri sierungsmessung mit Hilfe präziser Lock-in-Verstärker-Technik detektiert.
Das Kapitel 5 beschäftigt sich mit allen Bereichen, von der Idee bis hin zu Messungen und Analysen des Seebeck-Effektes an einem n-p-Übergang (TAMT). Außerdem ist ein sehr einfaches numerisches Modell dargestellt, dass den gefundenen Effekt theoretisch beschreibt.
Durch die bekannten thermoelektrischen Effekte ergibt sich ein Temperaturgradient der immer
zu einer Thermospannung und somit zu einem Thermostrom entlang des Gradienten führt. Für
zukünftige Entwicklungen ist es demnach wichtig, diese Effekte zu beachten und diese bei elektrischen Messungen an Nanostrukturen als mögliche, zusätzliche Ursache eines Messsignals in Betracht zu ziehen.
In den vorliegenden Proben ist der Seebeck-Effekt stark anisotrop, mit einem größeren Thermospannungswert für Magnetisierungen entlang der magnetisch harten Achsen des (Ga,Mn)As.
Es wurde ein einfaches Model entwickelt, welches das Tunneln von Elektronen zwischen zwei
unterschiedlich warmen Bereichen erklärt. Die Abhängigkeit des Effekts von der Temperatur des Heizkanals wurde anhand dieses Models sowohl qualitativ als auch größenordnungsmäßig korrekt beschrieben.
Die Nernst-Proben wurden von der Theorie bis zur Herstellung so entwickelt, dass in derselben
Anordnung eine im (Ga,Mn)As senkrecht zum Temperaturgradienten gerichtete Spannung
zusätzlich gemessen werden konnte. Diese wurde durch den Nernst-Effekt erklärt. Besonders interessant war, dass die Größe der Nernst-Spannung hierbei mit der Magnetisierung im (Ga,Mn)As verknüpft ist und somit ein aus der typischen Magnetisierungsumkehr hervorgehendes Verhalten zeigt.
Gegenüber den Magnetowiderstandseffekten entsteht beim Nernst-Effekt in sogenannten Fingerprints (vgl. Kapitel 1.3.3) ein dreistufiges Farbmuster anstelle eines zweistufigen hoch-tief-Systems. Die entstehende Temperatur im Heizkanal wird jeweils durch eine longitudinale Widerstandsmessung in einem senkrecht zum Kanal gerichteten äußeren Magnetfeld bestimmt. Die Magnetfeldabhängigkeit des Widerstands kommt hierbei durch den Effekt der schwachen Lokalisierung in dünnen Filmen zustande.
Zusammenfassend stellen die Magneto-Thermoelektrizitätseffekte eine wichtige weitere Transporteigenschaft in ferromagnetischen Halbleitern dar, die mit der Magnetisierung direkt zusammenhängen.
In dieser Arbeit wurden Thermospannungen an (Ga,Mn)As-Schichten mit vergleichsweise hoher
Mangankonzentration untersucht. Allerdings sind die Thermoelektrizitätseigenschaften zusammen mit Magneto-Widerstandsmessungen in Zukunft in der Lage, zusätzliche Informationen über die Bandstruktur sowie die Ladungsträgereigenschaften in Materialsystemen mit niedrigerem Mangangehalt, insbesondere in der Nähe des Metall-Isolator-Übergangs, zu liefern.
Inhalt des Anhangs ist eine ausführliche Anleitung zur Optimierung der Probenherstellung bzw.
der verschiedenen Bauelemente.
Leptoquarks are hypothetical particles that attempt to explain the coincidental similarities between leptons and quarks included in SM. Their exact properties vary between different theoretical models, and there are no strong theoretical constraints on their possible mass values. They can possibly be produced from particle
collisions, and there have already been searching efforts at previous collider experiments. Their presence have yet been observed, and this fact has been translated into lower bound exclusions on their possible mass values. The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) being the most recently constructed particle collider with the highest collision energies ever achieved experimentally, provides a new platform to continue the search for Leptoquarks at even higher mass ranges.
This thesis describes a search for pair-produced second-generation Leptoquarks using 20.3 fb−1 of data recorded by the ATLAS detector of LHC at √s = 8 TeV. Events with two oppositely charged muons and two or more jets in the final state were used. Candidate leptoquark events were selected with the help of four observables: the di-muon invariant mass (Mμμ ), the sum of the pT of the two muons
(LT ), the sum of the pT of the two leading jets (HT ) and the average Leptoquark mass (MLQ ). Monte Carlo simulations of SM background processes have shown
to be in good agreement with data, both in the region constructed using selection requirements for candiate leptoquark events and in the designated control regions.
Since no significant excess of events was observed in data, a exclusion limit was set as a function of the Leptoquark mass.
In this work, high-energy observables arising during different phases of SN explosions are studied with respect to their potential for allowing conclusions on suggested explosion scenarios and physical mechanisms that are thought to influence the evolution of SNe in a major way. The focus on selected observables at keV and MeV energies is motivated by the appearance of large degeneracies that can even be found for disparate scenarios in many wavelength regimes. Since the discussed emission in the high-energy regime is directly linked to nuclear processes being usually very distinct for different suggested physical models, the signatures at keV and MeV energies allow for meaningful comparisons of simulations with observations.
This work brings forward successful implementations of ultrafast chirality-sensitive spectroscopic techniques by probing circular dichroism (CD) or optical rotation dispersion (ORD). Furthermore, also first steps towards chiral quantum control, i.e., the selective variation of the chiral properties of molecules with the help of coherent light, are presented.
In the case of CD probing, a setup capable of mirroring an arbitrary polarization state of an ultrashort laser pulse was developed. Hence, by passing a left-circularly polarized laser pulse through this setup a right-circularly polarized laser pulse is generated. These two pulse enantiomers can be utilized as probe pulses in a pump--probe CD experiment. Besides CD spectroscopy, it can be utilized for anisotropy or ellipsometry spectroscopy also. Within this thesis, the approach is used to elucidate the photochemistry of hemoglobin, the oxygen transporting protein in mammalian blood. The oxygen loss can be triggered with laser pulses as well, and the results of the time-resolved CD experiment suggest a cascade-like relaxation, probably through different spin states, of the metallo-porphyrins in hemoglobin.
The ORD probing was realized via the combination of common-path optical heterodyne interferometric polarimetry and accumulative femtosecond spectroscopy. Within this setup, on the one hand the applicability of this approach for ultrafast studies was demonstrated explicitly. On the other hand, the discrimination between an achiral and a racemic solution without prior spatial separation was realized. This was achieved by inducing an enantiomeric excess via polarized femtosecond laser pulses and following its evolution with the developed polarimeter. Hence, chiral selectivity was already achieved with this method which can be turned into chiral control if the polarized laser pulses are optimized to steer an enhancement of the enantiomeric excess.
Furthermore, within this thesis, theoretical prerequisites for anisotropy-free pump--probe experiments with arbitrary polarized laser pulses were derived. Due to the small magnitude of optical chirality-sensitve signals, these results are important for any pump--probe chiral spectroscopy, like the CD probing presented in this thesis. Moreover, since for chiral quantum control the variation of the molecular structure is necessary, the knowledge about rearrangement reactions triggered by photons is necessary. Hence, within this thesis the ultrafast Wolff rearrangement of an α-diazocarbonyl was investigated via ultrafast photofragment ion spectroscopy in the gas phase. Though the compound is not chiral, the knowledge about the exact reaction mechanism is beneficial for future studies of chiral compounds.
Die vorliegende Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit den Prozessen, die in einer Unterklasse der Aktiven Galaxienkerne, den Blazaren, das Emissionsspektrum dieser Objekte erzeugen. Dies beinhaltet insbesondere den Beschleunigungsprozess, der eine nichtthermische Teilchenverteilung erzeugt, sowie diverse Strahlungsprozesse. Das Spektrum dieser Quellen reicht dabei vom Radiobereich bis zu Energien im TeV-Bereich. Die Form des zeitlich gemittelten Spektrums kann durch Modelle bereits sehr gut beschrieben werden. Insbesondere die erste der beiden dominierenden Komponenten des Spektrums kann mit hoher Sicherheit mit Synchrotronemission einer Elektronenenergieverteilung in Form eines Potenzgesetzes identifiziert werden. Für den Ursprung der zweiten Komponente existieren jedoch verschiedene Erklärungsversuche. Dies sind im wesentlichen die inverse Compton-Streuung der internen oder externer Strahlung (leptonische Modelle) sowie die Emission und photohadronische Wechselwirkung einer hochenergetischen Verteilung von Protonen in der Quelle.
Eine räumliche Auflösung des Ursprungs der detektierten Strahlung ist mit den zur Verfügung stehenden Teleskopen nicht möglich. Einschränkungen für die Ausdehnung dieser Emissionszone ergeben sich lediglich aus der Variation des Emissionsspektrums. Eine Bestimmung der Morphologie ist jedoch im selbstabsorbierten Radiobereich des Spektrums durch die Ausnutzung von interferometrischen Beobachtungen möglich. Die resultierenden Längen, auf denen die im inneren der Quelle selbstabsorbierte Strahlung die Quelle schließlich verlässt, sind jedoch etwa zwei Größenordnungen oberhalb der aus den Variabilitätszeitskalen gefolgerten Limits.
Das im Rahmen dieser Arbeit entwickelte Modell soll dabei helfen, verschiedene Beobachtungen mit Hilfe eines quantitativen Modells zu beschreiben. Hier steht insbesondere die Korrelation zwischen den Verläufen der Hochenergie- und Radioemission im Vordergrund. Eine Aussage über die Existenz einer solchen Verbindung konnte aus den bisherigen Beobachtungen nicht getroffen werden.
Eine quantitative Modellierung könnte bei der Interpretation der bisher uneindeutigen Datenlage helfen. Eine weitere, durch Modelle bisher nicht beschreibbare, Beobachtungsevidenz sind extrem kurzzeitige Variationen des Flusszustands.
Die Lichtlaufzeit durch das für die Modellierung benötigte Raumgebiet ist zumeist größer als die beobachtete Zeitskala.
Zudem deuten die Beobachtungen darauf hin, dass manche dieser Flussausbrüche nicht zwischen den verschiedenen Bändern korreliert sind, wie es zumindest die leptonischen Modelle erwarten lassen würden.
Das hier beschriebene Modell verbindet eine räumliche Auflösung des Emissionsgebiets mit dem dominanten Beschleunigungsmechanismus. Hierdurch konnte zunächst gezeigt werden, dass die Beschreibung von Variabilität auch auf Skalen unterhalb der Lichtlaufzeit durch das modellierte Raumgebiet möglich ist. Zudem wurde ein Szenario quantifiziert, dass im leptonischen Fall unkorrelierte Ausbrüche vorhersagt.
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Durch eine Erweiterung des Emissionsgebiets gegenüber anderen Blazar-Modellen um zwei Größenordnung konnte zudem eine Verknüpfung zwischen dem Hochenergie- und dem Radiobereich erfolgen. Die gefundene Morphologie des Einschlussgebiets der nichtthermischen Teilchenpopulation beinhaltet eine physikalisch sinnvolle Randbedingung für das Emissionsgebiet der Hochenergiestrahlung, die zudem den für die betrachtete Quelle korrekten Spektralindex im Radiobereich erzeugt.
Darüber hinaus wurden in das Modell sowohl leptonische als auch hadronische Prozesse integriert, die eine flexible und unvoreingenommene Modellierung potentieller Hybridquellen erlauben.
Mit dem entwickelten Modell ist es möglich, aus detailliert vermessenen Lichtkurven im Hochenergiebereich die zu erwartende Radioemission vorherzusagen. Die in diese Vorhersage eingehenden Parameter lassen sich aus der Modellierung des Gleichgewichtsspektrums bestimmen.
The focus of this work is studying recombination mechanisms occurring in organic solar cells, as well as their impact on one of their most important parameters — the open circuit voltage Voc.
Firstly, the relationship between Voc and the respective charge carrier density n in the active layer under open circuit conditions is analyzed. Therefor, a model after Shockley for the open circuit voltage is used, whose validity is proven with the aid of fits to the measured data. Thereby, it is emphasized that the equation is only valid under special conditions. In the used reference system P3HT:PC61BM the fits are in agreement with the measurement data only in the range of high temperatures (150 - 300 K), where Voc increases linearly with decreasing temperature. At lower temperatures (50 – 150 K), the experiment shows a saturation of Voc. This saturation cannot be explained with the model by the measured falling charge carrier density with decreasing temperatures. In this temperature range Voc is not directly related to the intrinsic properties of the active layer. Voc saturation is due to injection energy barriers at the contacts, which is ascertained by macroscopic simulations. Furthermore, it is observed that Voc in the case of saturation is equivalent to the so-called built-in potential. The difference between the built-in potential and the energy gap corresponds thereby to the sum of the energy barriers at both contacts.
With the knowledge of the Voc(n) dependency for not contact limited solar cells, it is possible to investigate the recombination mechanisms of charge carriers in the active layer. For Langevin recombination the recombination rate is Rn2 (recombination order RO = 2), for Shockley-Read-Hall (SRH) Rn1 (RO=1); in various publications RO higher than two is reported with two main explanations.
1: Trap states for charge carriers exist in the respective separated phases, i.e. electrons in the acceptor phase and holes in the donor phase, which leads to a delayed recombination of the charge carriers at the interface of both phases and finally to an apparent recombination order higher than 2.
2: The enhanced R(n) dependency is attributed to the so called recombination prefactor, which again is dependent from n dependent mobility µ.
It is shown that for the system P3HT:PC61BM at room temperature the µ(n) dependency does nearly completely explain the higher RO but not at lower temperatures which in this case supports the first explanation. In the material system PTB7:PC71BM the increased RO cannot be explained by the µ(n) dependency even at room temperature.
To support the importance of trap states in combination with a phase separation for the explanation of the enhanced RO, additional trap states were incorporated in the solar cells to investigate their influence on the recombination mechanisms. To achieve this, P3HT:PC61BM solar cells were exposed to synthetic air (in the dark and under illumination) or TCNQ was added in small concentrations to the active layer which act as electron traps. For the oxygen degraded solar cell the recombination order is determined by a combination of open Voc-transients and Voc(n) measurements. Thereby, a continuous increase of the recombination order from 2.4 to more than 5 is observed with higher degradation times. By the evaluation of the ideality factor it can be shown that the impact of SRH recombination is increasing with higher trap concentration in relation to Langevin recombination. A similar picture is revealed for solar cells with TCNQ as extrinsic trap states.
Finally, a phenomenon called s-shaped IV-curves is investigated, which can sometimes occur for solar cells under illumination. As course of this a reduced surface recombination velocity can be found. Experimentally, the solar cells were fabricated using a special plasma treatment of the ITO contact. The measured IV-curves of such solar cells are reproduced by macroscopic simulations, where the surface recombination velocity is reduced. Hereby, it has to be distinguished between the surface recombination of majority and minority charge carriers at the respective contacts. The theory can be experimentally confirmed by illumination level dependent IV-curves as well as short circuit current density and open circuit voltage transients.
The discovery of the Giant Magneto Resistance (GMR) effect in 1988 by Albert Fert [Baib 88] and Peter Grünberg [Bina 89] led to a rapid development of the field of spintronics and progress in the information technology. Semiconductor based spintronics, which appeared later, offered a possibility to combine storage and processing in a single monolithic device. A direct result is reduced heat dissipation. The observation of the spin Seebeck effect by Ushida [Uchi 08] in 2008 launched an increased interest and encouraged research in the field of spin caloritronics. Spintronics is about the coupling of charge and spin transport. Spin caloritronics studies the interaction between heat and spin currents. In contrast to spintronics and its variety of applications, a particular spin-caloritronic device has not yet been demonstrated. However, many of the novel phenomena in spin caloritronics can be detected in most spintronic devices. Moreover, thermoelectric effects might have a significant influence on spintronic device operation. This will be of particular interest for this work. Additional knowledge on the principle of coupling between heat and spin currents uncovers an alternative way to control heat dissipation and promises new device functionalities.
This thesis aims to further extend the knowledge on thermoelectrics in materials with strong spin-orbit coupling, in this case the prototypical ferromagnetic semiconductor (Ga,Mn)As. The study is focused on the thermoelectric / thermomagnetic effects at the interface between a normal metal and the ferromagnetic (Ga,Mn)As. In such systems, the different interfaces provide a condition for minimal phonon drag contribution to the thermal effects. This suggests that only band contributions (a diffusion transport regime) to these effects will be measured.
Chapter 2 begins with an introduction on the properties of the studied material system, and basics on thermoelectrics and spin caloritronics. The characteristic anisotropies of the (Ga,Mn)As density of states (DOS) and the corresponding magnetic properties are described. The DOS and magnetic anisotropies have an impact on the transport prop- erties of the material and that results in effects like tunneling anisotropic magnetores- istance (TAMR) [Goul 04]. Some of these effects will be used later as a reference to the results from thermoelectric / thermomagnetic measurements. The Fingerprint tech- nique [Papp 07a] is also described. The method gives an opportunity to easily study the anisotropies of materials in different device geometries.
Chapter 3 continues with the experimental observation of the diffusion thermopower of (Ga,Mn)As / Si-doped GaAs tunnel junction. A device geometry for measuring the diffusion thermopower is proposed. It consists of a Si - doped GaAs heating channel with a Low Temperature (LT) GaAs / (Ga,Mn)As contact (junction) in the middle of the channel. A single Ti / Au contact is fabricated on the top of the junction. For transport characterization, the device is immersed in liquid He. A heating current technique is used to create a temperature difference by local heating of the electron system on the Si:GaAs side. An AC current at low frequency is sent through the channel and it heats the electron population in it, while the junction remains at liquid He temperature (experimentally con- firmed). A temperature difference arises between the heating channel and the (Ga,Mn)As contact. As a result, a thermal (Seebeck) voltage develops across the junction, which we call tunnelling anisotropic magneto thermopower (TAMT), similar to TAMR. TAMT is detected by means of a standard lock-in technique at double the heating current frequency (at 2f ). The Seebeck voltage is found to be linear with the temperature difference. That dependence suggests a diffusion transport regime. Lattice (phonon drag) contribution to the thermovoltage, which is usually highly nonlinear with temperature, is not observed.
The value of the Seebeck coefficient of the junction at 4.2 K is estimated to be 0.5 µV/K.
It is about three orders of magnitude smaller than the previously reported one [Pu 06]. Subsequently, the thermal voltage is studied in external magnetic fields. It is found that the thermopower is anisotropic with the magnetization direction. The anisotropy is explained with the anisotropies of the (Ga,Mn)As contact. Further, switching events are detected in the thermopower when the magnetic field is swept from negative to positive fields. The switchings remind of a spin valve signal and is similar to the results from previous experiments on spin injection using a (Ga,Mn)As contacts in a non-local detection scheme. That shows the importance of the thermoelectric effects and their possible contribution to the spin injection measurements. A polar plot of the collected switching fields for different magnetization angles reveals a biaxial anisotropy and resembles earlier TAMR measurements of (Ga,Mn)As tunnel junction. A simple cartoon model is introduced to describe and estimate the expected thermopower of the studied junction. The model yields a Fermi level inside of the (Ga,Mn)As valence band. Moreover, the model is found to be in good agreement with the experimental results.
The Nernst effect of a (Ga,Mn)As / GaAs tunnel junction is studied in Chapter 4. A modified device geometry is introduced for this purpose. Instead of a single contact on the top of the square junction, four small contacts are fabricated to detect the Nernst signal. A temperature difference is maintained by means of a heating current technique described in Chapter 3. A magnetic field is applied parallel to the device plane. A voltage drop across two opposite contacts is detected at 2f. It appears that a simple cosine function with a parameter the angle between the magnetization and the [100] crystal direction in the (Ga,Mn)As layer manages to describe this signal which is attributed to the anomalous Nernst effect (ANE) of the ferromagnetic contact. Its symmetry is different than the Seebeck effect of the junction. For the temperature range of the thermopower measurements the ANE coefficient has a linear dependence on the temperature difference (∆T). For higher ∆T, a nonlinear dependence is observed for the coefficient. The ANE coefficient is found to be several orders of magnitude smaller than any Nernst coefficient in the literature. Both the temperature difference and the size of the ANE coefficient require further studies and analysis. Switching events are present in the measured Nernst signal when the magnetic field is swept from positive to negative values. These switchings are related to the switching fields in the ferromagnetic (Ga,Mn)As. Usually, there are two states which are present in TAMR or AMR measurements - low and high resistance. Instead of that, the Nernst signal appears to have three states - high, middle and low thermomagnetic voltage. That behaviour is governed not only by the magnetization, but also by the characteristic of the Nernst geometry.
Chapter 5 summarizes the main observations of this thesis and contains ideas for future work and experiments.
Die vorliegende Arbeit beschreibt die Charakterisierung von Halbleiter-Quantenpunkten (QP) in unterschiedlichen Materialsystemen. Die hier dargelegten Untersuchungen wurden mit verschiedenen Methoden der optischen Spektroskopie durchgeführt. Zu Beginn der Arbeit werden theoretische Grundlagen von QP hinsichtlich ihrer elektronischen Struktur und statistischen Eigenschaften erläutert. Darüber hinaus wird näher auf die Physik von Solarzellen eingegangen, in dem die relevanten Gleichungen für die Beschreibung des Ladungsträgertransportes hergeleitet und diskutiert werden.
Darauf folgend werden die experimentelle Methoden erklärt, welche zur Charakterisierung der jeweiligen Proben dienten. Besonderes Augenmerk wird auf die Methode zur Messung des Zwei-Photonen-Absorptionsprozesses gelegt.
Der Abschnitt der experimentell gewonnenen Ergebnisse beginnt mit Untersuchungen an einzelnen, spektral isolierten InP QP, welche mit ultralangsamen Wachstumsraten hergestellt wurden. Aufgrund der sehr geringen Flächendichte konnten grundlegende physikalische Eigenschaften von QP ohne zusätzliche laterale Strukturierungen studiert werden. Mittels Messungen in Abhängigkeit der Anregungsleistung und Detektion in Abhängigkeit der Polarisation konnten die verschiedenen Lumineszenzlinien eines QP-Spektrums den jeweiligen exzitonischen Zuständen zugeordnet werden. Zusätzlich wurden die QP in einem externen Magnetfeld in Faraday-Konfiguration untersucht. Abschließend durchgeführte Autokorrelationsmessungen erlaubten die Untersuchung der zeitlichen Statistik der QP-Photonen. Es konnte die Emission einzelner Photonen nachgewiesen werden.
Anschließend folgen spektroskopische Untersuchungen von InP QP, welche mittels sequentiellen Wachstums hergestellt wurden. Anhand von Messungen in Abhängigkeit der Anregungsleistung und bestätigt durch zeitaufgelöste Messungen am QP-Ensemble wurde eine bimodale QP-Verteilung mit Typ-I und Typ-II Bandverlauf bestimmt. Zusätzlich konnten an einzelnen, spektral isolierten QP verschiedene Exziton-Zustände identifiziert werden, bevor abschließend Autokorrelationsmessungen die Emission einzelner Photonen demonstrierten.
Zur Steigerung der Auskoppeleffizienz der Photonen wurden InP QP in Mikrosäulenresonatoren, bestehend aus zwei Bragg-Spiegeln mit einer dazwischenliegenden GaInP Kavität, eingebettet. Anfangs wurde die Emission der Kavitätsmode von Strukturen mit unterschiedlichen lateralen Durchmessern charakterisiert. Mittels Temperaturverstimmung konnte die Energie eines einzelnen QP-Exzitons in Resonanz mit der Resonatormode gebracht werden. Im Regime der schwachen Wechselwirkung wurde eine signifikante Überhöhung der Lumineszenzintensität aufgrund des Purcell-Effektes gemessen. Zusätzlich wurde im Regime der schwachen Kopplung die Emission einzelner Photonen anhand von Korrelationsmessungen nachgewiesen. Im zweiten Schritt wurden die QP-Mikrosäulenresonatorstrukturen elektrisch angeregt. Nach einer grundlegenden Charakterisierung konnte auch hier mittels Temperaturverstimmung die Energie der Resonatormode mit der eines Exziton in Resonanz gebracht werden. Im Regime der schwachen Wechselwirkung stieg die Intensität der Lumineszenz aufgrund des Purcell-Effekts signifikant an. Zum Abschluss bestätigen Korrelationsmessungen den Nachweis der Emission einzelner Photonen.
In Kapitel 6 werden die Eigenschaften von InGaN QP genauer analysiert. Nitrid-Verbindungshalbleiter kristallieren vorzugsweise stabil in der Wurtzit-Kristallstruktur. Polare Kristallebenen mit fehlender Spiegelsymmetrie führen zu starken piezoelektrischen Feldern. Dies hat eine Lumineszenz mit ausgeprägter linearer Polarisation zur Folge hat. Diese Eigenschaft wurde mittels statistischen Untersuchungen näher betrachtet. Zusätzlich erlaubten Messungen in Abhängigkeit der Anregungsleistung die verschiedenen Exziton-Zustände eines QP zu identifizieren. Zudem wurde die Emission einzelner Photonen durch InGaN QP demonstriert, erstmals sogar bis zu einer Temperatur von 50 K.
Im abschliessenden Kapitel wird eine mögliche Anwendung von QP präsentiert, bei der Eigenschaften in Bauteilen gezielt ausgenutzt werden, um die Bandbreite der Photonenabsorption zu erhöhen. Das Konzept der Zwischenband-Solarzellen verspricht auch Photonen mit einer Energie kleiner der Bandlücke des umgebenden Materials aufnehmen zu können und somit den spektralen Absorptionsbereich zu erweitern. Für eine systematische Untersuchung wurden verschiedene Proben mit integrierten AlGaInAs QP hergestellt. Anhand der Strom-Spannungs-Kennlinien der jeweiligen Proben im Dunkeln und unter Beleuchtung konnten wichtige Solarzellenparameter bestimmt werden. Spektrale Messungen liefern Informationen über die externe Quanteneffizienz der Proben. Entscheidend für den experimentellen Nachweis des Funktionsprinzips der Zwischenband-Solarzellen ist die Messung der Zwei-Photonen-Absorption für zwei Photonen mit jeweils kleineren Energien als der Bandlücke des umgebenden Materials.
In this work, three different material systems comprising carbon were researched: (i) Organic polymers and small molecules, in conjunction with fullerene molecules for applications in organic photovoltaics (OPV), (ii) single walled semiconducting carbon nanotubes and (iii) silicon carbide (SiC), whose defect color centers are recently in the limelight as candidates for quantum applications. All systems were analyzed using the optically detected magnetic resonance (ODMR) spectroscopy.
In the OPV chapter, first the intrinsic parameters and orientations of high spin excitons were analyzed in the materials P3HT, PTB7 and DIP. Specifically the influence of ordering in these organic systems was adressed. The second part of the OPV chapter is concerned with triplet generation by electron back transfer in the high-efficiency OPV material combination PTB7:PC71BM.
The carbon nanotube chapter first shows the way to the first unambiguous proof of the existence of triplet excitons in semiconducting (6,5) single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNT) by ODMR spectroscopy. A model for exciton kinetics, and also orientation and intrinsic parameters were propoesed.
The last part of this work is devoted to spin centers in silicon carbide (SiC). After a brief introduction, the spin multiplicity of the V2 and V3 silicon vacancies, and also of a Frenkel pair and an unassigned defect UD in 6H SiC, and of the V2 vacancy and the Frenkel pair in 4H SiC, was shown to be S=3/2. The spin polarized pumping of the 3/2 manifold of the quartet ground state of the silicon vacancies allows stimulated microwave emission. Furthermore, in 6H SiC, the UD and Frenkel pair were shown to have a large dependence of their intrinsic zero field interaction parameters on the temperature, while the vacancies are temperature independent. The application of the UD and Frenkel pair as temperature sensor, and of the vacancies as a vector magnetic field sensor is discussed.
Light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation, well-known for revolutionising photonic science, has been realised primarily in fermionic systems including widely applied diode lasers. The prerequisite for fermionic lasing is the inversion of electronic population, which governs the lasing threshold. More recently, bosonic lasers have also been developed based on Bose-Einstein condensates of exciton-polaritons in semiconductor microcavities. These electrically neutral bosons coexist with charged electrons and holes. In the presence of magnetic fields, the charged particles are bound to their cyclotron orbits, while the neutral exciton-polaritons move freely. We demonstrate how magnetic fields affect dramatically the phase diagram of mixed Bose-Fermi systems, switching between fermionic lasing, incoherent emission and bosonic lasing regimes in planar and pillar microcavities with optical and electrical pumping. We collected and analyzed the data taken on pillar and planar microcavity structures at continuous wave and pulsed optical excitation as well as injecting electrons and holes electronically. Our results evidence the transition from a Bose gas to a Fermi liquid mediated by magnetic fields and light-matter coupling.
It is poorly understood how progressive brain swelling in experimental cerebral malaria (ECM) evolves in space and over time, and whether mechanisms of inflammation or microvascular sequestration/obstruction dominate the underlying pathophysiology. We therefore monitored in the Plasmodium berghei ANKA-C57BL/6 murine ECM model, disease manifestation and progression clinically, assessed by the Rapid-Murine-Coma-and-Behavioral-Scale (RMCBS), and by high-resolution in vivo MRI, including sensitive assessment of early blood-brain-barrier-disruption (BBBD), brain edema and microvascular pathology. For histological correlation HE and immunohistochemical staining for microglia and neuroblasts were obtained. Our results demonstrate that BBBD and edema initiated in the olfactory bulb (OB) and spread along the rostral-migratory-stream (RMS) to the subventricular zone of the lateral ventricles, the dorsal-migratory-stream (DMS), and finally to the external capsule (EC) and brainstem (BS). Before clinical symptoms (mean RMCBS = 18.5±1) became evident, a slight, non-significant increase of quantitative T2 and ADC values was observed in OB+RMS. With clinical manifestation (mean RMCBS = 14.2±0.4), T2 and ADC values significantly increased along the OB+RMS (p = 0.049/p = 0.01). Severe ECM (mean RMCBS = 5±2.9) was defined by further spread into more posterior and deeper brain structures until reaching the BS (significant T2 elevation in DMS+EC+BS (p = 0.034)). Quantitative automated histological analyses confirmed microglial activation in areas of BBBD and edema. Activated microglia were closely associated with the RMS and neuroblasts within the RMS were severely misaligned with respect to their physiological linear migration pattern. Microvascular pathology and ischemic brain injury occurred only secondarily, after vasogenic edema formation and were both associated less with clinical severity and the temporal course of ECM. Altogether, we identified a distinct spatiotemporal pattern of microglial activation in ECM involving primarily the OB+RMS axis, a distinct pathway utilized by neuroblasts and immune cells. Our data suggest significant crosstalk between these two cell populations to be operative in deeper brain infiltration and further imply that the manifestation and progression of cerebral malaria may depend on brain areas otherwise serving neurogenesis.
Elektrooptische Transporteigenschaften und stochastisch aktivierte Prozesse Resonanter Tunneldioden
(2012)
Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden elektrooptische Transporteigenschaften und stochastisch aktivierte Prozesse Resonanter Tunneldioden (RTDs) bei Raumtemperatur untersucht. Die RTDs wurden auf dem III-V Halbleitermaterialsystem AlGaAs/GaAs durch Molekularstrahlepitaxie, Elektronenstrahllithographie und trockenchemischen Ätztechniken hergestellt. Im Bereich des negativen differentiellen Leitwerts konnte bistabi-les Schalten und hierbei stochastisch aktivierte Dynamik nichtlinearer Systeme untersucht werden. Die Flächenabhängigkeit der Ätzrate konnte ausgenutzt werden, um RTDs mit einem Stamm und zwei Transportästen zu realisieren, welche hinsichtlich ihrer optischen und elektrischen Eigenschaften untersucht wurden. Im ersten experimentellen Abschnitt 3.1 werden die elektrischen Transporteigenschaften Resonanter Tunneldioden bei Raum-temperatur und die Flächenabhängigkeit des kohärenten und nicht-kohärenten Elektronen-transports analysiert. Die Realisierung universeller logischer Gatter (NOR und NAND) und deren Rekonfigurierbarkeit durch einen externen Kontrollparameter wird in Abschnitt 3.2 gezeigt. In Abschnitt 3.3 wird die Lichtsensitivität Resonanter Tunneldioden als Photode-tektoren für den sichtbaren Wellenlängenbereich und in Abschnitt 3.4 für die Telekommu-nikationswellenlänge bei λ = 1,3 µm demonstriert.
One rarely finds practical guidelines for the implementation of complex optical setups. Here, we aim to provide technical details on the decision making of building and revising a custom sensor-based adaptive optics (AO) direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscope (dSTORM) to provide practical assistance in setting up or troubleshooting similar devices.
The foundation of this report is an instrument constructed as part of a master's thesis in 2021, which was built for deep tissue imaging. The setup is presented in the following way: (1) An optical and mechanical overview of the system at the beginning of this internship is given. (2) The optical components are described in detail in the order at which the light passes through, highlighting their working principle and implementation in the system. The optical component include (2A) a focus on even sample illumination, (2B) restoring telecentricity when working with commercial microscope bodies, (2C) the AO elements, namely the deformable mirror (DM) and the wavefront sensor, and their integration, and (2D) the separation of wavefront and image capture using fluorescent beads and a dichroic mirror. After addressing the limitations of the existing setup, modification options are derived. The modifications include the implementation of adjustment only light paths to improve system stability and revise the degrees of freedom of the components and changes in lens choices to meet the specifications of the AO components. Last, the capabilities of the modified setup are presented and discussed: (1) First, we enable epifluorescence imaging of bead samples through 180 µm unstained murine hippocampal tissue with wavefront error correction of ~ 90 %. Point spread function, wavefront shape and Zernike decomposition of bead samples are presented. (2) Second, we move from epifluorescent to dSTORM imaging of tubulin stained primary mouse hippocampal cells, which are imaged through up to 180 µm of unstained murine hippocampal tissue. We show that full width at half maximum (FWHM) of prominent features can be reduced in size by nearly a magnitude from uncorrected epiflourescence images to dSTORM images corrected by the adaptive optics. We present dSTORM localization count and FWHM of prominent features as as a function of imaging depth.
The capabilities of a new approach towards the foundations of Statistical Mechanics are explored. The approach is genuine quantum in the sense that statistical behavior is a consequence of objective quantum uncertainties due to entanglement and uncertainty relations. No additional randomness is added by hand and no assumptions about a priori probabilities are made, instead measure concentration results are used to justify the methods of Statistical Physics. The approach explains the applicability of the microcanonical and canonical ensemble and the tendency to equilibrate in a natural way. This work contains a pedagogical review of the existing literature and some new results. The most important of which are: i) A measure theoretic justification for the microcanonical ensemble. ii) Bounds on the subsystem equilibration time. iii) A proof that a generic weak interaction causes decoherence in the energy eigenbasis. iv) A proof of a quantum H-Theorem. v) New estimates of the average effective dimension for initial product states and states from the mean energy ensemble. vi) A proof that time and ensemble averages of observables are typically close to each other. vii) A bound on the fluctuations of the purity of a system coupled to a bath.
Magnetic Particle Imaging (MPI) ist ein innovatives tomographisches Bildgebungsverfahren, mit dem Tracerpartikel äußerst sensitiv und schnell mehrdimensional abgebildet werden können. Die Methode basiert auf der nichtlinearen Magnetisierungsantwort superparamagnetischer Eisenoxidnanopartikel (SPION) in einem Messpunkt, welcher ein Messvolumen rastert. In vorliegender Arbeit wurde das sog. Traveling Wave MPI (TWMPI) Verfahren eingesetzt, wodurch im Vergleich zu konventionellen MPI-Scannern ein größeres Field of View (FOV) und eine geringere Latenz bis zur Bildanzeige erreicht werden konnte. TWMPI weist einige für medizinische Zwecke vielversprechende Eigenschaften auf: Es liefert zwei- und dreidimensionale Bildrekonstruktionen in Echtzeit mit hoher zeitlicher und räumlicher Auflösung. Dabei ist die Bildgebung von Grund auf hintergrundfrei und erfordert keinerlei ionisierende Strahlung. Zudem ist die Technik äußerst sensitiv und kann SPION-Tracer noch in mikromolaren Konzentrationen detektieren.
Ziel dieser Arbeit war es daher zu untersuchen, inwiefern es mittels TWMPI möglich ist, künstliche Stenosen im Gefäßmodell visuell in Echtzeit darzustellen und quantitativ zu beurteilen sowie überdies eine perkutane transluminale Angioplastie (PTA) im Gefäßmodell unter TWMPI-Echtzeit-Bildgebung durchzuführen.
Alle Experimente wurden in einem speziell angefertigten TWMPI-Scanner durchgeführt (JMU Würzburg, Experimentelle Physik V (Biophysik), FOV: 65 x 29 x 29 mm³, Auflösung: ca. 1.5 - 2 mm). Die Lumen-Darstellungen erfolgten mittels des SPION-Tracers Ferucarbotran in einer Verdünnung von 1 : 50 (entspr. 10 mmol [Fe]/l). Das PTA-Instrumentarium wurde mit eigens hergestelltem ferucarbotranhaltigem Lack (100 mmol [Fe]/l) markiert. Für die verschiedenen Teilexperimente wurden den jeweiligen speziellen Anforderungen entsprechend mehrere Gefäßmodelle handgefertigt.
Für die visuelle Stenosequantifizierung wurden fünf starre Stenosephantome unterschiedlicher Stenosierung (0%, 25%, 50%, 75%, 100%) aus Polyoxymethylen hergestellt (l: 40 mm, ID: 8 mm). Die Gefäßmodelle wurden mehrfach zentral im FOV platziert und das stenosierte Lumen mittels sog. Slice-Scanning Modus (SSM, Einzelaufnahme inkl. 10 Mittelungen: 200 ms, Bildfrequenz: 5 Bilder pro Sekunde, Latenz: ca. 100 ms) als zweidimensionale Quasi-Projektionen abgebildet. Diese Aufnahmen (n = 80, 16 je Phantom) wurden mit einer einheitlichen Grauskalierung versehen und anschließend entsprechend den NASCET-Kriterien visuell ausgewertet.
Alle achtzig Aufnahmen waren unabhängig vom Stenosegrad aufgrund einheitlicher Fensterung sowie konstanter Scannerparameter untereinander gut vergleichbar. Niedriggradige Stenosen konnten insgesamt genauer abgebildet werden als höhergradige, was sich neben der subjektiven Bildqualität auch in geringeren Standardabweichungen zeigte (0%: 3.70 % ± 2.71, 25%: 18.64 % ± 1.84, 50%: 52.82 % ± 3.66, 75%: 77.84 % ± 14.77, 100%: 100 % ± 0). Mit zunehmendem Stenosegrad kam es vermehrt zu geometrischen Verzerrungen im Zentrum, sodass bei den 75%-Stenosen eine breitere Streuung der Messwerte mit einer höheren Standardabweichung von 14.77% einherging. Leichte, randständige Artefakte konnten bei allen Datensätzen beobachtet werden.
Für die PTA wurden drei interaktive Gefäßmodelle aus Polyvinylchlorid (l: 100 mm, ID: 8 mm) mit zu- und abführendem Schlauchsystem entwickelt, welche mittels Kabelband von außen hochgradig eingeengt werden konnten. Analog zu einer konventionellen PTA mittels röntgenbasierter digitaler Subtraktionsangiographie (DSA), wurden alle erforderlichen Arbeitsschritte (Gefäßdarstellung, Drahtpassage, Ballonplatzierung, Angioplastie, Erfolgskontrolle) unter (TW)MPI-Echtzeit-Bildgebung (Framerate: 2 - 4 FPS, Latenz: ca. 100 ms) abgebildet bzw. durchgeführt.
Im Rahmen der PTA war eine Echtzeit-Visualisierung der Stenose im Gefäßmodell durch Tracer-Bolusgabe sowie die Führung des markierten Instrumentariums zum Zielort möglich. Die Markierung der Instrumente hielt der Beanspruchung während der Prozedur stand und ermöglichte eine genaue Platzierung des Ballonkatheters. Die Stenose konnte mittels Angioplastie-Ballons unter Echtzeit-Darstellung gesprengt werden und der Interventionserfolg im Anschluss durch erneute Visualisierung des Lumens validiert werden.
Insgesamt zeigt sich MPI somit als adäquate Bildgebungstechnik für die beiden in der Fragestellung bzw. Zielsetzung definierten experimentellen Anwendungen. Stenosen im Gefäßmodell konnten erfolgreich in Echtzeit visualisiert und bildmorphologisch nach NASCET-Kriterien quantifiziert werden. Ebenso war eine PTA im Gefäßmodell unter TWMPI-Echtzeit-Bildgebung machbar. Diese Ergebnisse unterstreichen das grundlegende Potenzial von MPI für medizinische Zwecke. Um zu den bereits etablierten Bildgebungsmethoden aufzuschließen, ist jedoch weitere Forschung im Bereich der Scanner-Hard- und -Software sowie bezüglich SPION-Tracern nötig.
This thesis presents the detailed development of the fabrication process and the first observations of artificial magnetic atoms from the II-VI diluted magnetic semiconductor alloy (Zn,Cd,Be,Mn)Se. In order to manufacture the vertical quantum dot device which exhibits artificial atom behavior a number of development steps are conducted. First, the II-VI heterostructure is adjusted for the linear transport regime. Second, state of the art vertical quantum dot fabrication techniques in the III-V material system are investigated regarding their portability to the II-VI heterostructure. And third, new approaches to the fabrication process are developed, taking into account the complexity of the heterostructure and its physical properties. Finally a multi-step fabrication process is presented, which is built up from electron beam and optical lithography, dry and wet etching and insulator deposition. This process allows for the processing of pillars with diameters down to 200 nm with an insulating dielectric and gate. Preliminary transport data on the fabricated vertical quantum dots are presendted confirming the magnetic nature of the resulting artificial atoms.
Recently a new state of matter was discovered in which the bulk insulating state in a material is accompanied by conducting surface or edge states. This new state of matter can be distinguished from a conventional insulator phase by the topological properties of its band structure which led to the name "topological insulators". Experimentally, topological insulator states are mostly found in systems characterized by a band inversion compared to conventional systems. In most topological insulator systems, this is caused by a combination of energetically close bands and spin orbit coupling. Such properties are found in systems with heavy elements like Hg and Bi. And indeed, the first experimental discovery of a topological insulator succeeded in HgTe quantum wells and later also in BiSb bulk systems.
Topological insulators are of large interest due to their unique properties: In 2-dimensional topological insulators one dimensional edge states form without the need of an external magnetic field (in contrast to the quantum Hall effect). These edge states feature a linear band dispersion, a so called Dirac dispersion. The quantum spin Hall states are helical edge states, which means they consist of counterpropagating oppositely spin polarized edge channels. They are therefore of great potential for spintronic applications as well as building blocks for new more exotic states like Majorana Fermions. 3-dimensional topological insulators feature 2-dimensional surface states with only one Dirac band (also called Dirac cone) on each surface and an interesting spin texture where spin and momentum are locked perpendicular to each other in the surface plane. This unique surface band structure is predicted to be able to host several exotic states like e.g. Majorana Fermions (in combination with superconductors) and magnetic monopole like excitations.
This PhD thesis will summarize the discovery of topological insulators and highlights the developments on their experimental observations. The work focuses on HgTe which is up to now the only topological insulator material where the expected properties are unambiguously demonstrated in transport experiments. In HgTe, the topological insulator properties arise from the inversion of the Gamma_6 and Gamma_8 bands. The band inversion in HgTe is due to a combination of a high spin orbit splitting in Te and large energy corrections (due to the mass-velocity term) to the energy levels in Hg. Bulk HgTe, however, is a semimetal, which means for the conversion into a topological insulator a band gap has to be opened. In two dimensions (HgTe quantum well structures) this is achieved via quantum confinement, which opens a band gap between the quantum well subbands. In three dimensions, strain is used to lift the degeneracy of the semimetallic Gamma_8 bands opening up a band gap.
The thesis is structured as follows:
- The first chapter of this thesis will give a brief overview on discoveries in the field of topological insulators. It focuses on works relevant to experimental results presented in the following chapters. This includes a short outline of the early predictions and a summary of important results concerning 2-dimensional topological insulators while the final section discusses observations concerning 3-dimensional topological insulators.
- The discovery of the quantum spin Hall effect in HgTe marked the first experimental observation of a topological insulator. Chapter 2 will focus on HgTe quantum wells and the quantum spin Hall effect.
Above a critical thickness, HgTe quantum wells are predicted to host the quantum spin Hall state, the signature of a 2-dimensional topological insulator. HgTe quantum wells exhibiting low carrier concentrations and at the same time high carrier mobilities are required to be able to measure the quantum spin Hall effect. The growth of such high quality HgTe quantum wells was one of the major goals for this work. Continuous optimization of the substrate preparation and growth conditions resulted in controlled carrier densities down to a few 10^10 cm^-2. At the same time, carrier mobilities exceeding 1 x 10^6 cm^2/Vs have been achieved, which provides mean free paths of several micrometers in the material. Thus the first experimental evidence for the existence of the quantum spin Hall edge states succeeded in transport experiments on microstructures: When the Fermi energy was located in the bulk band gap a residual quantized resistance of 2e^2/h was found. Further experiments focused on investigating the nature of transport in this regime. By non-local measurements the edge state character could be established. The measured non-local resistances corresponded well with predictions from the Landauer-Büttiker theory applied to transport in helical edge channels.
In a final set of experiments the spin polarization of the edge channels was investigated. Here, we could make use of the advantage that HgTe quantum well structures exhibit a large Rashba spin orbit splitting. In systems with a large Rashba spin orbit splitting a spin accumulation is expected to occur at the edge of the sample perpendicular to a current flow. This so-called spin Hall effect was then used as a spin injector and detector. Using split gate devices it was possible to bring spin Hall and quantum spin Hall state into direct contact, which enabled an all electrical detection of the spin polarization of the quantum spin Hall edge channels.
- HgTe as a 3-dimensional topological insulator will be presented in chapter 3. Straining the HgTe layer enables the observation of topological insulator behavior. It was found that strain can be easily implemented during growth by using CdTe substrates. CdTe has a slightly larger lattice constant than HgTe and therefore leads to tensile strain in the HgTe layer as long as the growth is pseudomorphic. Magnetotransport studies showed the emergence of quantum Hall transport with characteristic signatures of a Dirac type bandstructure. Thus, this result marks the first observation of the quantum Hall effect in the surface states of a 3-dimensional topological insulator.
Transport experiments on samples fitted with a top gate enabled the identification of contributions from individual surfaces. Furthermore, the surface state quantum Hall effect was found to be surprisingly stable, perturbations due to additional bulk transport could not be found, even at high carrier densities of the system.
- Chapters 4 - 6 serve as in depth overviews of selected works: Chapter 4 presents a detailed overview on the all electrical detection of the spin Hall effect in HgTe quantum wells. The detection of the spin polarization of the quantum spin Hall effect is shown in chapter 5 and chapter 6 gives a detailed overview on the quantum Hall effect originating from the topological surface state in strained bulk HgTe.
The investigations discussed in this thesis pioneered the experimental work on the transport properties of topological insulator systems. The understanding of the fundamental properties of topological insulators enables new experiments in which e.g. the inclusion of magnetic dopants or the interplay between topological insulator and superconductors can be investigated in detail.
Radiationless energy transfer is at the core of diverse phenomena, such as light harvesting in photosynthesis\(^1\), energy-transfer-based microspectroscopies\(^2\), nanoscale quantum entanglement\(^3\) and photonic-mode hybridization\(^4\). Typically, the transfer is efficient only for separations that are much shorter than the diffraction limit. This hampers its application in optical communication and quantum information processing, which require spatially selective addressing. Here, we demonstrate highly efficient radiationless coherent energy transfer over a distance of twice the excitation wavelength by combining localized and delocalized\(^5\) plasmonic modes. Analogous to the Tavis-Cummings model, two whispering-gallery-mode antennas\(^6\) placed in the foci of an elliptical plasmonic cavity\(^7\) fabricated from single-crystal gold plates act as a pair of oscillators coupled to a common cavity mode. Time-resolved two-photon photoemission electron microscopy (TR 2P-PEEM) reveals an ultrafast long-range periodic energy transfer in accordance with the simulations. Our observations open perspectives for the optimization and tailoring of mesoscopic energy transfer and long-range quantum emitter coupling.
Proton–proton collisions at √s=7 TeV and heavy ion collisions at \(\sqrt{sNN}\)=2.76 TeV were produced by the LHC and recorded using the ATLAS experiment’s trigger system in 2010. The LHC is designed with a maximum bunch crossing rate of 40 MHz and the ATLAS trigger system is designed to record approximately 200 of these per second. The trigger system selects events by rapidly identifying signatures of muon, electron, photon, tau lepton, jet, and B meson candidates, as well as using global event signatures, such as missing transverse energy. An overview of the ATLAS trigger system, the evolution of the system during 2010 and the performance of the trigger system components and selections based on the 2010 collision data are shown. A brief outline of plans for the trigger system in 2011 is presented.
Using inelastic proton-proton interactions at s√=900 GeV and 7 TeV, recorded by the ATLAS detector at the LHC, measurements have been made of the correlations between forward and backward charged-particle multiplicities and, for the first time, between forward and backward charged-particle summed transverse momentum. In addition, jet-like structure in the events is studied by means of azimuthal distributions of charged particles relative to the charged particle with highest transverse momentum in a selected kinematic region of the event. The results are compared with predictions from tunes of the pythia and herwig++ Monte Carlo generators, which in most cases are found to provide a reasonable description of the data.
This article presents searches for the \({Zγ}\) decay of the Higgs boson and for narrow high-mass resonances decaying to \(Z\)γ, exploiting \(Z\) boson decays to pairs of electrons or muons. The data analysis uses 36.1 fb\(^{−1}\) of \({pp}\) collisions at \(\sqrt{s}=13\) recorded by the ATLAS detector at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. The data are found to be consistent with the expected Standard Model background. The observed (expected — assuming Standard Model \({pp} → H → {Z}γ\) production and decay) upper limit on the production cross section times the branching ratio for \({pp} → H → {Z}γ\) is 6.6. (5.2) times the Standard Model prediction at the 95% confidence level for a Higgs boson mass of 125.09 GeV. In addition, upper limits are set on the production cross section times the branching ratio as a function of the mass of a narrow resonance between 250 GeV and 2.4 TeV, assuming spin-0 resonances produced via gluon-gluon fusion, and spin-2 resonances produced via gluon-gluon or quark-antiquark initial states. For high-mass spin-0 resonances, the observed (expected) limits vary between 88 fb (61 fb) and 2.8 fb (2.7 fb) for the mass range from 250 GeV to 2.4 TeV at the 95% confidence level.
This paper presents measurements of the polarization of W bosons in top quark decays, derived from \(t\overline{t}\) events with missing transverse momentum, one charged lepton and at least four jets, or two charged leptons and at least two jets. Data from pp collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 7 TeV were collected with the ATLAS experiment at the LHC and correspond to an integrated luminosity of 1.04 fb\(^{−1}\). The measured fractions of longitudinally, left- and right-handed polarization are F\(_0\) = 0.67 ± 0.07, F\(_L\) = 0.32 ± 0.04 and F\(_R\) = 0.01 ± 0.05, in agreement with the Standard Model predictions. As the polarization of the W bosons in top quark decays is sensitive to the Wtb vertex Lorentz structure and couplings, the measurements were used to set limits on anomalous contributions to the Wtb couplings.
A search for a fermiophobic Higgs boson using diphoton events produced in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of √s=7 TeV is performed using data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 4.9 fb\(^{−1}\) collected by the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider. A specific benchmark model is considered where all the fermion couplings to the Higgs boson are set to zero and the bosonic couplings are kept at the Standard Model values (fermiophobic Higgs model). The largest excess with respect to the background-only hypothesis is found at 125.5 GeV, with a local significance of 2.9 standard deviations, which reduces to 1.6 standard deviations when taking into account the look-elsewhere effect. The data exclude the fermiophobic Higgs model in the ranges 110.0–118.0 GeV and 119.5–121.0 GeV at 95 % confidence level.
The results of a search for direct pair production of heavy top-quark partners in 4.7 fb\(^{−1}\) of integrated luminosity from pp collisions at √s=7 TeV collected by the ATLAS detector at the LHC are reported. Heavy top-quark partners decaying into a top quark and a neutral non-interacting particle are searched for in events with two leptons in the final state. No excess above the Standard Model expectation is observed. Limits are placed on the mass of a supersymmetric scalar top and of a spin-1/2 top-quark partner. A spin-1/2 top-quark partner with a mass between 300 GeV and 480 GeV, decaying to a top quark and a neutral non-interacting particle lighter than 100 GeV, is excluded at 95% confidence level.
This letter reports the results of a search for top and bottom squarks from gluino pair production in 4.7 fb\(^{−1}\) of pp collisions at √s=7 TeV using the ATLAS detector at the LHC. The search is performed in events with large missing transverse momentum and at least three jets identified as originating from a b-quark. Exclusion limits are presented for a variety of gluino-mediated models with gluino masses up to 1 TeV excluded.
The measurement of missing transverse momentum in the ATLAS detector, described in this paper, makes use of the full event reconstruction and a calibration based on reconstructed physics objects. The performance of the missing transverse momentum reconstruction is evaluated using data collected in pp collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 7 TeV in 2010. Minimum bias events and events with jets of hadrons are used from data samples corresponding to an integrated luminosity of about 0.3 nb\(^{−1}\) and 600 nb\(^{−1}\) respectively, together with events containing a Z boson decaying to two leptons (electrons or muons) or a W boson decaying to a lepton (electron or muon) and a neutrino, from a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of about 36 pb\(^{−1}\). An estimate of the systematic uncertainty on the missing transverse momentum scale is presented
We present a measurement of two-particle angular correlations in proton- proton collisions at √s=900 GeV and 7 TeV. The collision events were collected during 2009 and 2010 with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider using a single-arm minimum bias trigger. Correlations are measured for charged particles produced in the kinematic range of transverse momentum p\(_T\) > 100 MeV and pseudorapidity |η| < 2.5. A complex structure in pseudorapidity and azimuth is observed at both collision energies. Results are compared to PYTHIA 8 and HERWIG++ as well as to the AMBT2B, DW and Perugia 2011 tunes of PYTHIA 6. The data are not satisfactorily described by any of these models.
This letter reports on a search for hypothetical heavy neutrinos, N, and right-handed gauge bosons, W R, in events with high transverse momentum objects which include two reconstructed leptons and at least one hadronic jet. The results were obtained from data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 2.1 fb\(^{−1}\) collected in proton–proton collisions at √s=7 TeV with the ATLAS detector at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. No excess above the Standard Model background expectation is observed. Excluded mass regions for Majorana and Dirac neutrinos are presented using two approaches for interactions that violate lepton and lepton-flavor numbers. One approach uses an effective operator framework, the other approach is guided by the Left–Right Symmetric Model. The results described in this letter represent the most stringent limits to date on the masses of heavy neutrinos and W\(_R\) bosons obtained in direct searches.
Measurement of τ polarization in W→τν decays with the ATLAS detector in pp collisions at s√=7 TeV
(2012)
In this paper, a measurement of τ polarization in W→τν decays is presented. It is measured from the energies of the decay products in hadronic τ decays with a single final state charged particle. The data, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 24 pb\(^{−1}\), were collected by the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider in 2010. The measured value of the τ polarization is P\(_τ\)=−1.06±0.04 (stat)\(^{+0.05}_{−0.07}\) (syst), in agreement with the Standard Model prediction, and is consistent with a physically allowed 95 % CL interval [−1,−0.91]. Measurements of τ polarization have not previously been made at hadron colliders.
A measurement of event shape variables is presented for large momentum transfer proton-proton collisions using the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. Six event shape variables calculated using hadronic jets are studied in inclusive multi-jet events in 35 pb\(^{−1}\) of integrated luminosity at a center-of-mass energy of √s=7 TeV. These measurements are compared to predictions by three Monte Carlo event generators containing leading-logarithmic parton showers matched to leading order matrix elements for 2→2 and 2→n (n=2,…,6) scattering. Measurements of the third-jet resolution parameter, aplanarity, thrust, sphericity, and transverse sphericity are generally well described. The mean value of each event shape variable is evaluated as a function of the average momentum of the two leading jets p\(_{T,1}\) and p\(_{T,2}\), with a mean p\(_T\) approaching 1 TeV.
In models of anomaly-mediated supersymmetry breaking (AMSB), the lightest chargino is predicted to have a lifetime long enough to be detected in collider experiments. This letter explores AMSB scenarios in pp collisions at √s=7 TeV by attempting to identify decaying charginos which result in tracks that appear to have few associated hits in the outer region of the tracking system. The search was based on data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 1.02 fb\(^{−1}\) collected with the ATLAS detector in 2011. The p\(_T\) spectrum of candidate tracks is found to be consistent with the expectation from Standard Model background processes and constraints on the lifetime and the production cross section were obtained. In the minimal AMSB framework with m\(_{3/2}\)<32 TeV, m\(_0\)<1.5 TeV, tanβ=5 and μ>0, a chargino having mass below 92 GeV and a lifetime between 0.5 ns and 2 ns is excluded at 95 % confidence level.
A search for top quark pair resonances in final states containing at least one electron or muon has been performed with the ATLAS experiment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. The search uses a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 2.05 fb\(^{−1}\), which was recorded in 2011 at a proton-proton centre-of-mass energy of 7 TeV. No evidence for a resonance is found and limits are set on the production cross-section times branching ratio to \(t\overline t\) for narrow and wide resonances. For narrow Z′ bosons, the observed 95 % Bayesian credibility level limits range from 9.3 pb to 0.95 pb for masses in the range of m Z′=500 GeV to m\(_{Z′}\)=1300 GeV. The corresponding excluded mass region for a leptophobic topcolour Z′ boson (Kaluza-Klein gluon excitation in the Randall-Sundrum model) is m\(_{Z′}\)<880 GeV (m\(_{gKK}\)<1130 GeV).
Measurement of W\(^{±}\)Z production in proton-proton collisions at √s=7 TeV with the ATLAS detector
(2012)
A study of W\(^{±}\)Z production in proton-proton collisions at √s=7 TeV is presented using data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 4.6 fb\(^{−1}\) collected with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider in 2011. In total, 317 candidates, with a background expectation of 68±10 events, are observed in double-leptonic decay final states with electrons, muons and missing transverse momentum. The total cross-section is determined to be σ\(^{tot}_{WZ}\)=19.0\(^{+1.4}_{−1.3}\)(stat.)±0.9(syst.)±0.4(lumi.) pb, consistent with the Standard Model expectation of 17.6\(^{+1.1}_{−1.0}\) pb. Limits on anomalous triple gauge boson couplings are derived using the transverse momentum spectrum of Z bosons in the selected events. The cross-section is also presented as a function of Z boson transverse momentum and diboson invariant mass.
The ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider is used to search for high-mass resonances decaying to an electron-positron pair or a muon-antimuon pair. The search is sensitive to heavy neutral Z′ gauge bosons, Randall-Sundrum gravitons, Z* bosons, techni-mesons, Kaluza-Klein Z/γ bosons, and bosons predicted by Torsion models. Results are presented based on an analysis of pp collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 7 TeV corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 4.9 fb\(^{−1}\) in the e\(^+\)e\(^−\) channel and 5.0 fb\(^{−1}\) in the μ\(^+\)μ\(^−\)channel. A Z′ boson with Standard Model-like couplings is excluded at 95 % confidence level for masses below 2.22 TeV. A Randall-Sundrum graviton with coupling k/\(\overline M_{Pl}\)=0.1 is excluded at 95 % confidence level for masses below 2.16 TeV. Limits on the other models are also presented, including Technicolor and Minimal Z′ Models.
Search for anomalous production of prompt like-sign lepton pairs at √s=7TeV with the ATLAS detector
(2012)
An inclusive search for anomalous production of two prompt, isolated leptons with the same electric charge is presented. The search is performed in a data sample corresponding to 4.7 fb\(^{−1}\) of integrated luminosity collected in 2011 at √s=7TeV with the ATLAS detector at the LHC. Pairs of leptons (e\(^{±}\)e\(^{±}\), e\(^{±}\)μ\(^{±}\), and μ\(^{±}\)μ\(^{±}\)) with large transverse momentum are selected, and the dilepton invariant mass distribution is examined for any deviation from the Standard Model expectation. No excess is found, and upper limits on the production cross section of like-sign lepton pairs from physics processes beyond the Standard Model are placed as a function of the dilepton invariant mass within a fiducial region close to the experimental selection criteria. The 95% confidence level upper limits on the cross section of anomalous e\(^{±}\)e\(^{±}\), e\(^{±}\)μ\(^{±}\), or μ\(^{±}\)μ\(^{±}\) production range between 1.7 fb and 64 fb depending on the dilepton mass and flavour combination.
This paper describes measurements of the sum of the transverse energy of particles as a function of particle pseudorapidity, η, in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy, √s=7 TeV using the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. The measurements are performed in the region |η| < 4.8 for two event classes: those requiring the presence of particles with a low transverse momentum and those requiring particles with a significant transverse momentum. In the second dataset measurements are made in the region transverse to the hard scatter. The distributions are compared to the predictions of various Monte Carlo event generators, which generally tend to underestimate the amount of transverse energy at high |η|.
This paper describes an analysis of the angular distribution of W→eν and W→μν decays, using data from pp collisions at s√=7 TeV recorded with the ATLAS detector at the LHC in 2010, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of about 35 pb\(^{−1}\). Using the decay lepton transverse momentum and the missing transverse momentum, the W decay angular distribution projected onto the transverse plane is obtained and analysed in terms of helicity fractions f\(_0\), f\(_L\) and f\(_R\) over two ranges of W transverse momentum (p\(^W_T\)):35<p\(^W_T\)<50 GeV and p\(^W_T\)>50 GeV. Good agreement is found with theoretical predictions. For p\(^W_T\)>50 GeV, the values of f\(_0\) and f\(_L\)−f\(_R\), averaged over charge and lepton flavour, are measured to be: f\(_0\)=0.127±0.030±0.108 and f\(_L\)−f\(_R\)=0.252±0.017±0.030, where the first uncertainties are statistical, and the second include all systematic effects.
Pseudorapidity gap distributions in proton-proton collisions at √s=7 TeV are studied using a minimum bias data sample with an integrated luminosity of 7.1 μb\(^{−1}\). Cross sections are measured differentially in terms of Δη\(^F\), the larger of the pseudorapidity regions extending to the limits of the ATLAS sensitivity, at η=±4.9, in which no final state particles are produced above a transverse momentum threshold pcutT. The measurements span the region 0<Δη\(^F\)<8 for 200MeV<p\(^{cut}_T\)<800MeV. At small Δη\(^F\) , the data test the reliability of hadronisation models in describing rapidity and transverse momentum fluctuations in final state particle production. The measurements at larger gap sizes are dominated by contributions from the single diffractive dissociation process (pp→Xp), enhanced by double dissociation (pp→XY) where the invariant mass of the lighter of the two dissociation systems satisfies M\(_Y\) ≲7 GeV. The resulting cross section is dσ/dΔη\(^F\) ≈1 mb for Δη\(^F\) ≳3. The large rapidity gap data are used to constrain the value of the Pomeron intercept appropriate to triple Regge models of soft diffraction. The cross section integrated over all gap sizes is compared with other LHC inelastic cross section measurements.
This paper presents a search for the t-channel exchange of an R-parity violating scalar top quark ( \(\tilde{t}\) ) in the e\(^±\) μ\(^∓\) continuum using 2.1 fb\(^{−1}\) of data collected by the ATLAS detector in √s=7 TeV pp collisions at the Large Hadron Collider. Data are found to be consistent with the expectation from the Standard Model backgrounds. Limits on R-parity-violating couplings at 95 % C.L. are calculated as a function of the scalar top mass (m\(_\tilde{t}\)). The upper limits on the production cross section for pp→eμX, through the t-channel exchange of a scalar top quark, ranges from 170 fb for m\(_\tilde{t}\)=95 GeV to 30 fb for m\(_\tilde{t}\)=1000 GeV.
A measurement of B\(^0_s\)→J/ψϕ decay parameters, including the CP -violating weak phase ϕ\(_s\) and the decay width difference ΔΓ\(_s\) is reported, using 4.9 fb\(^{−1}\) of integrated luminosity collected in 2011 by the ATLAS detector from LHC pp collisions at a centre-of-mass energy √s=7 TeV. The mean decay width Γ\(_s\) and the transversity amplitudes |A\(_0\)(0)|\(^2\) and |A\(_∥\)(0)|\(^2\) are also measured. The values reported for these parameters are:
ϕ\(_s\)=0.22±0.41 (stat.)±0.10 (syst.) rad
ΔΓ\(_s\)=0.053±0.021 (stat.)±0.010 (syst.)ps\(^{−1}\)
Γ\(_s\)=0.677±0.007 (stat.)±0.004 (syst.) ps\(^{−1}\)
|A\(_0\)(0)|\(^2\)=0.528±0.006 (stat.)±0.009 (syst.)
|A\(_∥\)(0)|\(^2\)=0.220±0.008 (stat.)±0.007 (syst.)
where the values quoted for ϕ\(_s\) and ΔΓ\(_s\) correspond to the solution compatible with the external measurements to which the strong phase δ\(_⊥\) is constrained and where ΔΓ\(_s\) is constrained to be positive. The fraction of S-wave KK or f\(_0\) contamination through the decays B\(^0_s\)→J/ψK\(^+\)K\(^−\)(f\(_0\)) is measured as well and is found to be consistent with zero. Results for ϕ\(_s\) and ΔΓ\(_s\) are also presented as 68%, 90% and 95% likelihood contours, which show agreement with Standard Model expectations.
A search is conducted for hadronic three-body decays of a new massive coloured particle in √s=7TeV pp collisions at the LHC using an integrated luminosity of 4.6 fb\(^{−1}\) collected by the ATLAS detector. Supersymmetric gluino pair production in the context of a model with R-parity violation is used as a benchmark scenario. The analysis is divided into two search channels, each optimised separately for their sensitivity to high-mass and low-mass gluino production. The first search channel uses a stringent selection on the transverse momentum of the six leading jets and is performed as a counting experiment. The second search channel focuses on low-mass gluinos produced with a large boost. Large-radius jets are selected and the invariant mass of each of the two leading jets is used as a discriminant between the signal and the background. The results are found to be consistent with Standard Model expectations and limits are set on the allowed gluino mass.
A search for flavour changing neutral current (FCNC) processes in top-quark decays by the ATLAS Collaboration is presented. Data collected from pp collisions at the LHC at a centre-of-mass energy of √s=7TeV during 2011, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 2.1 fb\(^{−1}\), were used. A search was performed for top-quark pair-production events, with one top quark decaying through the t → Zq FCNC (q = u, c) channel, and the other through the Standard Model dominant mode t → W b. Only the decays of the Z boson to charged leptons and leptonic W -boson decays were considered as signal. Consequently, the final-state topology is characterised by the presence of three isolated charged leptons, at least two jets and missing transverse momentum from the undetected neutrino. No evidence for an FCNC signal was found. An upper limit on the t → Zq branching ratio of BR(t → Zq) < 0.73% is set at the 95% confidence level.
The results of a search for charged Higgs bosons are presented. The analysis is based on 4.6fb\(^{−1}\) of proton-proton collision data at √s=7TeV collected by the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider, using top quark pair events with a τ lepton in the final state. The data are consistent with the expected background from Standard Model processes. Assuming that the branching ratio of the charged Higgs boson to a τ lepton and a neutrino is 100 %, this leads to upper limits on the branching ratio of top quark decays to a b quark and a charged Higgs boson between 5% and 1% for charged Higgs boson masses ranging from 90 GeV to 160 GeV, respectively. In the context of the m\(^{max}_h\) scenario of the MSSM, tan β above 12-26, as well as between 1 and 2-6, can be excluded for charged Higgs boson masses between 90 GeV and 150 GeV.
A search for new phenomena in final states with four or more leptons (electrons or muons) is presented. The analysis is based on 4.7 fb\(^{−1}\) of √s=7 TeV proton-proton collisions delivered by the Large Hadron Collider and recorded with the ATLAS detector. Observations are consistent with Standard Model expectations in two signal regions: one that requires moderate values of missing transverse momentum and another that requires large effective mass. The results are interpreted in a simplified model of R-parity-violating supersymmetry in which a 95% CL exclusion region is set for charged wino masses up to 540 GeV. In an R-parity-violating MSUGRA/CMSSM model, values of m 1/2 up to 820 GeV are excluded for 10 < tan β < 40.
A search for doubly charged Higgs bosons decaying to pairs of electrons and/or muons is presented. The search is performed using a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 4.7 fb\(^{−1}\) of pp collisions at √s = 7 TeV collected by the ATLAS detector at the LHC. Pairs of prompt, isolated, high-p\(_T\) leptons with the same electric charge (\(e^±e^±, e^±μ^±, μ^±μ^±\)) are selected, and their invariant mass distribution is searched for a narrow resonance. No significant excess over Standard Model background expectations is observed, and limits are placed on the cross section times branching ratio for pair production of doubly charged Higgs bosons. The masses of doubly charged Higgs bosons are constrained depending on the branching ratio into these leptonic final states. Assuming pair production, coupling to left-handed fermions, and a branching ratio of 100 % for each final state, masses below 409 GeV, 375 GeV, and 398 GeV are excluded for \(e^±e^±, e^±μ^±\), and \(μ^±μ^±\), respectively.
A search for resonant production of high-mass top-quark pairs is performed on 2.05 fb\(^{−1}\) of proton-proton collisions at √s=7 TeV collected in 2011 with the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider. This analysis of the lepton+jets final state is specifically designed for the particular topology that arises from the decay of highly boosted top quarks. The observed \(t\overline t\) invariant mass spectrum is found to be compatible with the Standard Model prediction and 95% credibility level upper limits are derived on the \(t\overline t\) production rate through new massive states. An upper limit of 0.7 pb is set on the production cross section times branching fraction of a narrow 1 TeV resonance. A Kaluza-Klein gluon with a mass smaller than 1.5 TeV is excluded.
A search is presented for the pair production of light scalar top quarks in √s=7 TeV proton–proton collisions recorded with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. This analysis uses the full data sample collected during 2011 running that corresponds to a total integrated luminosity of 4.7 fb\(^{−1}\). Light scalar top quarks are searched for in events with two opposite-sign leptons (e, μ), large missing transverse momentum and at least one jet in the final state. No excess over Standard Model expectations is found, and the results are interpreted under the assumption that the light scalar top decays to a b-quark in addition to an on-shell chargino whose decay occurs through a virtual W boson. If the chargino mass is 106 GeV, light scalar top-quark masses up to 130 GeV are excluded for neutralino masses below 70 GeV.
The ATLAS detector at the LHC is used to search for high-mass states, such as heavy charged gauge bosons (W′), decaying to a charged lepton (electron or muon) and a neutrino. Results are presented based on the analysis of pp collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 7 TeV corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 4.7 fb\(^{−1}\). No excess beyond Standard Model expectations is observed. A W′ with Sequential Standard Model couplings is excluded at the 95 % credibility level for masses up to 2.55 TeV. Excited chiral bosons (W∗) with equivalent coupling strength are excluded for masses up to 2.42 TeV.