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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Systematic studies of weak atomic transitions

Fleming, Janine January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
2

Study of the Renner effect in the linear XY2 molecule

Carlone, Cosmo January 1965 (has links)
A variational principle is applied to the Schroedinger equation for theXY₂ linear molecule. Trial solutions are synthesized from the nuclear eigenstates, which are assumed to be simple harmonic oscillator eigenstates, and from the unperturbed electronic states, whose azimuthal dependence is known because of the cylindrical symmetry of the field of the nuclei. The secular equation is discussed, and an expression for the Renner splitting of the π state is obtained. / Science, Faculty of / Physics and Astronomy, Department of / Graduate
3

The spectral properties and singularities of monodromy-free Schrödinger operators

Hemery, Adrian D. January 2012 (has links)
The main object of study is the theory of Schrödinger operators with meromorphic potentials, having trivial monodromy in the complex domain. In the first part we study the spectral properties of a class of such operators related to the classical Whittaker-Hill equation (-d^2/dx^2+Acos2x+Bcos4x)Ψ=λΨ. The equation, for special choices of A and B, is known to have the remarkable property that half of the gaps eventually become closed (semifinite-gap operator). Using the Darboux transformation we construct new trigonometric examples of semifinite-gap operators with real, smooth potentials. A similar technique applied to the Lamé operator gives smooth, real, finite-gap potentials in terms of classical Jacobi elliptic functions. In the second part we study the singular locus of monodromy-free potentials in the complex domain. A particular case is given by the zeros of Wronskians of Hermite polynomials, which are studied in detail. We introduce a class of partitions (doubled partitions) for which we observe a direct qualitative relationship between the pattern of zeros and the shape of the corresponding Young diagram. For the Wronskians W(H_n,H_{n+k}) we give an asymptotic formula for the curve on which zeros lie as n → ∞. We also give some empirical formulas for asymptotic behaviour of zeros of Wronskians of 3 and 4 Hermite polynomials. In the last chapter we apply the theory of monodromy-free operators to produce new vortex equilibria in the periodic case and in the presence of background flow.
4

On the behaviour of the solutions of certain Schredinger equations for vanishing potentials

Rome, Tovie Leon January 1961 (has links)
In studying the diamagnetism of free electrons in a uniform magnetic field it was found that reducing the field to zero in the wavefunction did not yield the experimentally indicated free particle plane wave wavefunction. However, solving the Schroedinger Equation resulting from setting the field equal to zero in the original equation did yield a plane wave wavefunction. This paradox was not found to be peculiar to the case of a charged particle in a uniform magnetic field but was found to occur in a number of other systems. In order to gain an understanding of this unexpected behavior, the following systems were analyzed: the one-dimensional square well potential; a charged, spinless particle in a Coulomb field and in a uniform electric field; a one-dimensional harmonic oscillator; and a charged, spinless particle in a uniform magnetic field. From these studies the following were obtained: conditions for determining the result of reducing the potential in a wavefunction; the condition under which the potential of a system may be switched off while maintaining the energy of the system constant; the relationship between the result of physically switching off a potential, the result of reducing it in the wavefunction, and the solution of the Schroedinger Equation obtained by decreasing the potential to zero in the original wave equation; and a general property of any wavefunction with respect to reducing any parameter within this wavefunction. / Science, Faculty of / Physics and Astronomy, Department of / Graduate
5

Studies in the Wigner-Poisson and Schroedinger-Poisson Systems

Toomire, Bruce V. 11 May 1998 (has links)
The need to model the quantum effects in semiconductor devices such as resonance tunneling diodes and quantum dots has lead to an intense study of the Wigner-Poisson (WP) and Schroedinger-Poisson (SP) systems. In this work we present the mathematical analysis of several related models for these systems. These include: a time-dependent model of dissipation in (SP), a quasi-linear (SP) system, a study of the stationary (WP)-(SP) problem with a discussion of the quantum analogue of classical BGK modes and a proof of existence of eigenfunctions for (SP) with periodic boundary conditions, and an examination of the stationary Wigner equations with inflow" boundary conditions. Finally, a proposed numerical scheme for the stationary (SP) system with Boltzmann distribution functions is shown along with its corresponding Bloch equation. / Ph. D.
6

Improved Spectral Calculations for Discrete Schroedinger Operators

Puelz, Charles 16 September 2013 (has links)
This work details an O(n^2) algorithm for computing the spectra of discrete Schroedinger operators with periodic potentials. Spectra of these objects enhance our understanding of fundamental aperiodic physical systems and contain rich theoretical structure of interest to the mathematical community. Previous work on the Harper model led to an O(n^2) algorithm relying on properties not satisfied by other aperiodic operators. Physicists working with the Fibonacci Hamiltonian, a popular quasicrystal model, have instead used a problematic dynamical map approach or a sluggish O(n^3) procedure for their calculations. The algorithm presented in this work, a blend of well-established eigenvalue/vector algorithms, provides researchers with a more robust computational tool of general utility. Application to the Fibonacci Hamiltonian in the sparsely studied intermediate coupling regime reveals structure in canonical coverings of the spectrum that will prove useful in motivating conjectures regarding band combinatorics and fractal dimensions.
7

Computational and analytical methods for the simulation of electronic states and transport in semiconductor systems

Barrett, Junior Augustus January 2014 (has links)
The work in this thesis is focussed on obtaining fast, e cient solutions to the Schroedinger-Poisson model of electron states in microelectronic devices. The self-consistent solution of the coupled system of Schroedinger-Poisson equations poses many challenges. In particular, the three-dimensional solution is computationally intensive resulting in long simulation time, prohibitive memory requirements and considerable computer resources such as parallel processing and multi-core machines. Consequently, an approximate analytical solution for the coupled system of Schroedinger-Poisson equations is investigated. Details of the analytical techniques for the approximate solution are developed and the original approach is outlined. By introducing the hyperbolic secant and tangent functions with complex arguments, the coupled system of equations is transformed into one for which an approximate solution is much simpler to obtain. The method solves Schroedinger's equation rst by approximating the electrostatic potential in Poisson's equation and subsequently uses this solution to solve Poisson's equation. The complete iterative solution for the coupled system is obtained through implementation into Matlab. The semi-analytical method is robust and is applicable to one, two and three dimensional device architectures. It has been validated against alternative methods and experimental results reported in the literature and it shows improved simulation times for the class of coupled partial di erential equations and devices for which it was developed.
8

Quantized Hydrodynamics

Coomer, Grant C. 08 1900 (has links)
The object of this paper is to derive Landau's theory of quantized hydrodynamics from the many-particle Schroedinger equation. Landau's results are obtained, together with an additional term in the Hamiltonian.
9

On the Role of Linear Processes in the Development and Evolution of Filaments in Air

Roskey, Daniel Eric January 2007 (has links)
It is well known that ultrashort, high intensity pulses with peak powers exceedinga certain critical value (Pcr) undergo self-focusingleading to collapse and filamentation. During the initial stagesof propagation at low intensities the beamdynamics are dominated by diffraction and dispersion. During filamentation, self-focusing resulting from the nonlinear Kerr effect is balanced by higher order nonlinearities such as plasma induced defocusing and absorption.This work examines the role that linear processes combined with initial spatial and temporal conditioningplay in the generation and subsequent evolution of filaments within nonlinearbeams. It is demonstrated that, because of linear diffraction, initial spatial beam shaping can have a dramatic effect on the filament pattern, the number of filaments and the energy contained in each filament. These ideas are applicable to cases that arequite common, such as circularly apodized beams, and help to explain interestingbehavior observed in these types of beams. Finally, it is demonstrated thatwith appropriate preconditioning of multiple subcritical pulses, linear effects can be employed to accurately control when and where filamentation occurs during long distance propagation through conditional collapse of overlapping pulses.
10

Effects of Nonlinearity and Disorder in Communication Systems

Shkarayev, Maxim January 2008 (has links)
In this dissertation we present theoretical and experimental investigation of the performance quality of fiber optical communication systems, and find new and inexpansive ways of increasing the rate of theinformation transmission.The first part of this work discuss the two major factors limiting the quality of information channels in the fiber optical communication systems. Using methods of large deviation theory from statisticalphysics, we carry out analytical and numerical study of error statistics in optical communication systems in the presence of the temporal noise from optical amplifiers and the structural disorder of optical fibers. In the slowly varying envelope approximation light propagation through optical fiber is described by Schr\{o}dinger's equation. Signal transmission is impeded by the additive (amplifiers) and multiplicative (birefringence) noise This results in signal distortion that may lead to erroneous interpretation of the signal. System performance is characterized by the probability of error occurrence. Fluctuation of spacial disorder due to changing external factors (temperature, vibrations, etc) leads to fluctuations of error rates. Commonly the distribution of error rates is assumed to be Gaussian. Using the optimal fluctuation method we show that this distribution is in fact lognormal. Sucha distribution has ""fat"" tails implying that the likelihood of system outages is much higher than itwould be in the Gaussian approximation. We present experimental results that provide excellent confirmation of our theoretical predictions.In the second part of this dissertation we present some published work on bisolitons in the dispersion managed systems. Modern communication systems use light pulses to transmit tremendous amounts of information. These systems can be modeled using variations of the Nonlinear Shrodinger Equation where chromatic dispersion and nonlinear effects in the glass fiber are taken into account. The best system performance to date is achieved using dispersion management. We will see how the dispersion management works and how it can be modeled. As you pack information more tightly the interaction between the pulsesbecomes increasingly important. In Fall 2005, experiments in Germany showed that bound pairs of pulses (bisolitons) could propagate significant distances. Through numerical investigation we found parametric bifurcation of bisolitonic solutions, and developed a new iterative method with polynomial correction for the calculation of these solutions. Using these solutions in the signal transmission could increase the transmission rates.

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