TY - JOUR A1 - Chen, Cong A1 - Müller, Bernd R. A1 - Prinz, Carsten A1 - Stroh, Julia A1 - Feldmann, Ines A1 - Bruno, Giovanni T1 - The correlation between porosity characteristics and the crystallographic texture in extruded stabilized aluminium titanate for diesel particulate filter applications JF - Journal of the European Ceramic Society N2 - Porous ceramic diesel particulate filters (DPFs) are extruded products that possess macroscopic anisotropic mechanical and thermal properties. This anisotropy is caused by both morphological features (mostly the orientation of porosity) and crystallographic texture. We systematically studied those two aspects in two aluminum titanate ceramic materials of different porosity using mercury porosimetry, gas adsorption, electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, and X-ray refraction radiography. We found that a lower porosity content implies a larger isotropy of both the crystal texture and the porosity orientation. We also found that, analogous to cordierite, crystallites do align with their axis of negative thermal expansion along the extrusion direction. However, unlike what found for cordierite, the aluminium titanate crystallite form is such that a more pronounced (0 0 2) texture along the extrusion direction implies porosity aligned perpendicular to it. KW - preferred orientation KW - X-ray refraction KW - pore orientation KW - crystal KW - structure KW - extrusion KW - microstructure-property relations Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jeurceramsoc.2019.11.076 SN - 0955-2219 SN - 1873-619X VL - 40 IS - 4 SP - 1592 EP - 1601 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Chen, Junchao A1 - Lange, Thomas A1 - Andjelkovic, Milos A1 - Simevski, Aleksandar A1 - Krstić, Miloš T1 - Prediction of solar particle events with SRAM-based soft error rate monitor and supervised machine learning JF - Microelectronics reliability N2 - This work introduces an embedded approach for the prediction of Solar Particle Events (SPEs) in space applications by combining the real-time Soft Error Rate (SER) measurement with SRAM-based detector and the offline trained machine learning model. The proposed approach is intended for the self-adaptive fault-tolerant multiprocessing systems employed in space applications. With respect to the state-of-the-art, our solution allows for predicting the SER 1 h in advance and fine-grained hourly tracking of SER variations during SPEs as well as under normal conditions. Therefore, the target system can activate the appropriate mechanisms for radiation hardening before the onset of high radiation levels. Based on the comparison of five different machine learning algorithms trained with the public space flux database, the preliminary results indicate that the best prediction accuracy is achieved with the recurrent neural network (RNN) with long short-term memory (LSTM). Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.microrel.2020.113799 SN - 0026-2714 VL - 114 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - GEN A1 - Cheng, Xin A1 - Zhang, Jie A1 - Kliem, Bernhard A1 - Török, Tibor A1 - Xing, Chen A1 - Zhou, Zhenjun A1 - Inhester, Bernd A1 - Ding, Mingde T1 - Initiation and early kinematic evolution of solar eruptions T2 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - We investigate the initiation and early evolution of 12 solar eruptions, including six active-region hot channel and six quiescent filament eruptions, which were well observed by the Solar Dynamics Observatory, as well as by the Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory for the latter. The sample includes one failed eruption and 11 coronal mass ejections, with velocities ranging from 493 to 2140 km s(-1). A detailed analysis of the eruption kinematics yields the following main results. (1) The early evolution of all events consists of a slow-rise phase followed by a main-acceleration phase, the height-time profiles of which differ markedly and can be best fit, respectively, by a linear and an exponential function. This indicates that different physical processes dominate in these phases, which is at variance with models that involve a single process. (2) The kinematic evolution of the eruptions tends to be synchronized with the flare light curve in both phases. The synchronization is often but not always close. A delayed onset of the impulsive flare phase is found in the majority of the filament eruptions (five out of six). This delay and its trend to be larger for slower eruptions favor ideal MHD instability models. (3) The average decay index at the onset heights of the main acceleration is close to the threshold of the torus instability for both groups of events (although, it is based on a tentative coronal field model for the hot channels), suggesting that this instability initiates and possibly drives the main acceleration. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1420 KW - solar coronal mass ejections KW - stellar coronal mass ejections KW - solar storm Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-519720 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Cheng, Xin A1 - Zhang, Jie A1 - Kliem, Bernhard A1 - Török, Tibor A1 - Xing, Chen A1 - Zhou, Zhenjun A1 - Inhester, Bernd A1 - Ding, Mingde T1 - Initiation and early kinematic evolution of solar eruptions JF - The Astrophysical Journal N2 - We investigate the initiation and early evolution of 12 solar eruptions, including six active-region hot channel and six quiescent filament eruptions, which were well observed by the Solar Dynamics Observatory, as well as by the Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory for the latter. The sample includes one failed eruption and 11 coronal mass ejections, with velocities ranging from 493 to 2140 km s(-1). A detailed analysis of the eruption kinematics yields the following main results. (1) The early evolution of all events consists of a slow-rise phase followed by a main-acceleration phase, the height-time profiles of which differ markedly and can be best fit, respectively, by a linear and an exponential function. This indicates that different physical processes dominate in these phases, which is at variance with models that involve a single process. (2) The kinematic evolution of the eruptions tends to be synchronized with the flare light curve in both phases. The synchronization is often but not always close. A delayed onset of the impulsive flare phase is found in the majority of the filament eruptions (five out of six). This delay and its trend to be larger for slower eruptions favor ideal MHD instability models. (3) The average decay index at the onset heights of the main acceleration is close to the threshold of the torus instability for both groups of events (although, it is based on a tentative coronal field model for the hot channels), suggesting that this instability initiates and possibly drives the main acceleration. KW - solar coronal mass ejections KW - stellar coronal mass ejections KW - solar storm Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab886a SN - 1055-6796 SN - 1476-3540 VL - 894 IS - 2 SP - 1 EP - 20 PB - Cambridge Scientific Publishers CY - Cambridge ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Chigarev, Vladimir A1 - Kazakov, Alexey A1 - Pikovsky, Arkady T1 - Kantorovich-Rubinstein-Wasserstein distance between overlapping attractor and repeller JF - Chaos : an interdisciplinary journal of nonlinear science N2 - We consider several examples of dynamical systems demonstrating overlapping attractor and repeller. These systems are constructed via introducing controllable dissipation to prototypic models with chaotic dynamics (Anosov cat map, Chirikov standard map, and incompressible three-dimensional flow of the ABC-type on a three-torus) and ergodic non-chaotic behavior (skew-shift map). We employ the Kantorovich-Rubinstein-Wasserstein distance to characterize the difference between the attractor and the repeller, in dependence on the dissipation level. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0007230 SN - 1054-1500 SN - 1089-7682 VL - 30 IS - 7 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Melville ER - TY - THES A1 - Christ, Simon T1 - Morphological transitions of vesicles exposed to nonuniform spatio-temporal conditions N2 - Giant unilamellar vesicles are an important tool in todays experimental efforts to understand the structure and behaviour of biological cells. Their simple structure allows the isolation of the physical elastic properties of the lipid membrane. A central physical property is the bending energy of the membrane, since the many different shapes of giant vesicles can be obtained by finding the minimum of the bending energy. In the spontaneous curvature model the bending energy is a function of the bending rigidity as well as the mean curvature and an additional parameter called the spontaneous curvature, which describes an internal preference of the lipid-bilayer to bend towards one side or the other. The spontaneous and mean curvature are local properties of the membrane. Additional constraints arise from the conservation of the membrane surface area and the enclosed volume, which are global properties. In this thesis the spontaneous curvature model is used to explain the experimental observation of a periodic shape oscillation of a giant unilamellar vesicle that was filled with a protein complex that periodically binds to and unbinds from the membrane. By assuming that the binding of the proteins to the membrane induces a change in the spontaneous curvature the experimentally observed shapes could successfully be explained. This involves the numerical solution of the differential equations as obtained from the minimization of the bending energy respecting the area and volume constraints, the so called shape equations. Vice versa this approach can be used to estimate the spontaneous curvature from experimentally measurable quantities. The second topic of this thesis is the analysis of concentration gradients in rigid conic membrane compartments. Gradients of an ideal gas due to gravity and gradients generated by the directed stochastic movement of molecular motors along a microtubulus were considered. It was possible to calculate the free energy and the bending energy analytically for the ideal gas. In the case of the non-equilibrium system with molecular motors, the characteristic length of the density profile, the jam-length, and its dependency on the opening angle of the conic compartment have been calculated in the mean-field limit. The mean field results agree qualitatively with stochastic particle simulations. N2 - Die Morphologie beschreibt die Struktur und Form von Organismen. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit werden insbesondere die verschiedenen Formen von einfachen Lipidmembranen untersucht, die geschlossene Formen in Lösung bilden, die Vesikel. Der Fokus liegt dabei auf Begebenheiten, in denen die es inhomogene Zustände innerhalb oder außerhalb des Vesikels gibt. Das betrifft zum einen die Erklärung der beobachteten Formen in einem Experiment, bei dem im Inneren des Vesikels Proteine plaziert wurden, die sich wiederkehrend an die innere Vesikelmembran heften und wieder ablösen. Dabei Verändert sich die Form des Vesikels von einer symmetrischen erdnussähnlichen Form zu einer asymmetrischen Form mit einem sehr dünnen Hals. Mittels eines theoretischem Modells, dass dem Anheften der Proteine eine Änderung in ihrer bevorzugten Krümmung zuweist, werden Formen berechnet, die den beobachteten Formen gleichen und nur durch das Variieren der bevorzugten Krümmung kann derselbe Formübergang erzielt werden. Außerdem wird die Biegeenergie von Vesikeln, die durch die äußere Umgebung in eine kegelförmige Form gezwungen werden, in Abhängigkeit des Öffnungswinkels des Kegels analytisch berechnet. Es wird weiterhin die freie Energie eines idealen Gases, das durch die Kräfte der Gravitation inhomogen verteilt ist, innerhalb solcher starren kegelförmigen Vesikeln analytisch berechnet. Ein weiteres System, das betrachtet wird, sind molekulare Motoren, die die Fähigkeit besitzen, sich entlang bestimmter Stränge, der Mikrotubuli, gerichtet fortzubewegen und wenn sie sich nicht an einem Mikrotubulus befinden, bewegen sie sich aufgrund der üblichen ungerichteten Kräfte, der Diffusion. Wenn nur ein Mikrotubulus und nur eine Art von Motoren vorhanden ist, entsteht dadurch eine Anhäufung von Teilchen auf der Seite in die die Motoren sich bewegen, ein Konzentrationsgradient. Es wird analytisch berechnet, wie sich dieser Konzentrationsgradient verschiebt, wenn sich der Öffnungswinkel des Kegels ändert und mit Ergebnissen aus Computersimulationen verglichen. T2 - Morphologische Übergänge von Vesikeln unter räumlich oder zeitlich inhomogenen Bedingunge KW - Formgleichungen von Vesikeln KW - Shape equations of vesicles KW - Molekulare Motoren KW - Molecular motors KW - Conic compartments KW - Kegelförmige Geometrien KW - Bending energy KW - Biegeenergie KW - Min-Proteine KW - Min-proteins Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-480788 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Ciemer, Catrin A1 - Rehm, Lars A1 - Kurths, Jürgen A1 - Donner, Reik Volker A1 - Winkelmann, Ricarda A1 - Boers, Niklas T1 - An early-warning indicator for Amazon droughts exclusively based on tropical Atlantic sea surface temperatures T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - Droughts in tropical South America have an imminent and severe impact on the Amazon rainforest and affect the livelihoods of millions of people. Extremely dry conditions in Amazonia have been previously linked to sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies in the adjacent tropical oceans. Although the sources and impacts of such droughts have been widely studied, establishing reliable multi-year lead statistical forecasts of their occurrence is still an ongoing challenge. Here, we further investigate the relationship between SST and rainfall anomalies using a complex network approach. We identify four ocean regions which exhibit the strongest overall SST correlations with central Amazon rainfall, including two particularly prominent regions in the northern and southern tropical Atlantic. Based on the time-dependent correlation between SST anomalies in these two regions alone, we establish a new early-warning method for droughts in the central Amazon basin and demonstrate its robustness in hindcasting past major drought events with lead-times up to 18 months. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1207 KW - complex networks KW - droughts KW - prediction KW - Amazon rainforest Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-525863 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ciemer, Catrin A1 - Rehm, Lars A1 - Kurths, Jürgen A1 - Donner, Reik Volker A1 - Winkelmann, Ricarda A1 - Boers, Niklas T1 - An early-warning indicator for Amazon droughts exclusively based on tropical Atlantic sea surface temperatures JF - Environmental Research Letters N2 - Droughts in tropical South America have an imminent and severe impact on the Amazon rainforest and affect the livelihoods of millions of people. Extremely dry conditions in Amazonia have been previously linked to sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies in the adjacent tropical oceans. Although the sources and impacts of such droughts have been widely studied, establishing reliable multi-year lead statistical forecasts of their occurrence is still an ongoing challenge. Here, we further investigate the relationship between SST and rainfall anomalies using a complex network approach. We identify four ocean regions which exhibit the strongest overall SST correlations with central Amazon rainfall, including two particularly prominent regions in the northern and southern tropical Atlantic. Based on the time-dependent correlation between SST anomalies in these two regions alone, we establish a new early-warning method for droughts in the central Amazon basin and demonstrate its robustness in hindcasting past major drought events with lead-times up to 18 months. KW - complex networks KW - droughts KW - prediction KW - Amazon rainforest Y1 - 2019 VL - 15 IS - 9 PB - IOP - Institute of Physics Publishing CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Crovetto, Andrea A1 - Hempel, Hannes A1 - Rusu, Marin A1 - Choubrac, Leo A1 - Kojda, Sandrino Danny A1 - Habicht, Klaus A1 - Unold, Thomas T1 - Water adsorption enhances electrical conductivity in transparent p-type CuI JF - ACS applied materials & interfaces N2 - CuI has been recently rediscovered as a p-type transparent conductor with a high figure of merit. Even though many metal iodides are hygroscopic, the effect of moisture on the electrical properties of CuI has not been clarified. In this work, we observe a 2-fold increase in the conductivity of CuI after exposure to ambient humidity for 5 h, followed by slight long-term degradation. Simultaneously, the work function of CuI decreases by almost 1 eV, which can explain the large spread in the previously reported work function values. The conductivity increase is partially reversible and is maximized at intermediate humidity levels. On the basis of the large intragrain mobility measured by THz spectroscopy, we suggest that hydration of grain boundaries may be beneficial for the overall hole mobility. KW - transparent conductors KW - CuI KW - copper iodide KW - conductivity KW - humidity KW - p-type KW - work function Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.0c11040 SN - 1944-8244 SN - 1944-8252 VL - 12 IS - 43 SP - 48741 EP - 48747 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington, DC ER - TY - THES A1 - Dahlke, Sandro T1 - Rapid climate changes in the arctic region of Svalbard T1 - Aktuelle Klimaänderungen in der Svalbard-Region BT - processes, implications and representativeness for the broader Arctic BT - Prozesse, Auswirkungen und Repräsentativität für die Arktis N2 - Over the last decades, the Arctic regions of the earth have warmed at a rate 2–3 times faster than the global average– a phenomenon called Arctic Amplification. A complex, non-linear interplay of physical processes and unique pecularities in the Arctic climate system is responsible for this, but the relative role of individual processes remains to be debated. This thesis focuses on the climate change and related processes on Svalbard, an archipelago in the North Atlantic sector of the Arctic, which is shown to be a "hotspot" for the amplified recent warming during winter. In this highly dynamical region, both oceanic and atmospheric large-scale transports of heat and moisture interfere with spatially inhomogenous surface conditions, and the corresponding energy exchange strongly shapes the atmospheric boundary layer. In the first part, Pan-Svalbard gradients in the surface air temperature (SAT) and sea ice extent (SIE) in the fjords are quantified and characterized. This analysis is based on observational data from meteorological stations, operational sea ice charts, and hydrographic observations from the adjacent ocean, which cover the 1980–2016 period. It is revealed that typical estimates of SIE during late winter range from 40–50% (80–90%) in the western (eastern) parts of Svalbard. However, strong SAT warming during winter of the order of 2–3K per decade dictates excessive ice loss, leaving fjords in the western parts essentially ice-free in recent winters. It is further demostrated that warm water currents on the west coast of Svalbard, as well as meridional winds contribute to regional differences in the SIE evolution. In particular, the proximity to warm water masses of the West Spitsbergen Current can explain 20–37% of SIE variability in fjords on west Svalbard, while meridional winds and associated ice drift may regionally explain 20–50% of SIE variability in the north and northeast. Strong SAT warming has overruled these impacts in recent years, though. In the next part of the analysis, the contribution of large-scale atmospheric circulation changes to the Svalbard temperature development over the last 20 years is investigated. A study employing kinematic air-back trajectories for Ny-Ålesund reveals a shift in the source regions of lower-troposheric air over time for both the winter and the summer season. In winter, air in the recent decade is more often of lower-latitude Atlantic origin, and less frequent of Arctic origin. This affects heat- and moisture advection towards Svalbard, potentially manipulating clouds and longwave downward radiation in that region. A closer investigation indicates that this shift during winter is associated with a strengthened Ural blocking high and Icelandic low, and contributes about 25% to the observed winter warming on Svalbard over the last 20 years. Conversely, circulation changes during summer include a strengthened Greenland blocking high which leads to more frequent cold air advection from the central Arctic towards Svalbard, and less frequent air mass origins in the lower latitudes of the North Atlantic. Hence, circulation changes during winter are shown to have an amplifying effect on the recent warming on Svalbard, while summer circulation changes tend to mask warming. An observational case study using upper air soundings from the AWIPEV research station in Ny-Ålesund during May–June 2017 underlines that such circulation changes during summer are associated with tropospheric anomalies in temperature, humidity and boundary layer height. In the last part of the analysis, the regional representativeness of the above described changes around Svalbard for the broader Arctic is investigated. Therefore, the terms in the diagnostic temperature equation in the Arctic-wide lower troposphere are examined for the Era-Interim atmospheric reanalysis product. Significant positive trends in diabatic heating rates, consistent with latent heat transfer to the atmosphere over regions of increasing ice melt, are found for all seasons over the Barents/Kara Seas, and in individual months in the vicinity of Svalbard. The above introduced warm (cold) advection trends during winter (summer) on Svalbard are successfully reproduced. Regarding winter, they are regionally confined to the Barents Sea and Fram Strait, between 70°–80°N, resembling a unique feature in the whole Arctic. Summer cold advection trends are confined to the area between eastern Greenland and Franz Josef Land, enclosing Svalbard. N2 - Die Arktis hast sich über die letzten Jahrzehnte etwa 2–3 mal so schnell erwärmt wie die globale Mitteltemperatur der Erde, wofür der Begriff Arktische Verstärkung geprägt wurde. Eine komplexe Kaskade nichtlinear miteinander interagierender Prozesse und lokaler Bedingungen ist für das Auftreten dieses Phänomens verantwortlich, jedoch bleibt ein wissenschaftlicher Konsens zur Quantifizierung einzelner beteiligter Prozesse noch aus. Diese Arbeit befasst sich mit den Klimaänderungen und assoziierten Prozessen in der Svalbard-Region, einem arktischen Archipel im Nordatlantik. Svalbard kann als Brennpunkt der arktischen Veränderungen bezeichnet werden, vor allem während des Winters. In dieser ausgesprochen dynamischen Region interagieren die Energieflüsse durch großskalige atmosphärische und ozeanische Wärme- und Feuchtetransporte mit der heteorogenen Oberfläche, die sich aus Eis-, Wasser-, oder Landflächen zusammensetzt. Die daraus resultierenden horizontalen und vertikalen Energieflüsse stehen in engem Zusammenhang mit der Beschaffenheit der atmosphärischen Grenzschicht. Im ersten Teil dieser Arbeit werden laterale Unterschiede in der Oberflächentemperatur (SAT), sowie der Meereisbedeckung (SIE) in den Fjorden und Sunden des Archipels quantifiziert und klassifiziert. Dies geschieht auf der Grundlage von meteorologischen Stationsmessdaten und operationellen Eisbedeckungskarten der Jahe 1980–2016. Es zeigt sich, dass prozentuale Eisbedeckungen im Osten des Studiengebietes typischerweise 80–90% im Winter erreichen, während diese Werte in Fjorden der Westküste mit 40–50% deutlich niedriger liegen. Allerdings bedingt eine starke, winterliche SAT Erwärmung von 2–3K pro Jahrzehnt signifikante SIE Abwärtstrends, sodass die Fjorde im Westen von Svalbard in den jüngeren Wintern üblicherweise eisfrei waren. Im Weiteren wird gezeigt dass die warmen Ozeanströmungen nahe der Westküste, sowie spezielle Windkonstellationen, einen signifikanten regionalen Einfluss auf die langzeitliche Entwicklung der Meereisbedeckung ausüben. So kann Variabilität in der Temperatur des Westspitzbergenstroms etwa 20–37% der zwischenjährlichen SIE Variabilität in den Fjorden der Westküste erklären. Die meridionale Atmosphärenströmung nordwestlich von Spitzbergen, die hochkorelliert mit Eisdrift ist, kann andererseits –regional abhängig– etwa 20–50% der SIE-Variablität in den nördlichen und nordöstlichen Fjorden erklären. Durch den starken temperaturbedingten Eisrückgang in der gesamten Region sind diese Einflüsse zuletzt jedoch stark abgeschwächt. Im Folgenden wird der Beitrag von Zirkulationsänderungen zur Temperaturentwicklung Svalbards während der letzten 20 Jahre untersucht. Die Analyse basiert auf den Quellregionen troposphärischer Luftmassen, die sich aus kinematischen FLEXTRA-Rückwärtstrajektorien ergeben. Für den Winter zeigt sich, dass sich diese zuletzt immer häufiger in sub-arktische Gebiete über dem Nordatlantik verlagert hatten, und seltener in der hohen Arktis lagen. Dies moduliert Warmluft-, und Feuchtetransporte in Richtung Spitzbergen, und beeinflusst potentiell Wolkencharakteristiken und assoziierte Strahlungsprozesse. Nähere Untersuchen zeigen dass ein zuletzt stärker ausgeprägtes Uralhoch und Islandtief dafür verantwortlich sind, und dass dies einen Beitrag von etwa 25% zur jüngsten Wintererwärmung auf Spitzbergen hat. Sommertrajektorien offenbaren eine gegensätzliche Entwicklung, mit häufigerer Anströmung aus der Zentralarktis, welche mit Kaltluftadvektion einhergeht, auf Kosten von seltenerer Anströmung aus dem Süden. Dies liegt in einem während der letzten 10 Jahre stark ausgeprägten Grönlandhoch begründet. Eine Fallstudie anhand von Radiosondendaten vom Frühsommer 2017 untermauert die Ergebnisse und zeigt darüber hinaus, dass derartige Zirkulationsänderungen mit ausgeprägten Anomalien von troposphärischen Temperaturen,Feuchtigkeit, und der Grenzschichthöhe in Ny-Ålesund einher geht. Interessanterweise tragen Zirkulationsänderungen im Winter also verstärkend zur Erwärmung auf Svalbard bei, während jene im Sommer einer stärkeren Erwärmung entgegenwirken. In einem letzten Analyseschritt wird die regionale Repräsentativität der Region für die weitere Arktis erörtert. Die Analyse von Era-Interim Reanalysedaten untermauert hierbei zunächst die advektiven Temperaturänderungen in Sommer und Winter in der Region um Svalbard. Der Trend zu verstärkt positiver winterlicher Temperaturadvektion ist einzigartig in der Arktis und beschränkt sich auf die Regionen zwischen Barentssee, Spitzbergen und der nördlichen Framstraße. Die sommerliche erhöhte Kaltluftadvektion findet sich in einem weiten Gebiet zwischen der Ostküste Grönlands und Franz-Josef-Land, welches Svalbard einschließt. Ein diabatischer Erwärmungstrend, der mit aufwärts gerichteten latenten Energieflüssen und Eisrückgang konsistent ist, findet sich in allen Jahreszeiten über der Barents/Karasee wieder, und erstreckt sich in einzelnen Monaten bis nach Svalbard. KW - arctic KW - climate KW - Svalbard KW - meteorology KW - climatology KW - atmosphere KW - Arktis KW - Klima KW - Svalbard KW - Meteorologie KW - Klimatologie KW - Atmosphäre Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-445542 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Eberhard, Julius A1 - Schaik, N. Loes M. B. A1 - Schibalski, Anett A1 - Gräff, Thomas T1 - Simulating future salinity dynamics in a coastal marshland under different climate scenarios JF - Vadose zone journal N2 - Salinization is a well-known problem in agricultural areas worldwide. In the last 20-30 yr, rising salinity in the upper, unconfined aquifer has been observed in the Freepsumer Meer, a grassland near the German North Sea coast. For investigating long-term development of salinity and water balance during 1961-2099, the one-dimensional Soil-Water-Atmosphere-Plant (SWAP) model was set up and calibrated for a soil column in the area. The model setup involves a deep aquifer as the source of salt through upward seepage. In the vertical salt transport equation, dispersion and advection are included. Six different regional outputs of statistical downscaling methods were used as climate scenarios. These comprise different rates of increasing surface temperature and different trends in seasonal rainfall. The simulation results exhibit opposing salinity trends for topsoil and deeper layers. Although projections of some scenarios entail decreasing salinities near the surface, most of them project a rise in subsoil salinity, with the strongest trends of up to +0.9 mg cm(-3) 100 yr(-1) at -65 cm. The results suggest that topsoil salinity trends in the study area are affected by the magnitude of winter rainfall trends, whereas high subsoil salinities correspond to low winter rainfall and high summer temperature. How these projected trends affect the vegetation and thereby future land use will depend on the future management of groundwater levels in the area. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/vzj2.20008 SN - 1539-1663 VL - 19 IS - 1 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Emanuel, Marc D. A1 - Cherstvy, Andrey G. A1 - Metzler, Ralf A1 - Gompper, Gerhard T1 - Buckling transitions and soft-phase invasion of two-component icosahedral shells JF - Physical review / publ. by The American Physical Society. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics N2 - What is the optimal distribution of two types of crystalline phases on the surface of icosahedral shells, such as of many viral capsids? We here investigate the distribution of a thin layer of soft material on a crystalline convex icosahedral shell. We demonstrate how the shapes of spherical viruses can be understood from the perspective of elasticity theory of thin two-component shells. We develop a theory of shape transformations of an icosahedral shell upon addition of a softer, but still crystalline, material onto its surface. We show how the soft component "invades" the regions with the highest elastic energy and stress imposed by the 12 topological defects on the surface. We explore the phase diagram as a function of the surface fraction of the soft material, the shell size, and the incommensurability of the elastic moduli of the rigid and soft phases. We find that, as expected, progressive filling of the rigid shell by the soft phase starts from the most deformed regions of the icosahedron. With a progressively increasing soft-phase coverage, the spherical segments of domes are filled first (12 vertices of the shell), then the cylindrical segments connecting the domes (30 edges) are invaded, and, ultimately, the 20 flat faces of the icosahedral shell tend to be occupied by the soft material. We present a detailed theoretical investigation of the first two stages of this invasion process and develop a model of morphological changes of the cone structure that permits noncircular cross sections. In conclusion, we discuss the biological relevance of some structures predicted from our calculations, in particular for the shape of viral capsids. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.102.062104 SN - 2470-0045 SN - 2470-0053 SN - 2470-0061 SN - 1538-4519 VL - 102 IS - 6 PB - Woodbury CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Erler, Alexander A1 - Riebe, Daniel A1 - Beitz, Toralf A1 - Löhmannsröben, Hans-Gerd A1 - Grothusheitkamp, Daniela A1 - Kunz, Thomas A1 - Methner, Frank-Jürgen T1 - Characterization of volatile metabolites formed by molds on barley by mass and ion mobility spectrometry JF - Journal of mass spectrometr N2 - The contamination of barley by molds on the field or in storage leads to the spoilage of grain and the production of mycotoxins, which causes major economic losses in malting facilities and breweries. Therefore, on-site detection of hidden fungus contaminations in grain storages based on the detection of volatile marker compounds is of high interest. In this work, the volatile metabolites of 10 different fungus species are identified by gas chromatography (GC) combined with two complementary mass spectrometric methods, namely, electron impact (EI) and chemical ionization at atmospheric pressure (APCI)-mass spectrometry (MS). The APCI source utilizes soft X-radiation, which enables the selective protonation of the volatile metabolites largely without side reactions. Nearly 80 volatile or semivolatile compounds from different substance classes, namely, alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, esters, substituted aromatic compounds, alkenes, terpenes, oxidized terpenes, sesquiterpenes, and oxidized sesquiterpenes, could be identified. The profiles of volatile and semivolatile metabolites of the different fungus species are characteristic of them and allow their safe differentiation. The application of the same GC parameters and APCI source allows a simple method transfer from MS to ion mobility spectrometry (IMS), which permits on-site analyses of grain stores. Characterization of IMS yields limits of detection very similar to those of APCI-MS. Accordingly, more than 90% of the volatile metabolites found by APCI-MS were also detected in IMS. In addition to different fungus genera, different species of one fungus genus could also be differentiated by GC-IMS. KW - APCI KW - fungus KW - gas chromatography KW - ion mobility spectrometry KW - mass KW - spectrometry KW - mold KW - soft X-ray Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/jms.4501 SN - 1076-5174 SN - 1096-9888 VL - 55 IS - 5 SP - 1 EP - 10 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Evsevleev, Sergei A1 - Paciornik, Sidnei A1 - Bruno, Giovanni T1 - Advanced deep learning-based 3D microstructural characterization of multiphase metal matrix composites JF - Advanced engineering materials N2 - The quantitative analysis of microstructural features is a key to understanding the micromechanical behavior of metal matrix composites (MMCs), which is a premise for their use in practice. Herein, a 3D microstructural characterization of a five-phase MMC is performed by synchrotron X-ray computed tomography (SXCT). A workflow for advanced deep learning-based segmentation of all individual phases in SXCT data is shown using a fully convolutional neural network with U-net architecture. High segmentation accuracy is achieved with a small amount of training data. This enables extracting unprecedently precise microstructural parameters (e.g., volume fractions and particle shapes) to be input, e.g., in micromechanical models. KW - computed tomography KW - convolutional neural networks KW - deep learning KW - metal KW - matrix composites KW - segmentations Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/adem.201901197 SN - 1438-1656 SN - 1527-2648 VL - 22 IS - 4 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fernandez, Amanda Diez A1 - Charchar, Patrick A1 - Cherstvy, Andrey G. A1 - Metzler, Ralf A1 - Finnis, Michael W. T1 - The diffusion of doxorubicin drug molecules in silica nanoslits is non-Gaussian, intermittent and anticorrelated JF - Physical chemistry, chemical physics N2 - In this study we investigate, using all-atom molecular-dynamics computer simulations, the in-plane diffusion of a doxorubicin drug molecule in a thin film of water confined between two silica surfaces. We find that the molecule diffuses along the channel in the manner of a Gaussian diffusion process, but with parameters that vary according to its varying transversal position. Our analysis identifies that four Gaussians, each describing particle motion in a given transversal region, are needed to adequately describe the data. Each of these processes by itself evolves with time at a rate slower than that associated with classical Brownian motion due to a predominance of anticorrelated displacements. Long adsorption events lead to ageing, a property observed when the diffusion is intermittently hindered for periods of time with an average duration which is theoretically infinite. This study presents a simple system in which many interesting features of anomalous diffusion can be explored. It exposes the complexity of diffusion in nanoconfinement and highlights the need to develop new understanding. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1039/d0cp03849k SN - 1463-9076 SN - 1463-9084 VL - 22 IS - 48 SP - 27955 EP - 27965 PB - Royal Society of Chemistry CY - Cambridge ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fernandez, Ricardo A1 - Bruno, Giovanni A1 - Garces, Gerardo A1 - Nieto-Luis, H. A1 - Gonzalez-Doncel, Gaspar T1 - Fractional brownian motion of dislocations during creep deformation of metals JF - Materials science & engineering. A, Structural materials N2 - The present work offers an explanation on how the long-range interaction of dislocations influences their movement, and therefore the strain, during creep of metals. It is proposed that collective motion of dislocations can be described as a fractional Brownian motion. This explains the noisy appearance of the creep strain signal as a function of time. Such signal is split into a deterministic and a stochastic part. These terms can be related to two kinds of dislocation motions: individual and collective, respectively. The description is consistent with the fractal nature of strain-induced dislocation structures predicated in previous works. Moreover, it encompasses the evolution of the strain rate during all stages of creep, including the tertiary one. Creep data from Al99.8% and Al3.85%Mg tested at different temperatures and stresses are used to validate the proposed ideas: it is found that different creep stages present different diffusion characters, and therefore different dislocation motion character. KW - Creep KW - Aluminum alloys KW - Dislocation motion KW - Diffusion KW - Fractal KW - structures Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.msea.2020.140013 SN - 0921-5093 SN - 1873-4936 VL - 796 PB - Elsevier CY - Lausanne ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fernandez, Ricardo A1 - Gonzalez-Doncel, Gaspar A1 - Garces, Gerardo A1 - Bruno, Giovanni T1 - Towards a comprehensive understanding of creep BT - microstructural dependence of the pre-exponential term in Al JF - Materials science & engineering. A, Structural materials: properties, microstructure and processing N2 - We show that the equation proposed by Takeuchi and Argon to explain the creep behavior of Al-Mg solid solution can be used to describe also the creep behavior of pure aluminum. In this frame, it is possible to avoid the use of the classic pre-exponential fitting parameter in the power law equation to predict the minimum creep strain rate. The effect of the fractal arrangement of dislocations, developed at the mesoscale, must be considered to fully explain the experimental data. These ideas allow improving the recently introduced SSTC model, fully describing the primary and secondary creep regimes of aluminum alloys without the need for fitting. Creep data from commercially pure A199.8% and Al-Mg alloys tested at different temperatures and stresses are used to validate the proposed ideas. KW - creep KW - Aluminum alloys KW - dislocations KW - fractal KW - stress exponent Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.msea.2020.139036 SN - 0921-5093 SN - 1873-4936 VL - 776 PB - Elsevier CY - Lausanne ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fulmer, Leah M. A1 - Gallagher, John S. A1 - Hamann, Wolf-Rainer A1 - Oskinova, Lidia M. A1 - Ramachandran, Varsha T1 - Testing massive star evolution, star-formation history, and feedback at low metallicity BT - photometric analysis of OB stars in the SMC Wing JF - Astronomy and astrophysics : an international weekly journal N2 - Context. The supergiant ionized shell SMC-SGS 1 (DEM 167), which is located in the outer Wing of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC), resembles structures that originate from an energetic star-formation event and later stimulate star formation as they expand into the ambient medium. However, stellar populations within and surrounding SMC-SGS 1 tell a different story. Aims. We present a photometric study of the stellar population encompassed by SMC-SGS 1 in order to trace the history of such a large structure and its potential influence on star formation within the low-density, low-metallicity environment of the SMC. Methods. For a stellar population that is physically associated with SMC-SGS 1, we combined near-ultraviolet (NUV) photometry from the Galaxy Evolution Explorer with archival optical (V-band) photometry from the ESO Danish 1.54 m Telescope. Given their colors and luminosities, we estimated stellar ages and masses by matching observed photometry to theoretical stellar isochrone models. Results. We find that the investigated region supports an active, extended star-formation event spanning similar to 25-40 Myr ago, as well as continued star formation into the present. Using a standard initial mass function, we infer a lower bound on the stellar mass from this period of similar to 3 x 10(4) M-circle dot, corresponding to a star-formation intensity of similar to 6 x 10(-3) M-circle dot kpc(-2) yr(-1). Conclusions. The spatial and temporal distributions of young stars encompassed by SMC-SGS 1 imply a slow, consistent progression of star formation over millions of years. Ongoing star formation, both along the edge and interior to SMC-SGS 1, suggests a combined stimulated and stochastic mode of star formation within the SMC Wing. We note that a slow expansion of the shell within this low-density environment may preserve molecular clouds within the volume of the shell, leaving them to form stars even after nearby stellar feedback expels local gas and dust. KW - galaxies KW - stellar content KW - stars KW - formation KW - individual KW - Small KW - Magellanic Cloud Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201834314 SN - 0004-6361 SN - 1432-0746 VL - 633 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fumani, F. Khastehdel A1 - Nemati, Somayyeh A1 - Mahdavifar, Saeed T1 - Quantum critical lines in the ground state phase diagram of spin-1/2 frustrated transverse-field ising chains JF - Annalen der Physik N2 - This paper focuses on the ground state phase diagram of a 1D spin-1/2 quantum Ising model with competing first and second nearest neighbour interactions known as the axial next nearest neighbour Ising model in the presence of a transverse magnetic field. Here, using quantum correlations, both numerically and analytically, some evidence is provided to clarify the identification of the ground state phase diagram. Local quantum correlations play a crucial role in detecting the critical lines either revealed or hidden by symmetry-breaking. A non-symmetry-breaking disorder transition line can be identified by the first derivative of both entanglement of formation and quantum discord between nearest neighbour spins. In addition, the quantum correlations between the second neighbour spins can also be used to reveal Kosterlitz-Thouless phase transition when their interaction strength grows and becomes closer to the first nearest neighbour one. The results obtained using the Jordan-Wigner transformation confirm the accuracy of the numerical case. KW - axial next nearest neighbour Ising chains KW - quantum correlations KW - quantum KW - phase transitions Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/andp.202000384 SN - 0003-3804 SN - 1521-3889 VL - 533 IS - 2 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Garbe, Julius A1 - Albrecht, Torsten A1 - Levermann, Anders A1 - Donges, Jonathan A1 - Winkelmann, Ricarda T1 - The hysteresis of the Antarctic Ice Sheet JF - Nature : the international weekly journal of science N2 - More than half of Earth's freshwater resources are held by the Antarctic Ice Sheet, which thus represents by far the largest potential source for global sea-level rise under future warming conditions(1). Its long-term stability determines the fate of our coastal cities and cultural heritage. Feedbacks between ice, atmosphere, ocean, and the solid Earth give rise to potential nonlinearities in its response to temperature changes. So far, we are lacking a comprehensive stability analysis of the Antarctic Ice Sheet for different amounts of global warming. Here we show that the Antarctic Ice Sheet exhibits a multitude of temperature thresholds beyond which ice loss is irreversible. Consistent with palaeodata(2)we find, using the Parallel Ice Sheet Model(3-5), that at global warming levels around 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, West Antarctica is committed to long-term partial collapse owing to the marine ice-sheet instability. Between 6 and 9 degrees of warming above pre-industrial levels, the loss of more than 70 per cent of the present-day ice volume is triggered, mainly caused by the surface elevation feedback. At more than 10 degrees of warming above pre-industrial levels, Antarctica is committed to become virtually ice-free. The ice sheet's temperature sensitivity is 1.3 metres of sea-level equivalent per degree of warming up to 2 degrees above pre-industrial levels, almost doubling to 2.4 metres per degree of warming between 2 and 6 degrees and increasing to about 10 metres per degree of warming between 6 and 9 degrees. Each of these thresholds gives rise to hysteresis behaviour: that is, the currently observed ice-sheet configuration is not regained even if temperatures are reversed to present-day levels. In particular, the West Antarctic Ice Sheet does not regrow to its modern extent until temperatures are at least one degree Celsius lower than pre-industrial levels. Our results show that if the Paris Agreement is not met, Antarctica's long-term sea-level contribution will dramatically increase and exceed that of all other sources.
Modelling shows that the Antarctic Ice Sheet exhibits multiple temperature thresholds beyond which ice loss would become irreversible, and once melted, the ice sheet can regain its previous mass only if the climate cools well below pre-industrial temperatures. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2727-5 SN - 0028-0836 SN - 1476-4687 VL - 585 IS - 7826 SP - 538 EP - 544 PB - Macmillan Publishers Limited CY - Berlin ER - TY - JOUR A1 - García-Benito, Inés A1 - Quarti, Claudio A1 - Queloz, Valentin I. E. A1 - Hofstetter, Yvonne J. A1 - Becker-Koch, David A1 - Caprioglio, Pietro A1 - Neher, Dieter A1 - Orlandi, Simonetta A1 - Cavazzini, Marco A1 - Pozzi, Gianluca A1 - Even, Jacky A1 - Nazeeruddin, Mohammad Khaja A1 - Vaynzof, Yana A1 - Grancini, Giulia T1 - Fluorination of organic spacer impacts on the structural and optical response of 2D perovskites JF - Frontiers in Chemistry N2 - Low-dimensional hybrid perovskites have triggered significant research interest due to their intrinsically tunable optoelectronic properties and technologically relevant material stability. In particular, the role of the organic spacer on the inherent structural and optical features in two-dimensional (2D) perovskites is paramount for material optimization. To obtain a deeper understanding of the relationship between spacers and the corresponding 2D perovskite film properties, we explore the influence of the partial substitution of hydrogen atoms by fluorine in an alkylammonium organic cation, resulting in (Lc)(2)PbI4 and (Lf)(2)PbI4 2D perovskites, respectively. Consequently, optical analysis reveals a clear 0.2 eV blue-shift in the excitonic position at room temperature. This result can be mainly attributed to a band gap opening, with negligible effects on the exciton binding energy. According to Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculations, the band gap increases due to a larger distortion of the structure that decreases the atomic overlap of the wavefunctions and correspondingly bandwidth of the valence and conduction bands. In addition, fluorination impacts the structural rigidity of the 2D perovskite, resulting in a stable structure at room temperature and the absence of phase transitions at a low temperature, in contrast to the widely reported polymorphism in some non-fluorinated materials that exhibit such a phase transition. This indicates that a small perturbation in the material structure can strongly influence the overall structural stability and related phase transition of 2D perovskites, making them more robust to any phase change. This work provides key information on how the fluorine content in organic spacer influence the structural distortion of 2D perovskites and their optical properties which possess remarkable importance for future optoelectronic applications, for instance in the field of light-emitting devices or sensors. KW - fluorinated organic spacer KW - 2D perovskites KW - phase transition KW - temperature dependence KW - excitonic materials Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2019.00946 SN - 2296-2646 VL - 7 SP - 1 EP - 11 PB - Frontiers Media CY - Lausanne ER - TY - GEN A1 - García-Benito, Inés A1 - Quarti, Claudio A1 - Queloz, Valentin I. E. A1 - Hofstetter, Yvonne J. A1 - Becker-Koch, David A1 - Caprioglio, Pietro A1 - Neher, Dieter A1 - Orlandi, Simonetta A1 - Cavazzini, Marco A1 - Pozzi, Gianluca A1 - Even, Jacky A1 - Nazeeruddin, Mohammad Khaja A1 - Vaynzof, Yana A1 - Grancini, Giulia T1 - Fluorination of organic spacer impacts on the structural and optical response of 2D perovskites T2 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - Low-dimensional hybrid perovskites have triggered significant research interest due to their intrinsically tunable optoelectronic properties and technologically relevant material stability. In particular, the role of the organic spacer on the inherent structural and optical features in two-dimensional (2D) perovskites is paramount for material optimization. To obtain a deeper understanding of the relationship between spacers and the corresponding 2D perovskite film properties, we explore the influence of the partial substitution of hydrogen atoms by fluorine in an alkylammonium organic cation, resulting in (Lc)(2)PbI4 and (Lf)(2)PbI4 2D perovskites, respectively. Consequently, optical analysis reveals a clear 0.2 eV blue-shift in the excitonic position at room temperature. This result can be mainly attributed to a band gap opening, with negligible effects on the exciton binding energy. According to Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculations, the band gap increases due to a larger distortion of the structure that decreases the atomic overlap of the wavefunctions and correspondingly bandwidth of the valence and conduction bands. In addition, fluorination impacts the structural rigidity of the 2D perovskite, resulting in a stable structure at room temperature and the absence of phase transitions at a low temperature, in contrast to the widely reported polymorphism in some non-fluorinated materials that exhibit such a phase transition. This indicates that a small perturbation in the material structure can strongly influence the overall structural stability and related phase transition of 2D perovskites, making them more robust to any phase change. This work provides key information on how the fluorine content in organic spacer influence the structural distortion of 2D perovskites and their optical properties which possess remarkable importance for future optoelectronic applications, for instance in the field of light-emitting devices or sensors. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1421 KW - fluorinated organic spacer KW - 2D perovskites KW - phase transition KW - temperature dependence KW - excitonic materials Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-512420 SN - 1866-8372 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Glanemann, Nicole A1 - Willner, Sven N. A1 - Levermann, Anders T1 - Paris Climate Agreement passes the cost-benefit test JF - Nature Communications N2 - The Paris Climate Agreement aims to keep temperature rise well below 2 degrees C. This implies mitigation costs as well as avoided climate damages. Here we show that independent of the normative assumptions of inequality aversion and time preferences, the agreement constitutes the economically optimal policy pathway for the century. To this end we consistently incorporate a damage-cost curve reproducing the observed relation between temperature and economic growth into the integrated assessment model DICE. We thus provide an intertemporally optimizing cost-benefit analysis of this century's climate problem. We account for uncertainties regarding the damage curve, climate sensitivity, socioeconomic future, and mitigation costs. The resulting optimal temperature is robust as can be understood from the generic temperature-dependence of the mitigation costs and the level of damages inferred from the observed temperature-growth relationship. Our results show that the politically motivated Paris Climate Agreement also represents the economically favourable pathway, if carried out properly. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-13961-1 SN - 2041-1723 VL - 11 IS - 1 PB - Nature Publishing Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gong, Chen Chris A1 - Tönjes, Ralf A1 - Pikovsky, Arkady T1 - Coupled Möbius maps as a tool to model Kuramoto phase synchronization JF - Physical review : E, Statistical, nonlinear and soft matter physics N2 - We propose Mobius maps as a tool to model synchronization phenomena in coupled phase oscillators. Not only does the map provide fast computation of phase synchronization, it also reflects the underlying group structure of the sinusoidally coupled continuous phase dynamics. We study map versions of various known continuous-time collective dynamics, such as the synchronization transition in the Kuramoto-Sakaguchi model of nonidentical oscillators, chimeras in two coupled populations of identical phase oscillators, and Kuramoto-Battogtokh chimeras on a ring, and demonstrate similarities and differences between the iterated map models and their known continuous-time counterparts. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.102.022206 SN - 2470-0045 SN - 2470-0053 SN - 1063-651X SN - 2470-0061 SN - 1550-2376 VL - 102 IS - 2 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gostkowska-Lekner, Natalia Katarzyna A1 - Wallacher, Dirk A1 - Grimm, Nico A1 - Habicht, Klaus A1 - Hofmann, Tommy T1 - A novel electrochemical anodization cell for the synthesis of mesoporous silicon JF - Review of scientific instruments : a monthly journal devoted to scientific instruments, apparatus, and techniques N2 - A novel design of an electrochemical anodization cell dedicated to the synthesis of mesoporous, single-crystalline silicon is presented. First and foremost, the design principle follows user safety since electrochemical etching of silicon requires highly hazardous electrolytes based on hydrofluoric (HF) acid. The novel cell design allows for safe electrolyte handling prior, during, and post-etching. A peristaltic pump with HF-resistant fluoroelastomer tubing transfers electrolytes between dedicated reservoirs and the anodization cell. Due to the flexibility of the cell operation, different processing conditions can be realized providing a large parameter range for the attainable sample thickness, its porosity, and the mean pore size. Rapid etching on the order of several minutes to synthesize micrometer-thick porous silicon epilayers on bulk silicon is possible as well as long-time etching with continuous, controlled electrolyte flow for several days to prepare up to 1000 mu m thick self-supporting porous silicon membranes. A highly adaptable, LabVIEW((TM))-based control software allows for user-defined etching profiles. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0008536 SN - 0034-6748 SN - 1089-7623 VL - 91 IS - 10 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Melville, NY ER - TY - GEN A1 - Granado, Felipe Le Vot A1 - Abad, Enrique A1 - Metzler, Ralf A1 - Yuste, Santos B. T1 - Continuous time random walk in a velocity field BT - role of domain growth, Galilei-invariant advection-diffusion, and kinetics of particle mixing T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - We consider the emerging dynamics of a separable continuous time random walk (CTRW) in the case when the random walker is biased by a velocity field in a uniformly growing domain. Concrete examples for such domains include growing biological cells or lipid vesicles, biofilms and tissues, but also macroscopic systems such as expanding aquifers during rainy periods, or the expanding Universe. The CTRW in this study can be subdiffusive, normal diffusive or superdiffusive, including the particular case of a Lévy flight. We first consider the case when the velocity field is absent. In the subdiffusive case, we reveal an interesting time dependence of the kurtosis of the particle probability density function. In particular, for a suitable parameter choice, we find that the propagator, which is fat tailed at short times, may cross over to a Gaussian-like propagator. We subsequently incorporate the effect of the velocity field and derive a bi-fractional diffusion-advection equation encoding the time evolution of the particle distribution. We apply this equation to study the mixing kinetics of two diffusing pulses, whose peaks move towards each other under the action of velocity fields acting in opposite directions. This deterministic motion of the peaks, together with the diffusive spreading of each pulse, tends to increase particle mixing, thereby counteracting the peak separation induced by the domain growth. As a result of this competition, different regimes of mixing arise. In the case of Lévy flights, apart from the non-mixing regime, one has two different mixing regimes in the long-time limit, depending on the exact parameter choice: in one of these regimes, mixing is mainly driven by diffusive spreading, while in the other mixing is controlled by the velocity fields acting on each pulse. Possible implications for encounter–controlled reactions in real systems are discussed. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1005 KW - diffusion KW - expanding medium KW - continuous time random walk Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-479997 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 1005 SP - 28 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Granado, Felipe Le Vot A1 - Abad, Enrique A1 - Metzler, Ralf A1 - Yuste, Santos B. T1 - Continuous time random walk in a velocity field BT - role of domain growth, Galilei-invariant advection-diffusion, and kinetics of particle mixing JF - New Journal of Physics N2 - We consider the emerging dynamics of a separable continuous time random walk (CTRW) in the case when the random walker is biased by a velocity field in a uniformly growing domain. Concrete examples for such domains include growing biological cells or lipid vesicles, biofilms and tissues, but also macroscopic systems such as expanding aquifers during rainy periods, or the expanding Universe. The CTRW in this study can be subdiffusive, normal diffusive or superdiffusive, including the particular case of a Lévy flight. We first consider the case when the velocity field is absent. In the subdiffusive case, we reveal an interesting time dependence of the kurtosis of the particle probability density function. In particular, for a suitable parameter choice, we find that the propagator, which is fat tailed at short times, may cross over to a Gaussian-like propagator. We subsequently incorporate the effect of the velocity field and derive a bi-fractional diffusion-advection equation encoding the time evolution of the particle distribution. We apply this equation to study the mixing kinetics of two diffusing pulses, whose peaks move towards each other under the action of velocity fields acting in opposite directions. This deterministic motion of the peaks, together with the diffusive spreading of each pulse, tends to increase particle mixing, thereby counteracting the peak separation induced by the domain growth. As a result of this competition, different regimes of mixing arise. In the case of Lévy flights, apart from the non-mixing regime, one has two different mixing regimes in the long-time limit, depending on the exact parameter choice: in one of these regimes, mixing is mainly driven by diffusive spreading, while in the other mixing is controlled by the velocity fields acting on each pulse. Possible implications for encounter–controlled reactions in real systems are discussed. KW - diffusion KW - expanding medium KW - continuous time random walk Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/ab9ae2 SN - 1367-2630 VL - 22 PB - Dt. Physikalische Ges. CY - Bad Honnef ER - TY - GEN A1 - Grebenkov, Denis S. A1 - Metzler, Ralf A1 - Oshanin, Gleb T1 - From single-particle stochastic kinetics to macroscopic reaction rates BT - fastest first-passage time of N random walkers T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - We consider the first-passage problem for N identical independent particles that are initially released uniformly in a finite domain Ω and then diffuse toward a reactive area Γ, which can be part of the outer boundary of Ω or a reaction centre in the interior of Ω. For both cases of perfect and partial reactions, we obtain the explicit formulas for the first two moments of the fastest first-passage time (fFPT), i.e., the time when the first out of the N particles reacts with Γ. Moreover, we investigate the full probability density of the fFPT. We discuss a significant role of the initial condition in the scaling of the average fFPT with the particle number N, namely, a much stronger dependence (1/N and 1/N² for partially and perfectly reactive targets, respectively), in contrast to the well known inverse-logarithmic behaviour found when all particles are released from the same fixed point. We combine analytic solutions with scaling arguments and stochastic simulations to rationalise our results, which open new perspectives for studying the relevance of multiple searchers in various situations of molecular reactions, in particular, in living cells. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1018 KW - diffusion KW - first-passage KW - fastest first-passage time of N walkers Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-484059 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 1018 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Grebenkov, Denis S. A1 - Metzler, Ralf A1 - Oshanin, Gleb T1 - From single-particle stochastic kinetics to macroscopic reaction rates BT - fastest first-passage time of N random walkers JF - New Journal of Physics N2 - We consider the first-passage problem for N identical independent particles that are initially released uniformly in a finite domain Ω and then diffuse toward a reactive area Γ, which can be part of the outer boundary of Ω or a reaction centre in the interior of Ω. For both cases of perfect and partial reactions, we obtain the explicit formulas for the first two moments of the fastest first-passage time (fFPT), i.e., the time when the first out of the N particles reacts with Γ. Moreover, we investigate the full probability density of the fFPT. We discuss a significant role of the initial condition in the scaling of the average fFPT with the particle number N, namely, a much stronger dependence (1/N and 1/N² for partially and perfectly reactive targets, respectively), in contrast to the well known inverse-logarithmic behaviour found when all particles are released from the same fixed point. We combine analytic solutions with scaling arguments and stochastic simulations to rationalise our results, which open new perspectives for studying the relevance of multiple searchers in various situations of molecular reactions, in particular, in living cells. KW - diffusion KW - first-passage KW - fastest first-passage time of N walkers Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/abb1de SN - 1367-2630 VL - 22 PB - Dt. Physikalische Ges. CY - Bad Honnef ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Grebenkov, Denis S. A1 - Sposini, Vittoria A1 - Metzler, Ralf A1 - Oshanin, Gleb A1 - Seno, Flavio T1 - Exact distributions of the maximum and range of random diffusivity processes JF - New Journal of Physics N2 - We study the extremal properties of a stochastic process xt defined by the Langevin equation ẋₜ =√2Dₜ ξₜ, in which ξt is a Gaussian white noise with zero mean and Dₜ is a stochastic‘diffusivity’, defined as a functional of independent Brownian motion Bₜ.We focus on threechoices for the random diffusivity Dₜ: cut-off Brownian motion, Dₜt ∼ Θ(Bₜ), where Θ(x) is the Heaviside step function; geometric Brownian motion, Dₜ ∼ exp(−Bₜ); and a superdiffusive process based on squared Brownian motion, Dₜ ∼ B²ₜ. For these cases we derive exact expressions for the probability density functions of the maximal positive displacement and of the range of the process xₜ on the time interval ₜ ∈ (0, T).We discuss the asymptotic behaviours of the associated probability density functions, compare these against the behaviour of the corresponding properties of standard Brownian motion with constant diffusivity (Dₜ = D0) and also analyse the typical behaviour of the probability density functions which is observed for a majority of realisations of the stochastic diffusivity process. KW - random diffusivity KW - extremal values KW - maximum and range KW - diffusion KW - Brownian motion Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/abd313 SN - 1367-2630 VL - 23 PB - Dt. Physikalische Ges. CY - Bad Honnef ER - TY - GEN A1 - Grebenkov, Denis S. A1 - Sposini, Vittoria A1 - Metzler, Ralf A1 - Oshanin, Gleb A1 - Seno, Flavio T1 - Exact distributions of the maximum and range of random diffusivity processes T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - We study the extremal properties of a stochastic process xt defined by the Langevin equation ẋₜ =√2Dₜ ξₜ, in which ξt is a Gaussian white noise with zero mean and Dₜ is a stochastic‘diffusivity’, defined as a functional of independent Brownian motion Bₜ.We focus on threechoices for the random diffusivity Dₜ: cut-off Brownian motion, Dₜt ∼ Θ(Bₜ), where Θ(x) is the Heaviside step function; geometric Brownian motion, Dₜ ∼ exp(−Bₜ); and a superdiffusive process based on squared Brownian motion, Dₜ ∼ B²ₜ. For these cases we derive exact expressions for the probability density functions of the maximal positive displacement and of the range of the process xₜ on the time interval ₜ ∈ (0, T).We discuss the asymptotic behaviours of the associated probability density functions, compare these against the behaviour of the corresponding properties of standard Brownian motion with constant diffusivity (Dₜ = D0) and also analyse the typical behaviour of the probability density functions which is observed for a majority of realisations of the stochastic diffusivity process. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1142 KW - random diffusivity KW - extremal values KW - maximum and range KW - diffusion KW - Brownian motion Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-503976 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 1142 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Großmann, Robert A1 - Aranson, Igor S. A1 - Peruani, Fernando T1 - A particle-field approach bridges phase separation and collective motion in active matter JF - Nature Communications N2 - Whereas self-propelled hard discs undergo motility-induced phase separation, self-propelled rods exhibit a variety of nonequilibrium phenomena, including clustering, collective motion, and spatio-temporal chaos. In this work, we present a theoretical framework representing active particles by continuum fields. This concept combines the simplicity of alignment-based models, enabling analytical studies, and realistic models that incorporate the shape of self-propelled objects explicitly. By varying particle shape from circular to ellipsoidal, we show how nonequilibrium stresses acting among self-propelled rods destabilize motility-induced phase separation and facilitate orientational ordering, thereby connecting the realms of scalar and vectorial active matter. Though the interaction potential is strictly apolar, both, polar and nematic order may emerge and even coexist. Accordingly, the symmetry of ordered states is a dynamical property in active matter. The presented framework may represent various systems including bacterial colonies, cytoskeletal extracts, or shaken granular media. Interacting self-propelled particles exhibit phase separation or collective motion depending on particle shape. A unified theory connecting these paradigms represents a major challenge in active matter, which the authors address here by modeling active particles as continuum fields. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-18978-5 SN - 2041-1723 VL - 11 IS - 1 PB - Nature Publishing Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gruner, David A1 - Barnes, Sydney A. T1 - Rotation periods for cool stars in the open cluster Ruprecht 147 (NGC 6774) Implications for gyrochronology JF - Astronomy and astrophysics : an international weekly journal N2 - Context: Gyrochronology allows the derivation of ages for cool main sequence stars based on their observed rotation periods and masses, or a suitable proxy thereof. It is increasingly well-explored for FGK stars, but requires further measurements for older ages and K - M-type stars. Aims: We study the 2.7 Gyr-old open cluster Ruprecht 147 to compare it with the previously-studied, but far more distant, NGC 6819 cluster, and especially to measure cooler stars than was previously possible there. Methods: We constructed an inclusive list of 102 cluster members from prior work, including Gaia DR2, and for which light curves were also obtained during Campaign 7 of the Kepler/K2 space mission. We placed them in the cluster color-magnitude diagram and checked the related information against appropriate isochrones. The light curves were then corrected for data systematics using Principal Component Analysis on all observed K2 C07 stars and subsequently subjected to periodicity analysis. Results: Periodic signals are found for 32 stars, 21 of which are considered to be both highly reliable and to represent single, or effectively single, Ru 147 stars. These stars cover the spectral types from late-F to mid-M stars, and they have periods ranging from 6 d - 33 d, allowing for a comparison of Ruprecht 147 to both other open clusters and to models of rotational spindown. The derived rotation periods connect reasonably to, overlap with, and extend to lower masses the known rotation period distribution of the 2.5 Gyr-old cluster NGC 6819. Conclusions: The data confirm that cool stars lie on a single surface in rotation period-mass-age space, and they simultaneously challenge its commonly assumed shape. The shape at the low mass region of the color-period diagram at the age of Ru 147 favors a recently-proposed model which requires a third mass-dependent timescale in addition to the two timescales required by a former model, suggesting that a third physical process is required to model rotating stars effectively. KW - stars: late-type KW - stars: low-mass KW - stars: rotation KW - stars: solar-type Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202038984 SN - 0004-6361 SN - 1432-0746 VL - 644 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - THES A1 - Grätz, Fabio M. T1 - Nonlinear diffusion in granular gases and dense planetary rings N2 - Small moonlets or moons embedded in dense planetary rings create S-shaped density modulations called propellers if their masses are smaller than a certain threshold, alternatively they create a circumferential gap in the disk if the embedded body’s mass exceeds this threshold (Spahn and Sremčević, 2000). The gravitational perturber scatters the ring particles, depletes the disk’s density, and, thus, clears a gap, whereas counteracting viscous diffusion of the ring material has the tendency to close the created gap, thereby forming a propeller. Propeller objects were predicted by Spahn and Sremčević (2000) and Sremčević et al. (2002) and were later discovered by the Cassini space probe (Tiscareno et al., 2006, Sremčević et al., 2007, Tiscareno et al., 2008, and Tiscareno et al., 2010). The ring moons Pan and Daphnis are massive enough to maintain the circumferential Encke and Keeler gaps in Saturn’s A ring and were detected by Showalter (1991) and Porco (2005) in Voyager and Cassini images, respectively. In this thesis, a nonlinear axisymmetric diffusion model is developed to describe radial density profiles of circumferential gaps in planetary rings created by embedded moons (Grätz et al., 2018). The model accounts for the gravitational scattering of the ring particles by the embedded moon and for the counteracting viscous diffusion of the ring matter back into the gap. With test particle simulations it is shown that the scattering of the ring particles passing the moon is larger for small impact parameters than estimated by Goldreich and Tremaine (1980). This is especially significant for the modeling of the Keeler gap. The model is applied to the Encke and Keeler gaps with the aim to estimate the shear viscosity of the ring in their vicinities. In addition, the model is used to analyze whether tiny icy moons whose dimensions lie below Cassini’s resolution capabilities would be able to cause the poorly understood gap structure of the C ring and the Cassini Division. One of the most intriguing facets of Saturn’s rings are the extremely sharp edges of the Encke and Keeler gaps: UVIS-scans of their gap edges show that the optical depth drops from order unity to zero over a range of far less than 100 m, a spatial scale comparable to the ring’s vertical extent. This occurs despite the fact that the range over which a moon transfers angular momentum onto the ring material is much larger. Borderies et al. (1982, 1989) have shown that this striking feature is likely related to the local reversal of the usually outward-directed viscous transport of angular momentum in strongly perturbed regions. We have revised the Borderies et al. (1989) model using a granular flow model to define the shear and bulk viscosities, ν and ζ, in order to incorporate the angular momentum flux reversal effect into the axisymmetric diffusion model for circumferential gaps presented in this thesis (Grätz et al., 2019). The sharp Encke and Keeler gap edges are modeled and conclusions regarding the shear and bulk viscosities of the ring are discussed. Finally, we explore the question of whether the radial density profile of the central and outer A ring, recently measured by Tiscareno and Harris (2018) in the highest resolution to date, and in particular, the sharp outer A ring edge can be modeled consistently from the balance of gravitational scattering by several outer moons and the mass and momentum transport. To this aim, the developed model is extended to account for the inward drifts caused by multiple discrete and overlapping resonances with multiple outer satellites and is then used to hydrodynamically simulate the normalized surface mass density profile of the A ring. This section of the thesis is based on studies by Tajeddine et al. (2017a) who recently discussed the common misconception that the 7:6 resonance with Janus alone maintains the outer A ring edge, showing that the combined effort of several resonances with several outer moons is required to confine the A ring as observed by the Cassini spacecraft. KW - celestial mechanics KW - diffusion KW - hydrodynamics KW - planets and satellites: rings KW - scattering Y1 - 2020 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gómez-Nava, Luis A1 - Grossmann, Robert A1 - Hintsche, Marius A1 - Beta, Carsten A1 - Peruani, Fernando T1 - A novel approach to chemotaxis BT - active particles guided by internal clocks JF - epl : a letters journal exploring the frontiers of physics N2 - Motivated by the observation of non-exponential run-time distributions of bacterial swimmers, we propose a minimal phenomenological model for taxis of active particles whose motion is controlled by an internal clock. The ticking of the clock depends on an external concentration field, e.g., a chemical substance. We demonstrate that these particles can detect concentration gradients and respond to them by moving up- or down-gradient depending on the clock design, albeit measurements of these fields are purely local in space and instantaneous in time. Altogether, our results open a new route in the study of directional navigation: we show that the use of a clock to control motility actions represents a generic and versatile toolbox to engineer behavioral responses to external cues, such as light, chemical, or temperature gradients. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1209/0295-5075/130/68002 SN - 0295-5075 SN - 1286-4854 VL - 130 IS - 6 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hajduk, Marcin A1 - Todt, Helge Tobias A1 - Hamann, Wolf-Rainer A1 - Borek, Karolina A1 - van Hoof, Peter A. M. A1 - Zijlstra, Albert A. T1 - The cooling-down central star of the planetary nebula SwSt 1 BT - a late thermal pulse in a massive post-AGB star? JF - Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society N2 - SwSt 1 (PN G001.5-06.7) is a bright and compact planetary nebula containing a late [WC]-type central star. Previous studies suggested that the nebular and stellar lines are slowly changing with time. We studied new and archival optical and ultraviolet spectra of the object. The [O III] 4959 and 5007 angstrom to H beta line flux ratios decreased between about 1976 and 1997/2015. The stellar spectrum also shows changes between these epochs. We modelled the stellar and nebular spectra observed at different epochs. The analyses indicate a drop of the stellar temperature from about 42 kK to 40.5 kK between 1976 and 1993. We do not detect significant changes between 1993 and 2015. The observations show that the star performed a loop in the H-R diagram. This is possible when a shell source is activated during its post-AGB evolution. We infer that a late thermal pulse (LTP) experienced by a massive post-AGB star can explain the evolution of the central star. Such a star does not expand significantly as the result of the LTP and does not became a born-again red giant. However, the released energy can remove the tiny H envelope of the star. KW - stars: AGB and post-AGB KW - stars: atmospheres KW - stars: evolution KW - planetary KW - nebulae: general KW - planetary nebulae: individual: SwSt1 Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/staa2274 SN - 0035-8711 SN - 1365-2966 VL - 498 IS - 1 SP - 1205 EP - 1220 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Henkel, Carsten T1 - Thermally excited quasiparticles in metals, dispersion forces, and the thermal anomaly JF - Modern physics letters : A, Particles and fields, gravitation, cosmology, nuclear physics N2 - We provide a brief review of the contribution of thermally excited carriers to dispersion forces. In a metal, these carriers generate charge and current fluctuations whose spectral frequencies are comparable to k(B)T/(h) over bar. They are very likely responsible for the "plasma vs. Drude" anomaly. KW - Dispersion force KW - quasi-particles Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1142/S021773232040009X SN - 0217-7323 SN - 1793-6632 VL - 35 IS - 3 PB - World Scientific CY - Singapore ER - TY - THES A1 - Hernandez Anguizola, Eloy Luis T1 - Numerical simulations in multimode fibres for astronomical spectroscopy N2 - The goal of this thesis was to thoroughly investigate the behavior of multimode fibres to aid the development of modern and forthcoming fibre-fed spectrograph systems. Based on the Eigenmode Expansion Method, a field propagation model was created that can emulate effects in fibres relevant for astronomical spectroscopy, such as modal noise, scrambling, and focal ratio degradation. These effects are of major concern for any fibre-coupled spectrograph used in astronomical research. Changes in the focal ratio, modal distribution of light or non-perfect scrambling limit the accuracy of measurements, e.g. the flux determination of the astronomical object, the sky-background subtraction and detection limit for faint galaxies, or the spectral line position accuracy used for the detection of extra-solar planets. Usually, fibres used for astronomical instrumentation are characterized empirically through tests. The results of this work allow to predict the fibre behaviour under various conditions using sophisticated software tools to simulate the waveguide behaviour and mode transport of fibres. The simulation environment works with two software interfaces. The first is the mode solver module FemSIM from Rsoft. It is used to calculate all the propagation modes and effective refractive indexes of a given system. The second interface consists of Python scripts which enable the simulation of the near- and far-field outputs of a given fibre. The characteristics of the input field can be manipulated to emulate real conditions. Focus variations, spatial translation, angular fluctuations, and disturbances through the mode coupling factor can also be simulated. To date, complete coherent propagation or complete incoherent propagation can be simulated. Partial coherence was not addressed in this work. Another limitation of the simulations is that they work exclusively for the monochromatic case and that the loss coefficient of the fibres is not considered. Nevertheless, the simulations were able to match the results of realistic measurements. To test the validity of the simulations, real fibre measurements were used for comparison. Two fibres with different cross-sections were characterized. The first fibre had a circular cross-section, and the second one had an octagonal cross-section. The utilized test-bench was originally developed for the prototype fibres of the 4MOST fibre feed characterization. It allowed for parallel laser beam measurements, light cone measurements, and scrambling measurements. Through the appropriate configuration, the acquisition of the near- and/or far-field was feasible. By means of modal noise analysis, it was possible to compare the near-field speckle patterns of simulations and measurements as a function of the input angle. The spatial frequencies that originate from the modal interference could be analyzed by using the power spectral density analysis. Measurements and simulations yielded similar results. Measurements with induced modal scrambling were compared to simulations using incoherent propagation and once again similar results were achieved. Through both measurements and simulations, the enlargement of the near-field distribution could be observed and analyzed. The simulations made it possible to explain incoherent intensity fluctuations that appear in real measurements due to the field distribution of the active propagation modes. By using the Voigt analysis in the far-field distribution, it was possible to separate the modal diffusion component in order to compare it with the simulations. Through an appropriate assessment, the modal diffusion component as a function of the input angle could be translated into angular divergence. The simulations gave the minimal angular divergence of the system. Through the mean of the difference between simulations and measurements, a figure of merit is given which can be used to characterize the angular divergence of real fibres using the simulations. Furthermore, it was possible to simulate light cone measurements. Due to the overall consistent results, it can be stated that the simulations represent a good tool to assist the fibre characterization process for fibre-fed spectrograph systems. This work was possible through the BMBF Grant 05A14BA1 which was part of the phase A study of the fibre system for MOSAIC, a multi-object spectrograph for the Extremely Large Telescope (ELT-MOS). N2 - Vorrangiges Ziel der Arbeit war eine ausführliche Untersuchung von Eigenschaften multimodaler Glasfasern mittels Simulationen und experimenteller Tests, welche die Charakterisierung fasergekoppelter astronomischer Spektrographen unterstützt. Die simulierten Effekte sind von großer Bedeutung für alle fasergekoppelten Spektrographen, die in der astronomischen Forschung verwendet werden. Jede Änderung des Öffnungsverhältnisses (durch Focal-Ratio-Degradation), der Modenanregung in der Glasfaser (modal noise) oder einer variablen Ausleuchtung (durch unzureichendes scrambling) schränkt die Genauigkeit der Messungen ein. Dies hat Auswirkungen auf die Intensitätsbestimmung des astronomischen Objekts, die Subtraktion des Himmelshintergrundes und damit die Detektion von lichtschwachen Galaxien, oder die spektrale Stabilität, die für den Nachweis von extra-solaren Planeten benötigt wird. Zwei Softwareprogramme wurden für die Simulationsumgebung verwendet. Zunächst wurde ein Modenrechner benötigt, um die ausbreitungsfähigen Moden des simulierten Systems zu berechenen. Dafür wurde das FemSIM-Modul von RSOFT eingesetzt. Anschließend wurden durch selbst geschriebene Python-Skripte die Nah- und Fernfelder am Faserausgang berechnet. Die Funktionen beinhalten die Berechnungen des Eingangsfeldes, der räumlichen Verschiebung, der Winkelabweichung des Eingangsfeldes, sowie der Störungseffekte durch Modenkopplung. Bisher konnte die Propagation der Felder kohärent oder inkohärent simuliert werden. Das umfangreiche Themenfeld der partiellen Kohärenz wurde in dieser Arbeit nicht behandelt. Außerdem sind die von der Wellenlänge abhängigen Verlustkoeffizienten nicht berücksichtig worden und die Simulationen beschränken sich auf den monochromatischen Fall. Dennoch war es möglich, eine gute Übereinstimmung von realen Messwerten und Simulationsergebnissen zu erlangen. Um die Gültigkeit der Simulationen zu überprüfen, wurden optische Fasern vermessen und die Ergebnisse zwischen Simulationen und Messungen verglichen. Hierfür wurden zwei Fasern mit unterschiedlichem Querschnitt verwendet: eine zirkulare Faser und eine oktagonale Faser. Der verwendete Prüfstand wurde für die Charakterisierung der 4MOST Faserprototypen entwickelt. Verschiedene Konfigurationen zur Charakterisierung optischer Fasern waren durch den Prüfstand möglich, z.B. die Aufnahmen von Nah- und Fernfeldern. Durch die Analyse des Modenrauschens war es möglich, die Abhängigkeit der Interferenzmuster als Funktion des Eingangswinkels zu vergleichen. Mittels der spektralen Leistungsdichte konnten die räumlichen Frequenzen der Interferenzmuster untersucht und eine gute Übereinstimmung zwischen Theorie und Experiment bestätigt werden. Messungen mit induzierter Durchmischung wurden mit Simulationen veglichen, die den inkohärenten Ausbreitungsfall benutzen. Die Vergrößerung des Nahfeldes auf Grund schnellerer Blendenzahlen wurde in Messungen und Simulationen beobachtet und nachgewiesen. Durch die Simulationen ist es gelungen, inkohärente Intensitätsuktuationen zu erklären. Mittels der Voigt Analyse der Fernfelder war es möglich, die modale Diffusionskomponente zwischen Messungen und Simulationen zu vergleichen. Durch eine geeignete Auswertung konnten die Diffusionskomponenten als Funktion des Eingangswinkels ermittelt werden und die Winkeldivergenz der Fernfelder berechnet werden. Das Minimum der Winkeldivergenz eines Systems konnte durch Simulationen berechnet werden. Als Leistungszahl wurde die Mittelung der Differenz zwischen der minimalen und der gemessenen Winkeldivergenz ermittelt. Obwohl die Simulationen durch einige Faktoren begrenzt sind, ist es gelungen, die Ergebnisse der Lichtkegel Messungen zu emulieren. Auf Grund der insgesamt guten Übereinstimmung zwischen Simulationen und Messungen ist es damit möglich, die Charakterisierung von fasergekoppelten Spektrographen im Vorfeld realistisch zu simulieren. Diese Arbeit wurde ermöglicht durch die BMBF-Förderung 05A14BA1 als Teil der Phase-A-Studie des Fasersystems für MOSAIC, einem Multi-Objekt-Spektrographen für das Extremly Large Telescope (ELTMOS) der europäischen Südsternwarte ESO. KW - Astronomical instrumentation KW - Fibre-fed spectroscopy KW - Multi-object spectroscopy KW - Multimode fibres KW - Modal expansion method Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-472363 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Holmes, Zoe A1 - Anders, Janet A1 - Mintert, Florian T1 - Enhanced energy transfer to an optomechanical piston from indistinguishable photons JF - Physical review letters N2 - Thought experiments involving gases and pistons, such as Maxwell's demon and Gibbs' mixing, are central to our understanding of thermodynamics. Here, we present a quantum thermodynamic thought experiment in which the energy transfer from two photonic gases to a piston membrane grows quadratically with the number of photons for indistinguishable gases, while it grows linearly for distinguishable gases. This signature of bosonic bunching may be observed in optomechanical experiments, highlighting the potential of these systems for the realization of thermodynamic thought experiments in the quantum realm. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.124.210601 SN - 0031-9007 SN - 1079-7114 VL - 124 IS - 21 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park, Md. ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Horton, Benjamin P. A1 - Khan, Nicole S. A1 - Cahill, Niamh A1 - Lee, Janice S. H. A1 - Shaw, Timothy A. A1 - Garner, Andra J. A1 - Kemp, Andrew C. A1 - Engelhart, Simon E. A1 - Rahmstorf, Stefan T1 - Estimating global mean sea-level rise and its uncertainties by 2100 and 2300 from an expert survey JF - npj Climate and Atmospheric Science N2 - Sea-level rise projections and knowledge of their uncertainties are vital to make informed mitigation and adaptation decisions. To elicit projections from members of the scientific community regarding future global mean sea-level (GMSL) rise, we repeated a survey originally conducted five years ago. Under Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) 2.6, 106 experts projected a likely (central 66% probability) GMSL rise of 0.30-0.65 m by 2100, and 0.54-2.15 m by 2300, relative to 1986-2005. Under RCP 8.5, the same experts projected a likely GMSL rise of 0.63-1.32 m by 2100, and 1.67-5.61 m by 2300. Expert projections for 2100 are similar to those from the original survey, although the projection for 2300 has extended tails and is higher than the original survey. Experts give a likelihood of 42% (original survey) and 45% (current survey) that under the high-emissions scenario GMSL rise will exceed the upper bound (0.98 m) of the likely range estimated by the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which is considered to have an exceedance likelihood of 17%. Responses to open-ended questions suggest that the increases in upper-end estimates and uncertainties arose from recent influential studies about the impact of marine ice cliff instability on the meltwater contribution to GMSL rise from the Antarctic Ice Sheet. KW - projections KW - Greenland KW - consequences KW - climate Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41612-020-0121-5 SN - 2397-3722 VL - 3 IS - 1 SP - 1 EP - 8 PB - Springer Nature CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Horton, Benjamin P. A1 - Khan, Nicole S. A1 - Cahill, Niamh A1 - Lee, Janice S. H. A1 - Shaw, Timothy A. A1 - Garner, Andra J. A1 - Kemp, Andrew C. A1 - Engelhart, Simon E. A1 - Rahmstorf, Stefan T1 - Estimating global mean sea-level rise and its uncertainties by 2100 and 2300 from an expert survey T2 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - Sea-level rise projections and knowledge of their uncertainties are vital to make informed mitigation and adaptation decisions. To elicit projections from members of the scientific community regarding future global mean sea-level (GMSL) rise, we repeated a survey originally conducted five years ago. Under Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) 2.6, 106 experts projected a likely (central 66% probability) GMSL rise of 0.30-0.65 m by 2100, and 0.54-2.15 m by 2300, relative to 1986-2005. Under RCP 8.5, the same experts projected a likely GMSL rise of 0.63-1.32 m by 2100, and 1.67-5.61 m by 2300. Expert projections for 2100 are similar to those from the original survey, although the projection for 2300 has extended tails and is higher than the original survey. Experts give a likelihood of 42% (original survey) and 45% (current survey) that under the high-emissions scenario GMSL rise will exceed the upper bound (0.98 m) of the likely range estimated by the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which is considered to have an exceedance likelihood of 17%. Responses to open-ended questions suggest that the increases in upper-end estimates and uncertainties arose from recent influential studies about the impact of marine ice cliff instability on the meltwater contribution to GMSL rise from the Antarctic Ice Sheet. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1437 KW - projections KW - Greenland KW - consequences KW - climate Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-516788 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hosseini, Seyed Mehrdad A1 - Tokmoldin, Nurlan A1 - Lee, Young Woong A1 - Zou, Yingping A1 - Woo, Han Young A1 - Neher, Dieter A1 - Shoaee, Safa T1 - Putting order into PM6:Y6 solar cells to reduce the langevin recombination in 400 nm thick junction JF - Solar RRL N2 - Increasing the active layer thickness without sacrificing the power conversion efficiency (PCE) is one of the great challenges faced by organic solar cells (OSCs) for commercialization. Recently, PM6:Y6 as an OSC based on a non-fullerene acceptor (NFA) has excited the community because of its PCE reaching as high as 15.9%; however, by increasing the thickness, the PCE drops due to the reduction of the fill factor (FF). This drop is attributed to change in mobility ratio with increasing thickness. Furthermore, this work demonstrates that by regulating the packing and the crystallinity of the donor and the acceptor, through volumetric content of chloronaphthalene (CN) as a solvent additive, one can improve the FF of a thick PM6:Y6 device (approximate to 400 nm) from 58% to 68% (PCE enhances from 12.2% to 14.4%). The data indicate that the origin of this enhancement is the reduction of the structural and energetic disorders in the thick device with 1.5% CN compared with 0.5% CN. This correlates with improved electron and hole mobilities and a 50% suppressed bimolecular recombination, such that the non-Langevin reduction factor is 180 times. This work reveals the role of disorder on the charge extraction and bimolecular recombination of NFA-based OSCs. KW - charge carrier extraction KW - energetic disorders KW - non-fullerene acceptors KW - non-Langevin reduction factors KW - thick junctions Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/solr.202000498 SN - 2367-198X VL - 4 IS - 11 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Jay, Raphael M. A1 - Eckert, Sebastian A1 - Mitzner, Rolf A1 - Fondell, Mattis A1 - Föhlisch, Alexander T1 - Quantitative evaluation of transient valence orbital occupations in a 3d transition metal complex as seen from the metal and ligand perspective JF - Chemical physics letters N2 - It is demonstrated for the case of photo-excited ferrocyanide how time-resolved soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy in transmission geometry at the ligand K-edge and metal L-3-edge provides quantitatively equivalent valence electronic structure information, where signatures of photo-oxidation are assessed locally at the metal as well as the ligand. This allows for a direct and independent quantification of the number of photo-oxidized molecules at two soft X-ray absorption edges highlighting the sensitivity of X-ray absorption spectroscopy to the valence orbital occupation of 3d transition metal complexes throughout the soft X-ray range. KW - iron cyanides KW - photochemistry KW - soft X-ray absorption Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cplett.2020.137681 SN - 0009-2614 SN - 1873-4448 VL - 754 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Jay, Raphael M. A1 - Vaz da Cruz, Vinicius A1 - Eckert, Sebastian A1 - Fondell, Mattis A1 - Mitzner, Rolf A1 - Föhlisch, Alexander T1 - Probing solute-solvent interactions of transition metal complexes using L-edge absorption spectroscopy JF - The journal of physical chemistry : B, Condensed matter, materials, surfaces, interfaces & biophysical chemistry N2 - In order to tailor solution-phase chemical reactions involving transition metal complexes, it is critical to understand how their valence electronic charge distributions are affected by the solution environment. Here, solute-solvent interactions of a solvatochromic mixed-ligand iron complex were investigated using X-ray absorption spectroscopy at the transition metal L-2,L-3-edge. Due to the selectivity of the corresponding core excitations to the iron 3d orbitals, the method grants direct access to the valence electronic structure around the iron center and its response to interactions with the solvent environment. A linear increase of the total L-2,L-3-edge absorption cross section as a function of the solvent Lewis acidity is revealed. The effect is caused by relative changes in different metal-ligand-bonding channels, which preserve local charge densities while increasing the density of unoccupied states around the iron center. These conclusions are corroborated by a combination of molecular dynamics and spectrum simulations based on time-dependent density functional theory. The simulations reproduce the spectral trends observed in the X-ray but also optical absorption experiments. Our results underscore the importance of solute-solvent interactions when aiming for an accurate description of the valence electronic structure of solvated transition metal complexes and demonstrate how L-2,L-3-edge absorption spectroscopy can aid in understanding the impact of the solution environment on intramolecular covalency and the electronic charge distribution. KW - basis-sets KW - charge-transfer KW - density KW - dynamics KW - electron localization KW - iron KW - solvation KW - spin-crossover KW - tranfer excited-state KW - x-ray-absorption Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.0c00638 SN - 1520-6106 SN - 1520-5207 VL - 124 IS - 27 SP - 5636 EP - 5645 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - THES A1 - Jay, Raphael Martin T1 - Principles of charge distribution and separation BT - the case of iron complexes probed by X-ray spectroscopy N2 - The electronic charge distributions of transition metal complexes fundamentally determine their chemical reactivity. Experimental access to the local valence electronic structure is therefore crucial in order to determine how frontier orbitals are delocalized between different atomic sites and electronic charge is spread throughout the transition metal complex. To that end, X-ray spectroscopies are employed in this thesis to study a series of solution-phase iron complexes with respect to the response of their local electronic charge distributions to different external influences. Using resonant inelastic X-ray scattering (RIXS) and X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) at the iron L-edge, changes in local charge densities are investigated at the iron center depending on different ligand cages as well as solvent environments. A varying degree of charge delocalization from the metal center onto the ligands is observed, which is governed by the capabilities of the ligands to accept charge density into their unoccupied orbitals. Specific solvents are furthermore shown to amplify this process. Solvent molecules of strong Lewis-acids withdraw charge from the ligand allowing in turn for more metal charge to be delocalized onto the ligand. The resulting local charge deficiencies at the metal center are, however, counteracted by competing electron-donation channels from the ligand towards the iron, which are additionally revealed. This is interpreted as a compensating effect which strives to maintain local charge densities at the iron center. This mechanism of charge density preservation is found to be of general nature. Using time-resolved RIXS and XAS at the iron L-edge, an analogous interplay of electron donation and back-donation channels is also revealed for the case of charge-transfer excited states. In such transient configurations, the electronic occupation of iron-centered frontier orbitals has been altered by an optical excitation. Changes in local charge densities that are expected to follow an increased or decreased population of iron-centered orbitals are, however, again counteracted. By scaling the degree of electron donation from the ligand onto the metal, local charge densities at the iron center can be efficiently maintained. Since charge-transfer excitations, however, often constitute the initial step in many electron transfer processes, these findings challenge common notions of charge-separation in transition metal dyes. KW - L-edge spectroscopy KW - charge-transfer excitations KW - transition metal complexes KW - electronic structure KW - photo-chemical pathways Y1 - 2020 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Jelken, Joachim A1 - Henkel, Carsten A1 - Santer, Svetlana T1 - Polarization controlled fine structure of diffraction spots from an optically induced grating JF - Applied physics letters N2 - We report on the remote control of the fine structure of a diffraction spot from optically induced dual gratings within a photosensitive polymer film. The material contains azobenzene in the polymer side chains and develops a surface relief under two-beam holographic irradiation. The diffraction of a polarized probe beam is sensitive to the orientation of the azobenzene groups forming a permanently stored birefringence grating within the film. We demonstrate that the fine structure of the probe diffraction spot switches from a Gaussian to a hollow or a hollow to a "Saturn"-like structure by a change in polarization. This makes it potentially useful in photonic devices because the beam shape can be easily inverted by an external stimulus. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5140067 SN - 0003-6951 SN - 1077-3118 VL - 116 IS - 5 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Melville ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Jelken, Joachim A1 - Henkel, Carsten A1 - Santer, Svetlana T1 - Formation of half-period surface relief gratings in azobenzene containing polymer films JF - Applied physics : B, Lasers and optics N2 - We study the peculiar response of photo-sensitive polymer films irradiated with a certain type of interference pattern where one interfering beam is S-polarized, while the second one is P-polarized. The polymer film, although in a glassy state, deforms following the local polarization distribution of the incident light, and a surface relief grating (SRG) appears whose period is half the optical one. All other types of interference patterns result in the matching of both periods. The topographical response is triggered by the alignment of photo-responsive azobenzene containing polymer side chains orthogonal to the local electrical field, resulting in a bulk birefringence grating (BBG). We investigate the process of dual grating formation (SRG and BBG) in a polymer film utilizing a dedicated set-up that combines probe beam diffraction and atomic force microscopy (AFM) measurements, and permits acquiring in situ and in real-time information about changes in local topography and birefringence. We find that the SRG maxima appear at the positions of linearly polarized light (tilted by 45 degrees relative to the grating vector), causing the formation of the half-period topography. This permits to inscribe symmetric and asymmetric topography gratings with sub-wavelength period, while changing only slightly the polarization of one of the interfering beams. We demonstrate an easy generation of sawtooth profiles (blazed gratings) with adjustable shape. With these results, we have taken a significant step in understanding the photo-induced deformation of azo-polymer films. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00340-020-07500-w SN - 0946-2171 SN - 1432-0649 VL - 126 IS - 9 PB - Springer CY - Heidelberg ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Jiang, Wei A1 - Tao, Chen A1 - Stolterfoht, Martin A1 - Jin, Hui A1 - Stephen, Meera A1 - Lin, Qianqian A1 - Nagiri, Ravi C. R. A1 - Burn, Paul L. A1 - Gentle, Ian R. T1 - Hole-transporting materials for low donor content organic solar cells BT - charge transport and device performance JF - Organic electronics : physics, materials and applications N2 - Low donor content solar cells are an intriguing class of photovoltaic device about which there is still considerable discussion with respect to their mode of operation. We have synthesized a series of triphenylamine-based materials for use in low donor content devices with the electron accepting [6,6]-phenyl-C71-butyric acid methyl ester (PC(7)0BM). The triphenylamine-based materials absorb light in the near UV enabling the PC(7)0BM to be be the main light absorbing organic semiconducting material in the solar cell. It was found that the devices did not operate as classical Schottky junctions but rather photocurrent was generated by hole transfer from the photo-excited PC(7)0BM to the triphenylamine-based donors. We found that replacing the methoxy surface groups with methyl groups on the donor material led to a decrease in hole mobility for the neat films, which was due to the methyl substituted materials having the propensity to aggregate. The thermodynamic drive to aggregate was advantageous for the performance of the low donor content (6 wt%) films. It was found that the 6 wt% donor devices generally gave higher performance than devices containing 50 wt% of the donor. KW - photoexcited hole transfer KW - photocurrent generation KW - synthesis KW - hole KW - mobility KW - low donor content KW - Schottky junction Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.orgel.2019.105480 SN - 1566-1199 SN - 1878-5530 VL - 76 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Keles, Engin A1 - Kitzmann, Daniel A1 - Mallonn, Matthias A1 - Alexoudi, Xanthippi A1 - Fossati, Luca A1 - Pino, Lorenzo A1 - Seidel, Julia Victoria A1 - Caroll, Thorsten A. A1 - Steffen, M. A1 - Ilyin, Ilya A1 - Poppenhäger, Katja A1 - Strassmeier, Klaus G. A1 - von Essen, Carolina A1 - Nascimbeni, Valerio A1 - Turner, Jake D. T1 - Probing the atmosphere of HD189733b with the Na i and K i lines JF - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society N2 - High spectral resolution transmission spectroscopy is a powerful tool to characterize exoplanet atmospheres. Especially for hot Jupiters, this technique is highly relevant, due to their high-altitude absorption, e.g. from resonant sodium (Na i) and potassium (K i) lines. We resolve the atmospheric K i absorption on HD189733b with the aim to compare the resolved K i line and previously obtained high-resolution Na i-D line observations with synthetic transmission spectra. The line profiles suggest atmospheric processes leading to a line broadening of the order of ∼10 km/s for the Na i-D lines and only a few km/s for the K i line. The investigation hints that either the atmosphere of HD189733b lacks a significant amount of K i or the alkali lines probe different atmospheric regions with different temperature, which could explain the differences we see in the resolved absorption lines. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/staa2435 VL - 498 IS - 1 SP - 1033 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kirchartz, Thomas A1 - Márquez, José A. A1 - Stolterfoht, Martin A1 - Unold, Thomas T1 - Photoluminescence-based characterization of halide perovskites for photovoltaics JF - Advanced Energy Materials N2 - Photoluminescence spectroscopy is a widely applied characterization technique for semiconductor materials in general and halide perovskite solar cell materials in particular. It can give direct information on the recombination kinetics and processes as well as the internal electrochemical potential of free charge carriers in single semiconductor layers, layer stacks with transport layers, and complete solar cells. The correct evaluation and interpretation of photoluminescence requires the consideration of proper excitation conditions, calibration and application of the appropriate approximations to the rather complex theory, which includes radiative recombination, non-radiative recombination, interface recombination, charge transfer, and photon recycling. In this article, an overview is given of the theory and application to specific halide perovskite compositions, illustrating the variables that should be considered when applying photoluminescence analysis in these materials. KW - metal halide perovskites KW - numerical simulations KW - photoluminescence KW - photon recycling Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/aenm.201904134 SN - 1614-6832 SN - 1614-6840 VL - 10 IS - 26 SP - 1 EP - 21 PB - Wiley CY - Weinheim ER - TY - GEN A1 - Kirchartz, Thomas A1 - Márquez, José A. A1 - Stolterfoht, Martin A1 - Unold, Thomas T1 - Photoluminescence-based characterization of halide perovskites for photovoltaics T2 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - Photoluminescence spectroscopy is a widely applied characterization technique for semiconductor materials in general and halide perovskite solar cell materials in particular. It can give direct information on the recombination kinetics and processes as well as the internal electrochemical potential of free charge carriers in single semiconductor layers, layer stacks with transport layers, and complete solar cells. The correct evaluation and interpretation of photoluminescence requires the consideration of proper excitation conditions, calibration and application of the appropriate approximations to the rather complex theory, which includes radiative recombination, non-radiative recombination, interface recombination, charge transfer, and photon recycling. In this article, an overview is given of the theory and application to specific halide perovskite compositions, illustrating the variables that should be considered when applying photoluminescence analysis in these materials. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1419 KW - metal halide perovskites KW - numerical simulations KW - photoluminescence KW - photon recycling Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-519702 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 26 ER - TY - THES A1 - Knigge, Xenia T1 - Einzelmolekül-Manipulation mittels Nano-Elektroden und Dielektrophorese T1 - Single molecule manipulation using nano-electrodes and dielectrophoresis N2 - In dieser Arbeit wurden Nano-Elektroden-Arrays zur Einzel-Objekt-Immobilisierung mittels Dielektrophorese verwendet. Hierbei wurden fluoreszenzmarkierte Nano-Sphären als Modellsystem untersucht und die gewonnenen Ergebnisse auf biologische Proben übertragen. Die Untersuchungen in Kombination mit verschiedenen Elektrodenlayouts führten zu einer deterministischen Vereinzelung der Nano-Sphären ab einem festen Größenverhältnis zwischen Nano-Sphäre und Durchmesser der Elektrodenspitzen. An den Proteinen BSA und R-PE konnte eine dielektrophoretische Immobilisierung ebenfalls demonstriert und R-PE Moleküle zur Vereinzelung gebracht werden. Hierfür war neben einem optimierten Elektrodenlayout, das durch Feldsimulationen den Feldgradienten betreffend gesucht wurde, eine Optimierung der Feldparameter, insbesondere von Spannung und Frequenz, erforderlich. Neben der Dielektrophorese erfolgten auch Beobachtungen anderer Effekte des elektrischen Feldes, wie z.B. Elektrolyse an Nano-Elektroden und Strömungen über dem Elektroden-Array, hervorgerufen durch Joulesche Wärme und AC-elektroosmotischen Fluss. Zudem konnte Dielektrophorese an Silberpartikeln beobachtet werden und mittels Fluoreszenz-, Atom-Kraft-, Raster-Elektronen-Mikroskopie und energiedispersiver Röntgenspektroskopie untersucht werden. Schließlich wurden die verwendeten Objektive und Kameras auf ihre Lichtempfindlichkeit hin analysiert, so dass die Vereinzelung von Biomolekülen an Nano-Elektroden nachweisbar war. Festzuhalten bleibt also, dass die Vereinzelung von Nano-Objekten und Biomolekülen an Nano-Elektroden-Arrays gelungen ist. Durch den parallelen Ansatz erlaubt dies, Aussagen über das Verhalten von Einzelmolekülen mit guter Statistik zu treffen. N2 - In this work, nanoelectrode arrays were used for single object immobilization by dielectrophoresis. Fluorescently labeled nanospheres were used as a model system and the results were transferred to biological samples. The experiments in combination with different electrode layouts led to a deterministic singling of the nanospheres for a fixed size ratio between nanosphere and tipdiameter. Dielectrophoretic immobilization could also be demonstrated for the proteins BSA and R-PE, while R-PE molecules were even immobilized as single objects. For this purpose, in addition to an optimized electrode layout, which was searched by numerical field calculations, an optimization of the field parameters was required, in particular of voltage and frequency. Besides dielectrophoresis, observations of other effects were made, e.g. electrolysis at nanoelectrodes and fluid flows caused by Joule heating and AC-electroosmotic flow. In addition, dielectrophoresis was observed on silver nanoparticles, which was examined by fluorescence-, atomic force-, scanning electron microscopy and energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. Finally, the objectives and cameras were analyzed for their photosensitivity so that the singling of biomolecules on nanoelectrodes became detectable. The successful singling of nanoobjects and biomolecules on nanoelectrodes has been shown in a parallel approach so that it is possible to make statements about the behavior of single molecules with good statistics. KW - Dielektrophorese KW - Einzelmolekül-Biosensor KW - parallele Immobilisierung von Biomolekülen KW - R-PE KW - Polystyrol Nano-Sphären KW - Nano-Elektroden KW - 3D-Feldsimulationen KW - Einzel-Objekt-Nachweis KW - Fluoreszenz-Mikroskopie KW - REM KW - dielectrophoresis KW - single-molecule biosensor KW - parallel immobilization of biomolecules KW - R-PE KW - polystyrene nano-spheres KW - nano-electrodes KW - 3D field calculations KW - single-object detection KW - fluorescence microscopy KW - SEM Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-443137 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kontro, Inkeri A1 - Buschhüter, David T1 - Validity of Colorado Learning Attitudes about Science Survey for a high-achieving, Finnish population JF - Physical review. Physics education research N2 - The Colorado Learning Attitudes about Science Survey (CLASS) is an instrument which is widely used in physics education to characterize students' attitudes toward physics and learning physics and compare them with those of experts. While CLASS has been extensively validated for use in the context of higher education institutions in the United States, there has been less information about its use with European students. We have studied the structural, content, and substantive aspects of validity of CLASS by first doing a confirmatory factor analysis of N = 642 sets of student answers from the University of Helsinki, Finland. The students represented a culturally and demographically different subset of university physics students than in previous studies. The confirmatory factor analysis used a 3-factor, 15-item factor structure as a starting point and the resulting factor structure was similar to the original. Just minor modifications were needed for fit parameters to be in the acceptable range. We explored the differences by student interviews and consultation of experts. With the exception of one item, they supported the new 14-item, 3-factor structure. The results show that the interpretations made from CLASS results are mostly transferable, and CLASS remains a useful instrument for a wide variety of populations. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.16.020104 SN - 2469-9896 VL - 16 IS - 2 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park, MD ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kosztolowicz, Tadeusz A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - Diffusion of antibiotics through a biofilm in the presence of diffusion and absorption barriers JF - Physical review : E, Statistical, nonlinear and soft matter physics N2 - We propose a model of antibiotic diffusion through a bacterial biofilm when diffusion and/or absorption barriers develop in the biofilm. The idea of this model is: We deduce details of the diffusion process in a medium in which direct experimental study is difficult, based on probing diffusion in external regions. Since a biofilm has a gel-like consistency, we suppose that subdiffusion of particles in the biofilm may occur. To describe this process we use a fractional subdiffusion-absorption equation with an adjustable anomalous diffusion exponent. The boundary conditions at the boundaries of the biofilm are derived by means of a particle random walk model on a discrete lattice leading to an expression involving a fractional time derivative. We show that the temporal evolution of the total amount of substance that has diffused through the biofilm explicitly depends on whether there is antibiotic absorption in the biofilm. This fact is used to experimentally check for antibiotic absorption in the biofilm and if subdiffusion and absorption parameters of the biofilm change over time. We propose a four-stage model of antibiotic diffusion in biofilm based on the following physical characteristics: whether there is absorption of the antibiotic in the biofilm and whether all biofilm parameters remain unchanged over time. The biological interpretation of the stages, in particular their relation with the bacterial defense mechanisms, is discussed. Theoretical results are compared with empirical results of ciprofloxacin diffusion through Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilm, and ciprofloxacin and gentamicin diffusion through Proteus mirabilis biofilm. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.102.032408 SN - 2470-0045 SN - 2470-0053 VL - 102 IS - 3 PB - American Physical Society CY - Melville, NY ER - TY - THES A1 - Krivenkov, Maxim T1 - Spin textures and electron scattering in nanopatterned monolayer graphene N2 - The current thesis is focused on the properties of graphene supported by metallic substrates and specifically on the behaviour of electrons in such systems. Methods of scanning tunneling microscopy, electron diffraction and photoemission spectroscopy were applied to study the structural and electronic properties of graphene. The purpose of the first part of this work is to introduce the most relevant aspects of graphene physics and the methodical background of experimental techniques used in the current thesis. The scientific part of this work starts with the extensive study by means of scanning tunneling microscopy of the nanostructures that appear in Au intercalated graphene on Ni(111). This study was aimed to explore the possible structural explanations of the Rashba-type spin splitting of ~100 meV experimentally observed in this system — much larger than predicted by theory. It was demonstrated that gold can be intercalated under graphene not only as a dense monolayer, but also in the form of well-periodic arrays of nanoclusters, a structure previously not reported. Such nanocluster arrays are able to decouple graphene from the strongly interacting Ni substrate and render it quasi-free-standing, as demonstrated by our DFT study. At the same time calculations confirm strong enhancement of the proximity-induced SOI in graphene supported by such nanoclusters in comparison to monolayer gold. This effect, attributed to the reduced graphene-Au distance in the case of clusters, provides a large Rashba-type spin splitting of ~60 meV. The obtained results not only provide a possible mechanism of SOI enhancement in this particular system, but they can be also generalized for graphene on other strongly interacting substrates intercalated by nanostructures of heavy noble d metals. Even more intriguing is the proximity of graphene to heavy sp-metals that were predicted to induce an intrinsic SOI and realize a spin Hall effect in graphene. Bismuth is the heaviest stable sp-metal and its compounds demonstrate a plethora of exciting physical phenomena. This was the motivation behind the next part of the current thesis, where structural and electronic properties of a previously unreported phase of Bi-intercalated graphene on Ir(111) were studied by means of scanning tunneling microscopy, spin- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and electron diffraction. Photoemission experiments revealed a remarkable, nearly ideal graphene band structure with strongly suppressed signatures of interaction between graphene and the Ir(111) substrate, moreover, the characteristic moiré pattern observed in graphene on Ir(111) by electron diffraction and scanning tunneling microscopy was strongly suppressed after intercalation. The whole set of experimental data evidences that Bi forms a dense intercalated layer that efficiently decouples graphene from the substrate. The interaction manifests itself only in the n-type charge doping (~0.4 eV) and a relatively small band gap at the Dirac point (~190 meV). The origin of this minor band gap is quite intriguing and in this work it was possible to exclude a wide range of mechanisms that could be responsible for it, such as induced intrinsic spin-orbit interaction, hybridization with the substrate states and corrugation of the graphene lattice. The main origin of the band gap was attributed to the A-B symmetry breaking and this conclusion found support in the careful analysis of the interference effects in photoemission that provided the band gap estimate of ~140 meV. While the previous chapters were focused on adjusting the properties of graphene by proximity to heavy metals, graphene on its own is a great object to study various physical effects at crystal surfaces. The final part of this work is devoted to a study of surface scattering resonances by means of photoemission spectroscopy, where this effect manifests itself as a distinct modulation of photoemission intensity. Though scattering resonances were widely studied in the past by means of electron diffraction, studies about their observation in photoemission experiments started to appear only recently and they are very scarce. For a comprehensive study of scattering resonances graphene was selected as a versatile model system with adjustable properties. After the theoretical and historical introduction to the topic of scattering resonances follows a detailed description of the unusual features observed in the photoemission spectra obtained in this work and finally the equivalence between these features and scattering resonances is proven. The obtained photoemission results are in a good qualitative agreement with the existing theory, as verified by our calculations in the framework of the interference model. This simple model gives a suitable explanation for the general experimental observations. The possibilities of engineering the scattering resonances were also explored. A systematic study of graphene on a wide range of substrates revealed that the energy position of the resonances is in a direct relation to the magnitude of charge transfer between graphene and the substrate. Moreover, it was demonstrated that the scattering resonances in graphene on Ir(111) can be suppressed by nanopatterning either by a superlattice of Ir nanoclusters or by atomic hydrogen. These effects were attributed to strong local variations of tork function and/or destruction of long-range order of thephene lattice. The tunability of scattering resonances can be applied for optoelectronic devices based on graphene. Moreover, the results of this study expand the general understanding of the phenomenon of scattering resonances and are applicable to many other materials besides graphene. N2 - Die vorliegende Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit den Eigenschaften von Graphen auf metallischen Substraten und speziell mit dem Verhalten von Elektronen in solchen Systemen. Der wissenschaftliche Teil dieser Arbeit beginnt mit der umfassenden Untersuchung von Nanostrukturen, die in Au-interkaliertem Graphen auf Ni(111) auftreten, mittels Rastertunnelmikroskopie (RTM). Diese Studie zielte darauf ab, die möglichen strukturellen Erklärungen der experimentell in diesem System beobachteten Rashba- Spin-Aufspaltung von ~100 meV zu untersuchen — die viel größer als theoretisch vorhergesagt ist. Es wurde gezeigt, dass Gold unter Graphen nicht nur als dichte Monolage interkaliert werden kann, sondern auch in Form von exakt periodischen Anordnungen von Nanoclustern, einer Struktur, die bisher nicht beschrieben wurde. Solche Nanocluster-Arrays können Graphen von dem stark wechselwirkenden Ni-Substrat entkoppeln und es quasi freistehend machen, wie unsere Dichtefunktionaltheorie-Studie zeigt. Gleichzeitig bestätigen die Dichtefunktionaltheorie-Rechnungen eine starke Erhöhung der durch Proximity induzierten Spin-Bahn-Wechselwirkung (SBW) in Graphen durch solche Nanocluster im Vergleich zu einer homogenen Gold-Monolage. Dieser Effekt, der im Falle von Clustern auf den verringerten Graphen-Au-Abstand zurückgeführt wird, liefert eine große Spinaufspaltung vom Rashba-Typ von ~60 meV. Die erhaltenen Ergebnisse liefern nicht nur einen möglichen Mechanismus zur Erhöhung der SBW in diesem speziellen System, sondern können auch auf Graphen auf anderen stark wechselwirkenden Substraten verallgemeinert werden, die mit Nanostrukturen von schweren Edelmetallen interkaliert sind. Noch faszinierender ist die Nähe von Graphen zu schweren sp-Metallen, von denen vorhergesagt wurde, dass sie eine intrinsische SBW induzieren und einen Spin-Hall-Effekt in Graphen realisieren. Wismut ist das schwerste stabile sp-Metall und seine Verbindungen zeigen eine Vielzahl aufregender physikalischer Phänomene. Dies war die Motivation für den nächsten Teil der vorliegenden Arbeit, in dem strukturelle und elektronische Eigenschaften einer bisher nicht beschriebenen Phase von Bismuth-interkaliertem Graphen auf Ir(111) untersucht werden. Experimente ergaben eine nahezu ideale Graphenbandstruktur mit stark unterdrückten Wechselwirkungssignaturen zwischen Graphen und dem Ir(111)-Substrat. Die gesamten experimentellen Daten belegen, dass Bi eine dichte interkalierte Schicht bildet, die Graphen effizient vom Substrat entkoppelt. Die Wechselwirkung manifestiert sich nur in der Ladungsdotierung vom n-Typ (~0,4 eV) und einer Bandlücke am Dirac-Punkt (~190 meV). Den Ursprung dieser Bandlücke zu ermitteln ist sehr komplex, und in dieser Arbeit konnte eine Vielzahl von Mechanismen ausgeschlossen werden, die dafür verantwortlich sein könnten, wie etwa induzierte intrinsische SBW, Hybridisierung mit den Substratzuständen und Riffelung des Graphen-Gitters. Der Hauptursprung der Bandlücke wurde einem Bruch der A-B -Symmetrie zugeschrieben, und diese Schlussfolgerung stützte sich auf eine eingehende Analyse der Interferenzeffekte bei der Photoemission, die eine Abschätzung der Bandlücke von ~140 meV lieferte. Während sich die vorherigen Kapitel auf die Anpassung der Eigenschaften von Graphen durch die Nähe zu Schwermetallen konzentrierten, ist Graphen allein ein großartiges Objekt, um verschiedene physikalische Effekte an Kristalloberflächen zu untersuchen. Der letzte Teil dieser Arbeit befasst sich mit der Photoemissionsspektroskopie Untersuchung von Oberflächenstreuresonanzen, deren Effekt sich in einer deutlichen Modulation der Photoemissionsintensität manifestiert. Obwohl Streuresonanzen in der Vergangenheit häufig mittels Elektronenbeugung untersucht wurden, erschienen einige wenige Studien über ihre Beobachtung in Photoemissionsexperimenten erst vor kurzem. Für eine umfassende Untersuchung der Streuresonanzen wurde Graphen als vielseitiges Modellsystem mit einstellbaren Eigenschaften ausgewählt. Das Kapitel beginnt mit einer historischen Einführung in das Thema Streuresonanzen, gefolgt von der Beschreibung der ungewöhnlichen Photoemissionsspektralmerkmale, die in dieser Arbeit erhalten wurden. Schließlich wird die Äquivalenz zwischen diesen Merkmalen und Streuresonanzen bewiesen. Die erhaltenen Photoemissionsergebnisse stimmen qualitativ gut mit der bestehenden Theorie überein, wie unsere Berechnungen im Rahmen des Interferenzmodells belegen. Dieses einfache Modell liefert eine geeignete Erklärung für die Gesamtheit der experimentellen Beobachtungen. Möglichkeiten, die Streuresonanzen zu modifizieren wurden ebenfalls untersucht. Eine systematische Untersuchung von Graphen auf einer Vielzahl von Substraten ergab, dass die Energieposition der Resonanzen in direktem Zusammenhang mit der Größe des Ladungstransfers zwischen Graphen und Substrat steht. Darüber hinaus wurde gezeigt, dass die Streuresonanzen in Graphen auf Ir(111) durch Nanostrukturierung entweder durch ein Übergitter von Ir-Nanoclustern oder durch atomaren Wasserstoff unterdrückt werden können. Diese Effekte wurden auf starke lokale Variationen der Austrittsarbeit und/oder die Zerstörung der langreichweitigen Ordnung des Graphengitters zurückgeführt. Die Abstimmbarkeit von Streuresonanzen kann für optoelektronische Bauelemente auf der Basis von Graphen verwendet werden. Darüber hinaus erweitern die Ergebnisse dieser Studie das allgemeine Verständnis des Phänomens der Streuresonanzen und sind neben Graphen auch auf viele andere Materialien anwendbar. T2 - Spin-Texturen und Elektronenstreuung in nanostrukturiertem Monolage-Graphen KW - graphene KW - spin texture KW - scattering resonances KW - Rashba effect KW - bismuth KW - Rashba-Effekt KW - Wismut KW - Graphen KW - Streuresonanzen KW - Spin Textur Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-487017 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Krylov, Dmitrii A1 - Dylov, Dmitry V. A1 - Rosenblum, Michael T1 - Reinforcement learning for suppression of collective activity in oscillatory ensembles JF - Chaos : an interdisciplinary journal of nonlinear science N2 - We present the use of modern machine learning approaches to suppress self-sustained collective oscillations typically signaled by ensembles of degenerative neurons in the brain. The proposed hybrid model relies on two major components: an environment of oscillators and a policy-based reinforcement learning block. We report a model-agnostic synchrony control based on proximal policy optimization and two artificial neural networks in an Actor-Critic configuration. A class of physically meaningful reward functions enabling the suppression of collective oscillatory mode is proposed. The synchrony suppression is demonstrated for two models of neuronal populations-for the ensembles of globally coupled limit-cycle Bonhoeffer-van der Pol oscillators and for the bursting Hindmarsh-Rose neurons using rectangular and charge-balanced stimuli. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5128909 SN - 1054-1500 SN - 1089-7682 VL - 30 IS - 3 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Melville ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kuentzer, Felipe A. A1 - Juracy, Leonardo R. A1 - Moreira, Matheus T. A1 - Amory, Alexandre M. T1 - Testing the blade resilient asynchronous template JF - Analog integrated circuits and signal processing : an international journal N2 - As VLSI design moves into ultra-deep-submicron technologies, timing margins added to the clock period are mandatory, to ensure correct circuit behavior under worst-case conditions. Timing resilient architectures emerged as a promising solution to alleviate these worst-case timing margins. These architectures allow improving system performance and reducing energy consumption. Asynchronous systems, on the other hand, have the potential to improve energy efficiency and performance. Blade is an asynchronous timing resilient template that leverages the advantages of both asynchronous and timing resilient techniques. However, Blade still presents challenges regarding its testability, which hinders its commercial or large-scale application. This paper demonstrates that scan chains can be prohibitive for Blade due to their high silicon costs., which can reach more than 100%. Then, it proposes an alternative test approach that allows concurrent testing, stuck-at, and delay testing. The test approach is based on the reuse the Blade features to provide testability, with silicon area overheads between 4 and 7%. KW - asynchronous design KW - blade KW - delay faults KW - design for Testability KW - stuck-at faults KW - timing resilient design Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10470-020-01651-8 SN - 0925-1030 SN - 1573-1979 VL - 106 IS - 1 SP - 219 EP - 234 PB - Springer CY - Dordrecht ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kulgemeyer, Christoph A1 - Borowski, Andreas A1 - Buschhüter, David A1 - Enkrott, Patrick A1 - Kempin, Maren A1 - Reinhold, Peter A1 - Riese, Josef A1 - Schecker, Horst A1 - Schröder, Jan A1 - Vogelsang, Christoph T1 - Professional knowledge affects action-related skills BT - the development of preservice physics teachers' explaining skills during a field experience JF - Journal of research in science teaching : the official journal of the National Association for Research in Science Teaching N2 - Professional knowledge is an important source of science teachers' actions in the classroom (e.g., personal professional content knowledge [pedagogical content knowledge, PCK] is the source of enacted PCK in the refined consensus model [RCM] for PCK). However, the evidence for this claim is ambiguous at best. This study applied a cross-lagged panel design to examine the relationship between professional knowledge and actions in one particular instructional situation: explaining physics. Pre- and post a field experience (one semester), 47 preservice physics teachers from four different universities were tested for their content knowledge (CK), PCK, pedagogical knowledge (PK), and action-related skills in explaining physics. The study showed that joint professional knowledge (the weighted sum of CK, PCK, and PK scores) at the beginning of the field experience impacted the development of explaining skills during the field experience (beta = .38**). We interpret this as a particular relationship between professional knowledge and science teachers' action-related skills (enacted PCK): professional knowledge is necessary for the development of explaining skills. That is evidence that personal PCK affects enacted PCK. In addition, field experiences are often supposed to bridge the theory-practice gap by transforming professional knowledge into instructional practice. Our results suggest that for field experiences to be effective, preservice teachers should start with profound professional knowledge. KW - enacted PCK KW - field experience KW - instructional explanation KW - instructional KW - quality KW - practicum KW - professional knowledge KW - school internship Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/tea.21632 SN - 0022-4308 SN - 1098-2736 VL - 57 IS - 10 SP - 1554 EP - 1582 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kurilovich, Aleksandr A. A1 - Mantsevich, Vladimir A1 - Stevenson, Keith J. A1 - Chechkin, Aleksei V. A1 - Palyulin, V. V. T1 - Complex diffusion-based kinetics of photoluminescence in semiconductor nanoplatelets JF - Physical chemistry, chemical physics : a journal of European Chemical Societies N2 - We present a diffusion-based simulation and theoretical models for explanation of the photoluminescence (PL) emission intensity in semiconductor nanoplatelets. It is shown that the shape of the PL intensity curves can be reproduced by the interplay of recombination, diffusion and trapping of excitons. The emission intensity at short times is purely exponential and is defined by recombination. At long times, it is governed by the release of excitons from surface traps and is characterized by a power-law tail. We show that the crossover from one limit to another is controlled by diffusion properties. This intermediate region exhibits a rich behaviour depending on the value of diffusivity. The proposed approach reproduces all the features of experimental curves measured for different nanoplatelet systems. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1039/d0cp03744c SN - 1463-9076 SN - 1463-9084 VL - 22 IS - 42 SP - 24686 EP - 24696 PB - Royal Society of Chemistry CY - Cambridge ER - TY - THES A1 - Köhler, Raphael T1 - Towards seasonal prediction: stratosphere-troposphere coupling in the atmospheric model ICON-NWP N2 - Stratospheric variability is one of the main potential sources for sub-seasonal to seasonal predictability in mid-latitudes in winter. Stratospheric pathways play an important role for long-range teleconnections between tropical phenomena, such as the quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO) and El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), and the mid-latitudes on the one hand, and linkages between Arctic climate change and the mid-latitudes on the other hand. In order to move forward in the field of extratropical seasonal predictions, it is essential that an atmospheric model is able to realistically simulate the stratospheric circulation and variability. The numerical weather prediction (NWP) configuration of the ICOsahedral Non-hydrostatic atmosphere model ICON is currently being used by the German Meteorological Service for the regular weather forecast, and is intended to produce seasonal predictions in future. This thesis represents the first extensive evaluation of Northern Hemisphere stratospheric winter circulation in ICON-NWP by analysing a large set of seasonal ensemble experiments. An ICON control climatology simulated with a default setup is able to reproduce the basic behaviour of the stratospheric polar vortex. However, stratospheric westerlies are significantly too weak and major stratospheric warmings too frequent, especially in January. The weak stratospheric polar vortex in ICON is furthermore connected to a mean sea level pressure (MSLP) bias pattern resembling the negative phase of the Arctic Oscillation (AO). Since a good representation of the drag exerted by gravity waves is crucial for a realistic simulation of the stratosphere, three sensitivity experiments with reduced gravity wave drag are performed. Both a reduction of the non-orographic and orographic gravity wave drag respectively, lead to a strengthening of the stratospheric vortex and thus a bias reduction in winter, in particular in January. However, the effect of the non-orographic gravity wave drag on the stratosphere is stronger. A third experiment, combining a reduced orographic and non-orographic drag, exhibits the largest stratospheric bias reductions. The analysis of stratosphere-troposphere coupling based on an index of the Northern Annular Mode demonstrates that ICON realistically represents downward coupling. This coupling is intensified and more realistic in experiments with a reduced gravity wave drag, in particular with reduced non-orographic drag. Tropospheric circulation is also affected by the reduced gravity wave drag, especially in January, when the strongly improved stratospheric circulation reduces biases in the MSLP patterns. Moreover, a retuning of the subgrid-scale orography parameterisations leads to a significant error reduction in the MSLP in all months. In conclusion, the combination of these adjusted parameterisations is recommended as a current optimal setup for seasonal simulations with ICON. Additionally, this thesis discusses further possible influences on the stratospheric polar vortex, including the influence of tropical phenomena, such as QBO and ENSO, as well as the influence of a rapidly warming Arctic. ICON does not simulate the quasi-oscillatory behaviour of the QBO and favours weak easterlies in the tropical stratosphere. A comparison with a reanalysis composite of the easterly QBO phase reveals, that the shift towards the easterly QBO in ICON further weakens the stratospheric polar vortex. On the other hand, the stratospheric reaction to ENSO events in ICON is realistic. ICON and the reanalysis exhibit a weakened stratospheric vortex in warm ENSO years. Furthermore, in particular in winter, warm ENSO events favour the negative phase of the Arctic Oscillation, whereas cold events favour the positive phase. The ICON simulations also suggest a significant effect of ENSO on the Atlantic-European sector in late winter. To investigate the influence of Arctic climate change on mid-latitude circulation changes, two differing approaches with transient and fixed sea ice conditions are chosen. Neither ICON approach exhibits the mid-latitude tropospheric negative Arctic Oscillation circulation response to amplified Arctic warming, as it is discussed on the basis of observational evidence. Nevertheless, adding a new model to the current and active discussion on Arctic-midlatitude linkages, further contributes to the understanding of divergent conclusions between model and observational studies. N2 - Die stratosphärische Variabilität ist eine der wichtigsten potentiellen Quellen für die Vorhersagbarkeit der atmosphärischen Zirkulation in den mittleren Breiten im Winter auf der Zeitskala von Wochen bis zu Jahreszeiten. Stratosphärische Prozesse spielen eine grundlegende Rolle für die Fernverbindungen (Telekonnektionen) zwischen tropischen Klimaphänomenen, wie der quasi-zweijährigen Schwingung (QBO) oder „El Niño-Südliche Oszillation“ (ENSO), und den mittleren Breiten, sowie den Telekonnektionen zwischen arktischen Klimaänderungen und der atmosphärischen Zirkulation in den mittleren Breiten. Die Fähigkeit eines atmosphärischen Modells, die stratosphärische Zirkulation und deren Variabilität realistisch zu simulieren, ist deshalb von grundlegender Bedeutung, um die Jahreszeitenvorhersage in den mittleren Breiten deutlich zu verbessern. Das nichthydrostatische Atmosphärenmodell ICON (ICOsahedral Non-hydrostatic atmosphere model) wird gegenwärtig beim Deutschen Wetterdienst (DWD) in der numerischen Wettervorhersagekonfiguration (ICON-NWP) für die Wettervorhersage genutzt, und soll zukünftig auch für Jahreszeitenvorhersagen benutzt werden. Darauf basierend, präsentiert die vorliegende Arbeit eine Vielzahl von saisonalen Ensembleexperimenten mit ICON-NWP und liefert damit die erste umfassende Bewertung der stratosphärischen Winterzirkulation der nördlichen Hemisphäre in ICON-NWP. Die Klimatologie eines ICON-Modelllaufs im Standardsetup reproduziert die grundlegenden Eigenschaften des stratosphärischen Polarwirbels. Allerdings sind die stratosphärischen Westwinde deutlich schwächer als in den Beobachtungen, und starke Stratosphärenerwärmungen treten insbesondere im Januar zu häufig auf. Zudem ist der schwache stratosphärische Polarwirbel in ICON mit einem typischen Fehler-Muster des Bodenluftdrucks verknüpft, welches der negativen Phase der Arktischen Oszillation (AO) ähnelt. Da eine gute Darstellung des von Schwerewellen ausgeübten Widerstands für eine realistische Simulation der Stratosphäre entscheidend ist, werden drei Sensitivitätsexperimente mit reduziertem Schwerewellenwiderstand durchgeführt. Sowohl eine Verringerung des nicht-orographischen, als auch eine Verringerung des orographischen Schwerewellenwiderstands führen jeweils zu einer Verstärkung des stratosphärischen Wirbels und damit zu einer Verringerung des Fehlers im Winter, insbesondere im Januar. Die Wirkung des nicht-orographischen Schwerewellenwiderstands auf die Stratosphäre ist hierbei jedoch stärker. Ein drittes Experiment, welches den reduzierten orographischen und nicht-orographischen Widerstand kombiniert, zeigt die größten Verbesserungen in der Stratosphäre. Die auf dem Index des „Northern Annular Mode“ basierende Analyse der Stratosphären-Troposphären-Kopplung zeigt, dass ICON die nach unten gerichtete Kopplung zwischen der Stratosphäre und Troposphäre realistisch darstellt. Diese Kopplung wird in Experimenten mit einem reduzierten Schwerewellenwiderstand verstärkt und realistischer dargestellt, dies gilt insbesondere für den reduzierten nicht-orographischen Widerstand. Auch die troposphärische Zirkulation wird durch den reduzierten Schwerewellenwiderstand beeinflusst, vor allem im Januar, wenn die stark verbesserte stratosphärische Zirkulation den Fehler in den Bodenluftdruckfeldern reduziert. Darüber hinaus führt ein Tuning der Parameterisierung der subgrid-skaligen orographischen Schwerewellen zu einer signifikanten Fehlerreduktion des Bodenluftdrucks in allen Monaten. Die Kombination all dieser angepassten Parametrisierungen wird als derzeit optimales Setup für Jahreszeiten-Simulationen mit ICON vorgeschlagen. Darüber hinaus werden in dieser Arbeit weitere mögliche Einflussfaktoren auf den stratosphärischen Polarwirbel diskutiert, darunter der Einfluss tropischer Phänomene, wie QBO und ENSO, sowie der Einfluss einer sich rasch erwärmenden Arktis. Das quasi-oszillierende Verhalten der QBO wird durch ICON nicht simuliert, sodass schwache Ostwinde in der tropischen Stratosphäre dominieren. Ein Vergleich mit einem Reanalyse-Komposit der östlichen QBO-Phase zeigt, dass die Verschiebung in Richtung der östlichen QBO in ICON den stratosphärischen Polarwirbel weiter abschwächt. Die stratosphärische Reaktion auf ENSO-Ereignisse in ICON ist jedoch realistisch. ICON und Reanalysedaten zeigen einen abgeschwächten Stratosphärenwirbel in warmen ENSO-Jahren. Darüber hinaus begünstigen insbesondere im Winter warme ENSO-Ereignisse die negative Phase der Arktischen Oszillation, während kalte Ereignisse die positive Phase begünstigen. Die ICON-Simulationen deuten auch auf einen signifikanten Effekt von ENSO auf den atlantisch-europäischen Sektor im Spätwinter hin. Um den Einfluss des arktischen Klimawandels auf Änderungen der Zirkulation in mittleren Breiten zu untersuchen, werden zwei unterschiedliche Ansätze mit transienten und festen Meereisgrenzen gewählt. Keiner der beiden ICON-Ansätze zeigt eine Tendenz zur negativen Phase der Arktische Oszillation als Reaktion auf die verstärkte Erwärmung der Arktis, wie sie in der Literatur anhand von Beobachtungsdaten häufig diskutiert wird. Jedoch wird somit der aktuellen und aktiven Diskussion zu den Auswirkungen des arktischen Klimawandels auf die Zirkulation der mittleren Breiten ein neues Modell hinzugefügt. T2 - Im Hinblick auf die Jahreszeitenvorhersage: Stratosphären-Troposphären-Kopplung in dem Atmosphärenmodell ICON-NWP KW - Seasonal prediction KW - Stratosphere-troposphere coupling KW - ICON KW - Stratospheric polar vortex KW - Jahreszeitenvorhersage KW - Stratosphären-Troposphären-Kopplung KW - ICON KW - Stratosphärischer Polarwirbel KW - El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) KW - El Niño-Südliche Oszillation KW - Arctic-midlatitude linkages KW - Verbindungspfade zwischen der Arktis und den mittleren Breiten Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-487231 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Laing, Carlo R. A1 - Omel'chenko, Oleh T1 - Moving bumps in theta neuron networks JF - Chaos : an interdisciplinary journal of nonlinear science N2 - We consider large networks of theta neurons on a ring, synaptically coupled with an asymmetric kernel. Such networks support stable "bumps" of activity, which move along the ring if the coupling kernel is asymmetric. We investigate the effects of the kernel asymmetry on the existence, stability, and speed of these moving bumps using continuum equations formally describing infinite networks. Depending on the level of heterogeneity within the network, we find complex sequences of bifurcations as the amount of asymmetry is varied, in strong contrast to the behavior of a classical neural field model. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5143261 SN - 1054-1500 SN - 1089-7682 VL - 30 IS - 4 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Melville ER - TY - THES A1 - Landau, Livnat T1 - Mechanical stimulation of in-vitro tissue growth using magnetic beads N2 - Cells and tissues are sensitive to mechanical forces applied to them. In particular, bone forming cells and connective tissues, composed of cells embedded in fibrous extracellular matrix (ECM), are continuously remodeled in response to the loads they bear. The mechanoresponses of cells embedded in tissue include proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis, internal signaling between cells, and formation and resorption of tissue. Experimental in-vitro systems of various designs have demonstrated that forces affect tissue growth, maturation and mineralization. However, the results depended on different parameters such as the type and magnitude of the force applied in each study. Some experiments demonstrated that applied forces increase cell proliferation and inhibit cell maturation rate, while other studies found the opposite effect. When the effect of different magnitudes of forces was compared, some studies showed that higher forces resulted in a cell proliferation increase or differentiation decrease, while other studies observed the opposite trend or no trend at all. In this study, MC3T3-E1 cells, a cell line of pre-osteoblasts (bone forming cells), was used. In this cell line, cell differentiation is known to accelerate after cells stop proliferating, typically at confluency. This makes this cell line an interesting subject for studying the influence of forces on the switch between the proliferation stage of the precursor cell and the differentiation to the mature osteoblasts. A new experimental system was designed to perform systematic investigations of the influence of the type and magnitude of forces on tissue growth. A single well plate contained an array of 80 rectangular pores. Each pore was seeded with MC3T3-E1 cells. The culture medium contained magnetic beads (MBs) of 4.5 μm in diameter that were incorporated into the pre-osteoblast cells. Using an N52 neodymium magnet, forces ranging over three orders of magnitude were applied to MBs incorporated in cells at 10 different distances from the magnet. The amount of formed tissue was assessed after 24 days of culture. The experimental design allowed to obtain data concerning (i) the influence of the type of the force (static, oscillating, no force) on tissue growth; (ii) the influence of the magnitude of force (pN-nN range); (iii) the effect of functionalizing the magnetic beads with the tripeptide Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD). To learn about cell differentiation state, in the final state of the tissue growth experiments, an analysis for the expression of alkaline phosphatase (ALP), a well - known marker of osteoblast differentiation, was performed. The experiments showed that the application of static magnetic forces increased tissue growth compared to control, while oscillating forces resulted in tissue growth reduction. A statistically significant positive correlation was found between the amount of tissue grown and the magnitude of the oscillating magnetic force. A positive but non-significant correlation of the amount of tissue with the magnitude of forces was obtained when static forces were applied. Functionalizing the MBs with RGD peptides and applying oscillating forces resulted in an increase of tissue growth relative to tissues incubated with “plain” epoxy MBs. ALP expression decreased as a function of the magnitude of force both when static and oscillating forces were applied. ALP stain intensity was reduced relative to control when oscillating forces were applied and was not significantly different than control for static forces. The suggested interpretation of the experimental findings is that larger mechanical forces delay cell maturation and keep the pre-osteoblasts in a more proliferative stage characterized by more tissue formed and lower expression of ALP. While the influence of the force magnitude can be well explained by an effect of the force on the switch between proliferation and differentiation, the influence of force type (static or oscillating) is less clear. In particular, it is challenging to reconcile the reduction of tissue formed under oscillating forces as compared to controls with the simultaneous reduction of ALP expression. To better understand this, it may be necessary to refine the staining protocol of the scaffolds and to include the amount and structure of ECM as well as other factors that were not monitored in the experiment and which may influence tissue growth and maturation. The developed experimental system proved well suited for a systematic and efficient study of the mechanoresponsiveness of tissue growth, it allowed a study of the dependence of tissue growth on force magnitude ranging over three orders of magnitude, and a comparison between the effect of static and oscillating forces. Future experiments can explore the multiple parameters that affect tissue growth as a function of the magnitude of the force: by applying different time-dependent forces; by extending the force range studied; or by using different cell lines and manipulating the mechanotransduction in the cells biochemically. KW - mechanobiology KW - magnetism KW - biophysics KW - tissue growth KW - magnetic beads Y1 - 2020 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Laquai, Rene A1 - Müller, Bernd R. A1 - Schneider, Judith Ann A1 - Kupsch, Andreas A1 - Bruno, Giovanni T1 - Using SXRR to probe the nature of discontinuities in SLM additive manufactured inconel 718 specimens JF - Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A N2 - The utilization of additive manufacturing (AM) to fabricate robust structural components relies on understanding the nature of internal anomalies or discontinuities, which can compromise the structural integrity. While some discontinuities in AM microstructures stem from similar mechanisms as observed in more traditional processes such as casting, others are unique to the AM process. Discontinuities in AM are challenging to detect, due to their submicron size and orientation dependency. Toward the goal of improving structural integrity, minimizing discontinuities in an AM build requires an understanding of the mechanisms of formation to mitigate their occurrence. This study utilizes various techniques to evaluate the shape, size, nature and distribution of discontinuities in AM Inconel 718, in a non-hot isostatic pressed (HIPed) as-built, non-HIPed and direct age, and HIPed with two step age samples. Non-destructive synchrotron radiation refraction and transmission radiography (SXRR) provides additional information beyond that obtained with destructive optical microscopy. SXRR was able to distinguish between voids, cracks and lack of melt in, due to its sensitivity to the orientation of the discontinuity. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s11661-020-05847-5 SN - 1073-5623 SN - 1543-1940 VL - 51 IS - 8 SP - 4146 EP - 4157 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Li, Hua A1 - Xu, Yong A1 - Li, Yongge A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - Transition path dynamics across rough inverted parabolic potential barrier JF - The European physical journal : Plus N2 - Transition path dynamics have been widely studied in chemical, physical, and technological systems. Mostly, the transition path dynamics is obtained for smooth barrier potentials, for instance, generic inverse-parabolic shapes. We here present analytical results for the mean transition path time, the distribution of transition path times, the mean transition path velocity, and the mean transition path shape in a rough inverted parabolic potential function under the driving of Gaussian white noise. These are validated against extensive simulations using the forward flux sampling scheme in parallel computations. We observe how precisely the potential roughness, the barrier height, and the noise intensity contribute to the particle transition in the rough inverted barrier potential. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1140/epjp/s13360-020-00752-7 SN - 2190-5444 VL - 135 IS - 9 PB - Springer CY - Berlin ; Heidelberg ER - TY - GEN A1 - Li, Yongge A1 - Mei, Ruoxing A1 - Xu, Yong A1 - Kurths, Jürgen A1 - Duan, Jinqiao A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - Particle dynamics and transport enhancement in a confined channel with position-dependent diffusivity T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - This work focuses on the dynamics of particles in a confined geometry with position-dependent diffusivity, where the confinement is modelled by a periodic channel consisting of unit cells connected by narrow passage ways. We consider three functional forms for the diffusivity, corresponding to the scenarios of a constant (D ₀), as well as a low (D ₘ) and a high (D d) mobility diffusion in cell centre of the longitudinally symmetric cells. Due to the interaction among the diffusivity, channel shape and external force, the system exhibits complex and interesting phenomena. By calculating the probability density function, mean velocity and mean first exit time with the Itô calculus form, we find that in the absence of external forces the diffusivity D d will redistribute particles near the channel wall, while the diffusivity D ₘ will trap them near the cell centre. The superposition of external forces will break their static distributions. Besides, our results demonstrate that for the diffusivity D d, a high dependence on the x coordinate (parallel with the central channel line) will improve the mean velocity of the particles. In contrast, for the diffusivity D ₘ, a weak dependence on the x coordinate will dramatically accelerate the moving speed. In addition, it shows that a large external force can weaken the influences of different diffusivities; inversely, for a small external force, the types of diffusivity affect significantly the particle dynamics. In practice, one can apply these results to achieve a prominent enhancement of the particle transport in two- or three-dimensional channels by modulating the local tracer diffusivity via an engineered gel of varying porosity or by adding a cold tube to cool down the diffusivity along the central line, which may be a relevant effect in engineering applications. Effects of different stochastic calculi in the evaluation of the underlying multiplicative stochastic equation for different physical scenarios are discussed. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 974 KW - diffusion KW - channel KW - space-dependent diffusivity Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-474542 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 974 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Li, Yongge A1 - Mei, Ruoxing A1 - Xu, Yong A1 - Kurths, Jürgen A1 - Duan, Jinqiao A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - Particle dynamics and transport enhancement in a confined channel with position-dependent diffusivity JF - New Journal of Physics N2 - This work focuses on the dynamics of particles in a confined geometry with position-dependent diffusivity, where the confinement is modelled by a periodic channel consisting of unit cells connected by narrow passage ways. We consider three functional forms for the diffusivity, corresponding to the scenarios of a constant (D ₀), as well as a low (D ₘ) and a high (D d) mobility diffusion in cell centre of the longitudinally symmetric cells. Due to the interaction among the diffusivity, channel shape and external force, the system exhibits complex and interesting phenomena. By calculating the probability density function, mean velocity and mean first exit time with the Itô calculus form, we find that in the absence of external forces the diffusivity D d will redistribute particles near the channel wall, while the diffusivity D ₘ will trap them near the cell centre. The superposition of external forces will break their static distributions. Besides, our results demonstrate that for the diffusivity D d, a high dependence on the x coordinate (parallel with the central channel line) will improve the mean velocity of the particles. In contrast, for the diffusivity D ₘ, a weak dependence on the x coordinate will dramatically accelerate the moving speed. In addition, it shows that a large external force can weaken the influences of different diffusivities; inversely, for a small external force, the types of diffusivity affect significantly the particle dynamics. In practice, one can apply these results to achieve a prominent enhancement of the particle transport in two- or three-dimensional channels by modulating the local tracer diffusivity via an engineered gel of varying porosity or by adding a cold tube to cool down the diffusivity along the central line, which may be a relevant effect in engineering applications. Effects of different stochastic calculi in the evaluation of the underlying multiplicative stochastic equation for different physical scenarios are discussed. KW - diffusion KW - channel KW - space-dependent diffusivity Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/ab81b9 SN - 1367-2630 VL - 22 PB - Dt. Physikalische Ges. CY - Bad Honnef ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Magkos, Sotirios A1 - Kupsch, Andreas A1 - Bruno, Giovanni T1 - Direct iterative reconstruction of computed tomography trajectories reconstruction from limited number of projections with DIRECTT JF - Review of scientific instruments : a monthly journal devoted to scientific instruments, apparatus, and techniques N2 - X-ray computed tomography has many applications in materials science and non-destructive testing. While the standard filtered back-projection reconstruction of the radiographic datasets is fast and simple, it typically fails in returning accurate results from missing or inconsistent projections. Among the alternative techniques that have been proposed to handle such data is the Direct Iterative REconstruction of Computed Tomography Trajectories (DIRECTT) algorithm. We describe a new approach to the algorithm, which significantly decreases the computational time while achieving a better reconstruction quality than that of other established algorithms. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0013111 SN - 0034-6748 SN - 1089-7623 SN - 1527-2400 VL - 91 IS - 10 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Melville ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Makwana, Kirit D. A1 - Yan, Huirong T1 - Properties of magnetohydrodynamic modes in compressively driven plasma turbulence JF - Physical Review X N2 - We study properties of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) eigenmodes by decomposing the data of MHD simulations into linear MHD modes-namely, the Alfven, slow magnetosonic, and fast magnetosonic modes. We drive turbulence with a mixture of solenoidal and compressive driving while varying the Alfven Mach number (M-A), plasma beta, and the sonic Mach number from subsonic to transsonic. We find that the proportion of fast and slow modes in the mode mixture increases with increasing compressive forcing. This proportion of the magnetosonic modes can also become the dominant fraction in the mode mixture. The anisotropy of the modes is analyzed by means of their structure functions. The Alfven-mode anisotropy is consistent with the Goldreich-Sridhar theory. We find a transition from weak to strong Alfvenic turbulence as we go from low to high M-A. The slow-mode properties are similar to the Alfven mode. On the other hand, the isotropic nature of fast modes is verified in the cases where the fast mode is a significant fraction of the mode mixture. The fast-mode behavior does not show any transition in going from low to high M-A. We find indications that there is some interaction between the different modes, and the properties of the dominant mode can affect the properties of the weaker modes. This work identifies the conditions under which magnetosonic modes can be a major fraction of turbulent astrophysical plasmas, including the regime of weak turbulence. Important astrophysical implications for cosmic-ray transport and magnetic reconnection are discussed. KW - Astrophysics KW - Plasma Physics Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.10.031021 SN - 2160-3308 VL - 10 IS - 3 PB - American Physical Society (APS) CY - College Park ER - TY - GEN A1 - Makwana, Kirit D. A1 - Yan, Huirong T1 - Properties of magnetohydrodynamic modes in compressively driven plasma turbulence T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - We study properties of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) eigenmodes by decomposing the data of MHD simulations into linear MHD modes-namely, the Alfven, slow magnetosonic, and fast magnetosonic modes. We drive turbulence with a mixture of solenoidal and compressive driving while varying the Alfven Mach number (M-A), plasma beta, and the sonic Mach number from subsonic to transsonic. We find that the proportion of fast and slow modes in the mode mixture increases with increasing compressive forcing. This proportion of the magnetosonic modes can also become the dominant fraction in the mode mixture. The anisotropy of the modes is analyzed by means of their structure functions. The Alfven-mode anisotropy is consistent with the Goldreich-Sridhar theory. We find a transition from weak to strong Alfvenic turbulence as we go from low to high M-A. The slow-mode properties are similar to the Alfven mode. On the other hand, the isotropic nature of fast modes is verified in the cases where the fast mode is a significant fraction of the mode mixture. The fast-mode behavior does not show any transition in going from low to high M-A. We find indications that there is some interaction between the different modes, and the properties of the dominant mode can affect the properties of the weaker modes. This work identifies the conditions under which magnetosonic modes can be a major fraction of turbulent astrophysical plasmas, including the regime of weak turbulence. Important astrophysical implications for cosmic-ray transport and magnetic reconnection are discussed. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1225 KW - mhd turbulence KW - star formation KW - simulations KW - Anisotropy KW - diffusion Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-531607 SN - 1866-8372 VL - 10 IS - 3 PB - American Physical Society (APS) CY - College Park ER - TY - THES A1 - Mandal, Partha Sarathi T1 - Controlling the surface band gap in topological states of matter N2 - In the present study, we employ the angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) technique to study the electronic structure of topological states of matter. In particular, the so-called topological crystalline insulators (TCIs) Pb1-xSnxSe and Pb1-xSnxTe, and the Mn-doped Z2 topological insulators (TIs) Bi2Te3 and Bi2Se3. The Z2 class of strong topological insulators is protected by time-reversal symmetry and is characterized by an odd number of metallic Dirac type surface states in the surface Brillouin zone. The topological crystalline insulators on the other hand are protected by the individual crystal symmetries and exhibit an even number of Dirac cones. The topological properties of the lead tin chalcogenides topological crystalline insulators can be tuned by temperature and composition. Here, we demonstrate that Bi-doping of the Pb1-xSnxSe(111) epilayers induces a quantum phase transition from a topological crystalline insulator to a Z2 topological insulator. This occurs because Bi-doping lifts the fourfold valley degeneracy in the bulk. As a consequence a gap appears at ⌈¯, while the three Dirac cones at the M̅ points of the surface Brillouin zone remain intact. We interpret this new phase transition is caused by lattice distortion. Our findings extend the topological phase diagram enormously and make strong topological insulators switchable by distortions or electric field. In contrast, the bulk Bi doping of epitaxial Pb1-xSnxTe(111) films induces a giant Rashba splitting at the surface that can be tuned by the doping level. Tight binding calculations identify their origin as Fermi level pinning by trap states at the surface. Magnetically doped topological insulators enable the quantum anomalous Hall effect (QAHE) which provide quantized edge states for lossless charge transport applications. The edge states are hosted by a magnetic energy gap at the Dirac point which has not been experimentally observed to date. Our low temperature ARPES studies unambiguously reveal the magnetic gap of Mn-doped Bi2Te3. Our analysis shows a five times larger gap size below the Tc than theoretically predicted. We assign this enhancement to a remarkable structure modification induced by Mn doping. Instead of a disordered impurity system, a self-organized alternating sequence of MnBi2Te4 septuple and Bi2Te3quintuple layers is formed. This enhances the wave-function overlap and gives rise to a large magnetic gap. Mn-doped Bi2Se3 forms similar heterostructure, but only a nonmagnetic gap is observed in this system. This correlates with the difference in magnetic anisotropy due to the much larger spin-orbit interaction in Bi2Te3 compared to Bi2Se3. These findings provide crucial insights for pushing lossless transport in topological insulators towards room-temperature applications. N2 - In der vorliegenden Studie verwenden wir die Methode der winkelaufgelösten Photoemissionsspektroskopie (ARPES) zur Untersuchung der elektronischen Struktur von topologischen Zuständen der Materie. Insbesondere die sogenannten topologischen kristallinen Isolatoren (TCI) Pb1-xSnxSe und Pb1-xSnxTe sowie die Mn-dotierten Z2 topologischen Isolatoren (TI) Bi2Te3 und Bi2Se3. Die Z2-Klasse der starken topologischen Isolatoren ist durch Zeitumkehrsymmetrie geschützt und durch eine ungerade Anzahl metallischer Dirac-Oberflächenzustände in der Oberflächenbrillouinzone gekennzeichnet. Die topologischen kristallinen Isolatoren hingegen sind durch einzelne Kristallsymmetrien geschützt und weisen eine gerade Anzahl von Dirac-Kegeln auf. Die topologischen Eigenschaften von Blei-Zinn-Chalkogenid-TCI lassen sich durch Temperatur sowie chemische Zusammensetzung einstellen. Hier wird gezeigt, dass Bi-Dotierung von eptiaktischen Pb1-xSnxSe(111)-Schichten einen Quantenphasenübergang von einem topologischen kristallinen Isolator zu einem Z2-topologischen Isolator hervorruft. Dies geschieht, weil die Dotierung mit Bi die vierfache Valley-Entartung im Volumen aufhebt. Als Konsequenz entsteht eine Lücke bei ⌈¯, während die drei Dirac-Kegel an den M̅-Punkten der Oberflächenbrillouinzone intakt bleiben. Wir interpretieren diesen neuen Phasenübergang als durch eine Gitterverzerrung verursacht. Unsere Ergebnisse erweitern das topologische Phasendiagramm enorm und machen starke topologische Isolatoren durch Verzerrungen oder elektrische Felder schaltbar. Im Gegensatz dazu induziert eine Bi-Dotierung im Volumen von epitaktischen Pb1-xSnxTe(111)-Schichten eine riesige Rashba-Aufspaltung an der Oberfläche, die durch das Ausmaß der Dotierung eingestellt werden kann. Tight-Binding-Berechnungen identifizieren ihren Ursprung in einem Fermi-Niveau-Pinning durch Trap-Zustände an der Oberfläche. Magnetisch dotierte topologische Isolatoren ermöglichen den quantisierten anomalen Hall-Effekt (QAHE), der quantisierte Kantenzustände liefert, die für verlustfreien Ladungstransport eingesetzt werden können. Die Kantenzustände treten in einer magnetischen Energielücke am Dirac-Punkt auf, die bisher noch nicht experimentell beobachtet wurde. Unsere Tieftemperatur-ARPES-Untersuchungen weisen die magnetische Energielücke in Mn dotiertem Bi2Te3 eindeutig nach. Unsere Analyse zeigt unterhalb von Tc eine viermal größere Energielücke als theoretisch vorhergesagt. Wir führen diese Erhöhung auf eine bemerkenswerte Strukturmodifikation durch die Mn-Dotierung zurück. Statt eines Systems mit ungeordneten Mn Verunreinigungen entsteht eine selbstorganisierte alternierende Sequenz von MnBi2Te4-Septupel- und Bi2Te3-Quintupel-Schichten. Das erhöht den Überlapp der Wellenfunktionen und führt zu der großen magnetischen Energielücke. Mn-dotiertes Bi2Se3 bildet ähnliche Heterostrukturen aus, jedoch wird in diesem System nur eine nichtmagnetische Energielücke beobachtet. Dies korreliert mit der unterschiedlichen magnetischen Anisotropie aufgrund der viel größeren Spin-Bahn-Wechselwirkung im Bi2Te3 im Vergleich zu Bi2Se3. Diese Resultate liefern entscheidende Erkenntnisse, um verlustfreien Transport in topologischen Isolatoren für Anwendungen bei Raumtemperatur weiterzuentwickeln. KW - ARPES KW - Topological Insulator KW - Topological Crystalline Insulator KW - Rashba effect KW - Rashba-Effekt KW - Topologischer kristalliner Isolator KW - Topologischer Isolator Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-480459 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mansour, Ahmed E. A1 - Lungwitz, Dominique A1 - Schultz, Thorsten A1 - Arvind, Malavika A1 - Valencia, Ana M. A1 - Cocchi, Caterina A1 - Opitz, Andreas A1 - Neher, Dieter A1 - Koch, Norbert T1 - The optical signatures of molecular-doping induced polarons in poly(3-hexylthiophene-2,5-diyl) BT - individual polymer chains versus aggregates JF - Journal of materials chemistry : C, Materials for optical and electronic devices N2 - Optical absorption spectroscopy is a key method to investigate doped conjugated polymers and to characterize the doping-induced charge carriers, i.e., polarons. For prototypical poly(3-hexylthiophene-2,5-diyl) (P3HT), the absorption intensity of molecular dopant induced polarons is widely used to estimate the carrier density and the doping efficiency, i.e., the number of polarons formed per dopant molecule. However, the dependence of the polaron-related absorption features on the structure of doped P3HT, being either aggregates or separated individual chains, is not comprehensively understood in contrast to the optical absorption features of neutral P3HT. In this work, we unambiguously differentiate the optical signatures of polarons on individual P3HT chains and aggregates in solution, notably the latter exhibiting the same shape as aggregates in solid thin films. This is enabled by employing tris(pentafluorophenyl)borane (BCF) as dopant, as this dopant forms only ion pairs with P3HT and no charge transfer complexes, and BCF and its anion have no absorption in the spectral region of P3HT polarons. Polarons on individual chains exhibit absorption peaks at 1.5 eV and 0.6 eV, whereas in aggregates the high-energy peak is split into a doublet 1.3 eV and 1.65 eV, and the low-energy peak is shifted below 0.5 eV. The dependence of the fraction of solvated individual chains versus aggregates on absolute solution concentration, dopant concentration, and temperature is elucidated, and we find that aggregates predominate in solution under commonly used processing conditions. Aggregates in BCF-doped P3HT solution can be effectively removed upon simple filtering. From varying the filter pore size (down to 200 nm) and thin film morphology characterization with scanning force microscopy we reveal the aggregates' size dependence on solution absolute concentration and dopant concentration. Furthermore, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy shows that the dopant loading in aggregates is higher than for individual P3HT chains. The results of this study help understanding the impact of solution pre-aggregation on thin film properties of molecularly doped P3HT, and highlight the importance of considering such aggregation for other doped conjugated polymers in general. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1039/c9tc06509a SN - 2050-7526 SN - 2050-7534 VL - 8 IS - 8 SP - 2870 EP - 2879 PB - Royal Society of Chemistry CY - Cambridge ER - TY - THES A1 - Mardoukhi, Yousof T1 - Random environments and the percolation model BT - non-dissipative fluctuations of random walk process on finite size clusters BT - Nicht-dissipative Fluktuationen des Random-Walk-Prozesses bei endlichen Clustern N2 - Percolation process, which is intrinsically a phase transition process near the critical point, is ubiquitous in nature. Many of its applications embrace a wide spectrum of natural phenomena ranging from the forest fires, spread of contagious diseases, social behaviour dynamics to mathematical finance, formation of bedrocks and biological systems. The topology generated by the percolation process near the critical point is a random (stochastic) fractal. It is fundamental to the percolation theory that near the critical point, a unique infinite fractal structure, namely the infinite cluster, would emerge. As de Gennes suggested, the properties of the infinite cluster could be deduced by studying the dynamical behaviour of the random walk process taking place on it. He coined the term the ant in the labyrinth. The random walk process on such an infinite fractal cluster exhibits a subdiffusive dynamics in the sense that the mean squared displacement grows as ~t2/dw, where dw, called the fractal dimension of the random walk path, is greater than 2. Thus, the random walk process on the infinite cluster is classified as a process exhibiting the properties of anomalous diffusions. Yet near the critical point, the infinite cluster is not the sole emergent topology, but it coexists with other clusters whose size is finite. Though finite, on specific length scales these finite clusters exhibit fractal properties as well. In this work, it is assumed that the random walk process could take place on these finite size objects as well. Bearing this assumption in mind requires one address the non-equilibrium initial condition. Due to the lack of knowledge on the propagator of the random walk process in stochastic random environments, a phenomenological correspondence between the renowned Ornstein-Uhlenbeck process and the random walk process on finite size clusters is established. It is elucidated that when an ensemble of these finite size clusters and the infinite cluster is considered, the anisotropy and size of these finite clusters effects the mean squared displacement and its time averaged counterpart to grow in time as ~t(d+df (t-2))/dw, where d is the embedding Euclidean dimension, df is the fractal dimension of the infinite cluster, and , called the Fisher exponent, is a critical exponent governing the power-law distribution of the finite size clusters. Moreover, it is demonstrated that, even though the random walk process on a specific finite size cluster is ergodic, it exhibits a persistent non-ergodic behaviour when an ensemble of finite size and the infinite clusters is considered. N2 - Der Perkolationprozess, der nahe dem kritischen Punkt von Natur aus ein Phasenübergangsprozess ist, ist allgegenwärtig in der Natur. Anwendungen dieses Prozesses umfassen ein breites Spektrum natürliche Phänomene von Waldbränden, der Ausbreitung von Infektionskrankenheiten, Dynamik des Sozialverhaltens bis hin zu der Finanzmathematik, der Bildung des von Gestein und biologische Systemen. Die durch der Perkolationprozess nahe dem kritischen Punkt generierte Topologie, ist ein zufälliges (stochastisches) Fraktal. Es ist eine fundamentale Aussage der Perkolationtheorie, dass nahe dem kritischen Punkt eine eindeutige unendliche fraktale Struktur, nämlich der unendliche Cluster, aufkommt. Wie de Gennes vorgeschlagen hat, können die Eigenschaften des unendliches Clusters durch die Dynamik der Irrfahrt, die auf dem Cluster stattfindet, abgeleitet werden. Er erfand den Ausdruck \textit{the ant in the labyrinth}. Die Irrfahrt auf solchen unendlichen fraktalen Clustern weist eine subdiffusive Dynamik auf, in dem Sinne, dass ihre mittlere quadratische Verschiebung wie $\sim t^{d_w}$ skaliert, wobei $d_w$, genannt die fraktale Dimension der Zufallsbewegung, größer als 2 ist. Auf diese Weise wird die Irrfahrt auf dem unendlichen Cluster als ein Prozess, der die Eigenschaften von anomaler Diffusion aufweist, klassifiziert. Der unendliche Cluster ist allerdings nicht die einzige entstehende Topologie nahe dem kritischen Punkt. Tatsächlich, koexistiert er mit anderen Clustern deren Größe endlich ist. Obwohl sie endlich sind, weisen sie auf bestimmten Längenmaßen fraktale Eigenschaften auf. In dieser Arbeit wird angenommen, dass die Irrfahrt auch auf diesen Clustern stattfinden könnte. Diese Annahme verlangt, dass die Nichtgleichgewichts-Anfangsbedingung diskutiert wird. Aufgrund der mangelnden Kenntnisse über den Propagator der Irrfahrt in stochastischen Umgebungen, wird in diese Arbeit eine phänomenologische Übereinstimmung zwischen dem bekannten Ornstein-Uhlenbeck Prozess und der Irrfahrt auf dem endlichen Cluster hergestellt. Es wird erläutert, dass, wenn ein Ensemble von endlichen und unendlichen Clustern zusammen betrachtet wird, die Anisotropie und Größe der endlichen Cluster dazu führen, dass die mittlere quadratische Verschiebung und ihr zeitgemittlertes Gegenteil mit der Zeit wie $\sim t^{(d+d_f(\tau-2))/d_w}$ wachsen, wobei $d$ die euklidische Einbettungsdimension ist, $d_f$ die fraktale Dimension und $\tau$, genannt der \textit{Fisher Exponent}, ein kritischer Exponent ist, der die Power-Law Verteilung der Clustergröße angibt. Es wird außerdem dargestellt dass, obwohl die Irrfahrt auf einem bestimmten endlichen Cluster ergodisch ist, er dennoch ein unergodisches Verhalten aufweist, wenn ein Ensemble von endlichen und unendlichen Cluster betrachtet wird. T2 - Zufallsumgebungen und das Perkolationsmodell KW - Percolation KW - Random Environments KW - Fractals KW - Random Walk KW - Ornstein-Uhlenbeck Process KW - Perkolation KW - Zufällige Umgebungen KW - Fraktale KW - Zufällige Stochastische Irrfahrt KW - Ornstein-Uhlenbeck Prozess Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-472762 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mardoukhi, Yousof A1 - Chechkin, Aleksei V. A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - Spurious ergodicity breaking in normal and fractional Ornstein–Uhlenbeck process JF - New Journal of Physics N2 - The Ornstein–Uhlenbeck process is a stationary and ergodic Gaussian process, that is fully determined by its covariance function and mean. We show here that the generic definitions of the ensemble- and time-averaged mean squared displacements fail to capture these properties consistently, leading to a spurious ergodicity breaking. We propose to remedy this failure by redefining the mean squared displacements such that they reflect unambiguously the statistical properties of any stochastic process. In particular we study the effect of the initial condition in the Ornstein–Uhlenbeck process and its fractional extension. For the fractional Ornstein–Uhlenbeck process representing typical experimental situations in crowded environments such as living biological cells, we show that the stationarity of the process delicately depends on the initial condition. KW - Ornstein–Uhlenbeck process KW - stationary stochastic process KW - ensemble and time averaged mean squared displacement Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/ab950b SN - 1367-2630 VL - 22 PB - IOP CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Mardoukhi, Yousof A1 - Chechkin, Aleksei V. A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - Spurious ergodicity breaking in normal and fractional Ornstein–Uhlenbeck process T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - The Ornstein–Uhlenbeck process is a stationary and ergodic Gaussian process, that is fully determined by its covariance function and mean. We show here that the generic definitions of the ensemble- and time-averaged mean squared displacements fail to capture these properties consistently, leading to a spurious ergodicity breaking. We propose to remedy this failure by redefining the mean squared displacements such that they reflect unambiguously the statistical properties of any stochastic process. In particular we study the effect of the initial condition in the Ornstein–Uhlenbeck process and its fractional extension. For the fractional Ornstein–Uhlenbeck process representing typical experimental situations in crowded environments such as living biological cells, we show that the stationarity of the process delicately depends on the initial condition. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 981 KW - Ornstein–Uhlenbeck process KW - stationary stochastic process KW - ensemble and time averaged mean squared displacement Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-474875 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 981 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Marschall, Raphael A1 - Skorov, Yuri A1 - Zakharov, Vladimir A1 - Rezac, Ladislav A1 - Gerig, Selina-Barbara A1 - Christou, Chariton A1 - Dadzie, S. Kokou A1 - Migliorini, Alessandra A1 - Rinaldi, Giovanna A1 - Agarwal, Jessica A1 - Vincent, Jean-Baptiste A1 - Kappel, David T1 - Cometary comae-surface links the physics of gas and dust from the surface to a spacecraft JF - Space science reviews N2 - A comet is a highly dynamic object, undergoing a permanent state of change. These changes have to be carefully classified and considered according to their intrinsic temporal and spatial scales. The Rosetta mission has, through its contiguous in-situ and remote sensing coverage of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (hereafter 67P) over the time span of August 2014 to September 2016, monitored the emergence, culmination, and winding down of the gas and dust comae. This provided an unprecedented data set and has spurred a large effort to connect in-situ and remote sensing measurements to the surface. In this review, we address our current understanding of cometary activity and the challenges involved when linking comae data to the surface. We give the current state of research by describing what we know about the physical processes involved from the surface to a few tens of kilometres above it with respect to the gas and dust emission from cometary nuclei. Further, we describe how complex multidimensional cometary gas and dust models have developed from the Halley encounter of 1986 to today. This includes the study of inhomogeneous outgassing and determination of the gas and dust production rates. Additionally, the different approaches used and results obtained to link coma data to the surface will be discussed. We discuss forward and inversion models and we describe the limitations of the respective approaches. The current literature suggests that there does not seem to be a single uniform process behind cometary activity. Rather, activity seems to be the consequence of a variety of erosion processes, including the sublimation of both water ice and more volatile material, but possibly also more exotic processes such as fracture and cliff erosion under thermal and mechanical stress, sub-surface heat storage, and a complex interplay of these processes. Seasons and the nucleus shape are key factors for the distribution and temporal evolution of activity and imply that the heliocentric evolution of activity can be highly individual for every comet, and generalisations can be misleading. KW - comets KW - coma KW - gas KW - dust KW - dynamics KW - modelling KW - inversion Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s11214-020-00744-0 SN - 0038-6308 SN - 1572-9672 VL - 216 IS - 8 PB - Springer CY - Dordrecht ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Massolt, Joost Willem A1 - Borowski, Andreas T1 - Perceived relevance of university physics problems by pre-service physics teachers BT - personal constructs JF - International journal of science education N2 - Pre-service physics teachers often do not recognise the relevance for their future career in their university content knowledge courses. A lower perceived relevance can, however, have a negative effect on their motivation and on their academic success. Several intervention studies have been undertaken with the goal to increase this perceived relevance. A previous study shows that conceptual physics problems used in university physics courses are perceived by pre-service physics teachers as more relevant for their future career than regular, quantitative problems. It is however not clear, what the students' meaning of the construct 'relevance' is: what makes a problem more relevant to them than another problem? To answer this question, N = 7 pre-service teachers were interviewed using the repertory grid technique, based on the personal construct theory. Nine physics problems were discussed with regards to their perceived relevance and with regards to problem properties that distinguish these problems from each other. We are able to identify six problem properties that have a positive influence on the perceived relevance. Physics problems that are based on these properties should therefore potentially have a higher perceived relevance, which can have a positive effect on the motivation of the pre-service teachers who solve these problems. KW - Motivation KW - physics education KW - pre-service teachers KW - repertory grid Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1080/09500693.2019.1705424 SN - 0950-0693 SN - 1464-5289 VL - 42 IS - 2 SP - 167 EP - 189 PB - Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group CY - Abingdon ER - TY - GEN A1 - Massolt, Joost Willem A1 - Borowski, Andreas T1 - Perceived relevance of university physics problems by pre-service physics teachers BT - personal constructs T2 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - Pre-service physics teachers often do not recognise the relevance for their future career in their university content knowledge courses. A lower perceived relevance can, however, have a negative effect on their motivation and on their academic success. Several intervention studies have been undertaken with the goal to increase this perceived relevance. A previous study shows that conceptual physics problems used in university physics courses are perceived by pre-service physics teachers as more relevant for their future career than regular, quantitative problems. It is however not clear, what the students' meaning of the construct 'relevance' is: what makes a problem more relevant to them than another problem? To answer this question, N = 7 pre-service teachers were interviewed using the repertory grid technique, based on the personal construct theory. Nine physics problems were discussed with regards to their perceived relevance and with regards to problem properties that distinguish these problems from each other. We are able to identify six problem properties that have a positive influence on the perceived relevance. Physics problems that are based on these properties should therefore potentially have a higher perceived relevance, which can have a positive effect on the motivation of the pre-service teachers who solve these problems. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1396 KW - motivation KW - physics education KW - pre-service teachers KW - repertory grid Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-515838 SN - 1866-8372 VL - 42 IS - 2 SP - 167 EP - 189 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mazzio, Katherine A. A1 - Kojda, Sandrino Danny A1 - Rubio-Govea, Rodrigo A1 - Niederhausen, Jens A1 - Ryll, Britta A1 - Raja-Thulasimani, Monika A1 - Habicht, Klaus A1 - Raoux, Simone T1 - P-type-to-n-type transition in hybrid AgxTe/PEDOT:PSS thermoelectric materials via stoichiometric control during solution-based synthesis JF - ACS applied energy materials N2 - This work demonstrates the production of high-performing p- type and n-type hybrid AgxTe/poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiopene):polystyrene sulfonic acid (PE-DOT:PSS) thermoelectric materials from the same Te/PEDOT:PSS parent structure during aqueous-based synthesis. All samples were solution-processed and analyzed in thin- film architectures. We were able to demonstrate a power factor of 44 mu W m(-1) K-2 for our highest-performing n-type material. In addition, we were also able to realize a 68% improvement in the power factor of our p-type compositions relative to the parent structure through manipulation of the inorganic nanostructure composition. We demonstrate control over the thermoelectric properties by varying the stoichiometry of AgxTe nanoparticles in AgxTe/PEDOT:PSS hybrid materials via a topotactic chemical transformation process at room temperature. This process offers a simple, low-temperature, and cost-effective route toward the production of both efficient n-type and p-type hybrid thermoelectric materials. KW - thermoelectrics KW - hybrid material KW - PEDOT:PSS KW - tellurium KW - silver KW - telluride KW - hybrid synthesis Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/acsaem.0c01774 SN - 2574-0962 VL - 3 IS - 11 SP - 10734 EP - 10743 PB - ACS Publications CY - Washington, DC ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mejia-Monasterio, Carlos A1 - Metzler, Ralf A1 - Vollmer, Jürgen T1 - Editorial: anomalous transport BT - applications, mathematical perspectives, and big data JF - Frontiers in Physics KW - anomalous (or non-Fickian) diffusion KW - anomalous heat conduction KW - stochastic dynamics KW - molecular overcrowding KW - dynamical systems Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3389/fphy.2020.622417 SN - 2296-424X VL - 8 PB - Frontiers Media CY - Lausanne ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Metzler, Ralf T1 - Superstatistics and non-Gaussian diffusion JF - The European physical journal special topics N2 - Brownian motion and viscoelastic anomalous diffusion in homogeneous environments are intrinsically Gaussian processes. In a growing number of systems, however, non-Gaussian displacement distributions of these processes are being reported. The physical cause of the non-Gaussianity is typically seen in different forms of disorder. These include, for instance, imperfect "ensembles" of tracer particles, the presence of local variations of the tracer mobility in heteroegenous environments, or cases in which the speed or persistence of moving nematodes or cells are distributed. From a theoretical point of view stochastic descriptions based on distributed ("superstatistical") transport coefficients as well as time-dependent generalisations based on stochastic transport parameters with built-in finite correlation time are invoked. After a brief review of the history of Brownian motion and the famed Gaussian displacement distribution, we here provide a brief introduction to the phenomenon of non-Gaussianity and the stochastic modelling in terms of superstatistical and diffusing-diffusivity approaches. KW - Brownian diffusion KW - anomalous diffusion KW - dynamics KW - kinetic-theory KW - models KW - motion KW - nanoparticles KW - nonergodicity KW - statistics KW - subdiffusion Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1140/epjst/e2020-900210-x SN - 1951-6355 SN - 1951-6401 VL - 229 IS - 5 SP - 711 EP - 728 PB - Springer CY - Heidelberg ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meyer, Dominique M.-A. A1 - Petrov, Mykola A1 - Pohl, Martin T1 - Wind nebulae and supernova remnants of very massive stars JF - Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society N2 - A very small fraction of (runaway) massive stars have masses exceeding 60-70 M-circle dot and are predicted to evolve as luminous blue variable and Wolf-Rayet stars before ending their lives as core-collapse supernovae. Our 2D axisymmetric hydrodynamical simulations explore how a fast wind (2000 km s(-1)) and high mass-loss rate (10(-5)M(circle dot) yr(-1)) can impact the morphology of the circumstellar medium. It is shaped as 100 pc-scale wind nebula that can be pierced by the driving star when it supersonically moves with velocity 20-40 km s(-1) through the interstellar medium (ISM) in the Galactic plane. The motion of such runaway stars displaces the position of the supernova explosion out of their bow shock nebula, imposing asymmetries to the eventual shock wave expansion and engendering Cygnus-loop-like supernova remnants. We conclude that the size (up to more than 200 pc) of the filamentary wind cavity in which the chemically enriched supernova ejecta expand, mixing efficiently the wind and ISM materials by at least 10 per cent in number density, can be used as a tracer of the runaway nature of the very massive progenitors of such 0.1Myr old remnants. Our results motivate further observational campaigns devoted to the bow shock of the very massive stars BD+43 degrees 3654 and to the close surroundings of the synchrotron-emitting Wolf-Rayet shell G2.4+1.4. KW - shock waves KW - methods: numerical KW - circumstellar matter KW - stars: massive Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/staa554 SN - 0035-8711 SN - 1365-2966 VL - 493 IS - 3 SP - 3548 EP - 3564 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mishurova, Tatiana A1 - Bruno, Giovanni A1 - Evsevleev, Sergei A1 - Sevostianov, Igor T1 - Determination of macroscopic stress from diffraction experiments BT - a critical discussion JF - Journal of applied physics N2 - The paper is motivated by some inconsistencies and contradictions present in the literature on the calculation of the so-called diffraction elastic constants. In an attempt at unifying the views that the two communities of Materials Science and Mechanics of Materials have on the subject, we revisit and define the terminology used in the field. We also clarify the limitations of the commonly used approaches and show that a unified methodology is also applicable to textured materials with a nearly arbitrary grain shape. We finally compare the predictions based on this methodology with experimental data obtained by in situ synchrotron radiation diffraction on additively manufactured Ti-6Al-4V alloy. We show that (a) the transverse isotropy of the material yields good agreement between the best-fit isotropy approximation (equivalent to the classic Kroner's model) and the experimental data and (b) the use of a general framework allows the calculation of all components of the tensor of diffraction elastic constants, which are not easily measurable by diffraction methods. This allows us to extend the current state-of-the-art with a predictive tool. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0009101 SN - 0021-8979 SN - 1089-7550 VL - 128 IS - 2 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Melville ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mishurova, Tatiana A1 - Sydow, Benjamin A1 - Thiede, Tobias A1 - Sizova, Irina A1 - Ulbricht, Alexander A1 - Bambach, Markus A1 - Bruno, Giovanni T1 - Residual stress and microstructure of a Ti-6Al-4V Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing hybrid demonstrator JF - Metals N2 - Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing (WAAM) features high deposition rates and, thus, allows production of large components that are relevant for aerospace applications. However, a lot of aerospace parts are currently produced by forging or machining alone to ensure fast production and to obtain good mechanical properties; the use of these conventional process routes causes high tooling and material costs. A hybrid approach (a combination of forging and WAAM) allows making production more efficient. In this fashion, further structural or functional features can be built in any direction without using additional tools for every part. By using a combination of forging basic geometries with one tool set and adding the functional features by means of WAAM, the tool costs and material waste can be reduced compared to either completely forged or machined parts. One of the factors influencing the structural integrity of additively manufactured parts are (high) residual stresses, generated during the build process. In this study, the triaxial residual stress profiles in a hybrid WAAM part are reported, as determined by neutron diffraction. The analysis is complemented by microstructural investigations, showing a gradient of microstructure (shape and size of grains) along the part height. The highest residual stresses were found in the transition zone (between WAAM and forged part). The total stress range showed to be lower than expected for WAAM components. This could be explained by the thermal history of the component. KW - residual stress KW - WAAM KW - Ti-6Al-4V KW - additive manufacturing KW - neutron KW - diffraction KW - hybrid manufacturing Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3390/met10060701 SN - 2075-4701 VL - 10 IS - 6 PB - MDPI CY - Basel ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mkrtchian, Vanik E. A1 - Henkel, Carsten T1 - Green function solution of generalised boundary value problems JF - Physics Letters A N2 - We construct an expression for the Green function of a differential operator satisfying nonlocal, homogeneous boundary conditions starting from the fundamental solution of the differential operator. This also provides the solution to the boundary value problem of an inhomogeneous partial differential equation with inhomogeneous, nonlocal boundary conditions. The construction applies for a broad class of linear partial differential equations and linear boundary conditions. KW - Boundary value problem KW - Green function Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physleta.2020.126573 SN - 0375-9601 SN - 1873-2429 SN - 0031-9163 VL - 384 IS - 23 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mohammady, M. Hamed A1 - Auffèves, Alexia A1 - Anders, Janet T1 - Energetic footprints of irreversibility in the quantum regime JF - Communications Physics N2 - In classical thermodynamic processes the unavoidable presence of irreversibility, quantified by the entropy production, carries two energetic footprints: the reduction of extractable work from the optimal, reversible case, and the generation of a surplus of heat that is irreversibly dissipated to the environment. Recently it has been shown that in the quantum regime an additional quantum irreversibility occurs that is linked to decoherence into the energy basis. Here we employ quantum trajectories to construct distributions for classical heat and quantum heat exchanges, and show that the heat footprint of quantum irreversibility differs markedly from the classical case. We also quantify how quantum irreversibility reduces the amount of work that can be extracted from a state with coherences. Our results show that decoherence leads to both entropic and energetic footprints which both play an important role in the optimization of controlled quantum operations at low temperature. In classical thermodynamics irreversibility occurs whenever a non-thermal system is brought into contact with a thermal environment. Using quantum trajectories the authors here establish two energetic footprints of quantum irreversible processes, and find that while quantum irreversibility leads to the occurrence of a quantum heat and a reduction of work production, the two are not linked in the same manner as the classical laws of thermodynamics would dictate. KW - entropy production KW - quantum mechanics KW - thermodynamics Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s42005-020-0356-9 SN - 2399-3650 VL - 3 IS - 1 SP - 1 EP - 14 PB - Springer Nature CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Mohammady, M. Hamed A1 - Auffèves, Alexia A1 - Anders, Janet T1 - Energetic footprints of irreversibility in the quantum regime T2 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - In classical thermodynamic processes the unavoidable presence of irreversibility, quantified by the entropy production, carries two energetic footprints: the reduction of extractable work from the optimal, reversible case, and the generation of a surplus of heat that is irreversibly dissipated to the environment. Recently it has been shown that in the quantum regime an additional quantum irreversibility occurs that is linked to decoherence into the energy basis. Here we employ quantum trajectories to construct distributions for classical heat and quantum heat exchanges, and show that the heat footprint of quantum irreversibility differs markedly from the classical case. We also quantify how quantum irreversibility reduces the amount of work that can be extracted from a state with coherences. Our results show that decoherence leads to both entropic and energetic footprints which both play an important role in the optimization of controlled quantum operations at low temperature. In classical thermodynamics irreversibility occurs whenever a non-thermal system is brought into contact with a thermal environment. Using quantum trajectories the authors here establish two energetic footprints of quantum irreversible processes, and find that while quantum irreversibility leads to the occurrence of a quantum heat and a reduction of work production, the two are not linked in the same manner as the classical laws of thermodynamics would dictate. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1435 KW - entropy production KW - quantum mechanics KW - thermodynamics Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-516766 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Moutal, Nicolas A1 - Grebenkov, Denis S. T1 - The localization regime in a nutshell JF - Journal of magnetic resonance : JMR N2 - High diffusion-sensitizing magnetic field gradients have been more and more often applied nowadays to achieve a better characterization of the microstructure. As the resulting spin-echo signal significantly deviates from the conventional Gaussian form, various models have been employed to interpret these deviations and to relate them with the microstructural properties of a sample. In this paper, we argue that the non-Gaussian behavior of the signal is a generic universal feature of the Bloch-Torrey equation. We provide a simple yet rigorous description of the localization regime emerging at high extended gradients and identify its origin as a symmetry breaking at the reflecting boundary. We compare the consequent non-Gaussian signal decay to other diffusion NMR regimes such as slow-diffusion, motional-narrowing and diffusion-diffraction regimes. We emphasize limitations of conventional perturbative techniques and advocate for non-perturbative approaches which may pave a way to new imaging modalities in this field. KW - Localization regime KW - Bloch-Torrey equation KW - Diffusion NMR KW - Spin-echo KW - Non-perturbative analysis Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmr.2020.106836 SN - 1090-7807 SN - 1096-0856 VL - 320 PB - Elsevier CY - San Diego, Calif. [u.a.] ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Munyaev, Vyacheslav O. A1 - Smirnov, Lev A. A1 - Kostin, Vasily A. A1 - Osipov, Grigory V. A1 - Pikovskij, Arkadij T1 - Analytical approach to synchronous states of globally coupled noisy rotators JF - New journal of physics : the open-access journal for physics N2 - We study populations of globally coupled noisy rotators (oscillators with inertia) allowing a nonequilibrium transition from a desynchronized state to a synchronous one (with the nonvanishing order parameter). The newly developed analytical approaches resulted in solutions describing the synchronous state with constant order parameter for weakly inertial rotators, including the case of zero inertia, when the model is reduced to the Kuramoto model of coupled noise oscillators. These approaches provide also analytical criteria distinguishing supercritical and subcritical transitions to the desynchronized state and indicate the universality of such transitions in rotator ensembles. All the obtained analytical results are confirmed by the numerical ones, both by direct simulations of the large ensembles and by solution of the associated Fokker-Planck equation. We also propose generalizations of the developed approaches for setups where different rotators parameters (natural frequencies, masses, noise intensities, strengths and phase shifts in coupling) are dispersed. KW - coupled rotators KW - synchronization transition KW - hysteresis KW - Kuramoto KW - model KW - noisy systems Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/ab6f93 SN - 1367-2630 VL - 22 IS - 2 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - GEN A1 - Munyaev, Vyacheslav A1 - Smirnov, Lev A. A1 - Kostin, Vasily A1 - Osipov, Grigory V. A1 - Pikovskij, Arkadij T1 - Analytical approach to synchronous states of globally coupled noisy rotators T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - We study populations of globally coupled noisy rotators (oscillators with inertia) allowing a nonequilibrium transition from a desynchronized state to a synchronous one (with the nonvanishing order parameter). The newly developed analytical approaches resulted in solutions describing the synchronous state with constant order parameter for weakly inertial rotators, including the case of zero inertia, when the model is reduced to the Kuramoto model of coupled noise oscillators. These approaches provide also analytical criteria distinguishing supercritical and subcritical transitions to the desynchronized state and indicate the universality of such transitions in rotator ensembles. All the obtained analytical results are confirmed by the numerical ones, both by direct simulations of the large ensembles and by solution of the associated Fokker-Planck equation. We also propose generalizations of the developed approaches for setups where different rotators parameters (natural frequencies, masses, noise intensities, strengths and phase shifts in coupling) are dispersed. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1188 KW - coupled rotators KW - synchronization transition KW - hysteresis KW - Kuramoto model KW - noisy systems Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-524261 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Munyaev, Vyacheslav A1 - Smirnov, Lev A. A1 - Kostin, Vasily A1 - Osipov, Grigory V. A1 - Pikovskij, Arkadij T1 - Analytical approach to synchronous states of globally coupled noisy rotators JF - New Journal of Physics N2 - We study populations of globally coupled noisy rotators (oscillators with inertia) allowing a nonequilibrium transition from a desynchronized state to a synchronous one (with the nonvanishing order parameter). The newly developed analytical approaches resulted in solutions describing the synchronous state with constant order parameter for weakly inertial rotators, including the case of zero inertia, when the model is reduced to the Kuramoto model of coupled noise oscillators. These approaches provide also analytical criteria distinguishing supercritical and subcritical transitions to the desynchronized state and indicate the universality of such transitions in rotator ensembles. All the obtained analytical results are confirmed by the numerical ones, both by direct simulations of the large ensembles and by solution of the associated Fokker-Planck equation. We also propose generalizations of the developed approaches for setups where different rotators parameters (natural frequencies, masses, noise intensities, strengths and phase shifts in coupling) are dispersed. KW - coupled rotators KW - synchronization transition KW - hysteresis KW - Kuramoto model KW - noisy systems Y1 - 2019 VL - 22 IS - 2 PB - Springer Science CY - New York ER - TY - THES A1 - Müller, Jirka T1 - Untersuchungen zum flow-Erleben bei Experimenten als physikalische Lerngelegenheit N2 - In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird untersucht, in wie weit physikalische Experimente ein flow-Erleben bei Lernenden hervorrufen. Flow-Erleben wird als Motivationsursache gesehen und soll den Weg zu Freude und Glück darstellen. Insbesondere wegen dem oft zitierten Fachkräftemangel in naturwissenschaftlichen und technischen Berufen ist eine Motivationssteigerung in naturwissenschaftlichen Unterrichtsfächern wichtig. Denn trotz Leistungssteigerungen in internationalen Vergleichstests möchten in Deutschland deutlich weniger Schüler*innen einen solchen Beruf ergreifen als in anderen Industriestaaten. Daher gilt es, möglichst früh Schüler*innen für naturwissenschaftlich-technische Fächer zu begeistern und insbesondere im regelrecht verhassten Physikunterricht flow-Erleben zu erzeugen. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wird das flow-Erleben von Studierenden in klassischen Laborexperimenten und FELS (Forschend-Entdeckendes Lernen mit dem Smartphone) als Lernumgebung untersucht. FELS ist eine an die Lebenswelt der Schüler*innen angepasste Lernumgebung, in der sie mit Smartphones ihre eigene Lebenswelt experimentell untersuchen. Es zeigt sich, dass sowohl klassische Laborexperimente als auch in der Lebenswelt durchgeführte, smartphonebasierte Experimente flow-Erleben erzeugen. Allerdings verursachen die smartphonebasierten Experimente kaum Stressgefühle. Die in dieser Arbeit herausgefundenen Ergebnisse liefern einen ersten Ansatz, der durch Folgestudien erweitert werden sollte. N2 - The present work examines to what extent physical experiments induce a flow-experience in students. Experiencing flow is seen as a source of motivation and should represent the path to joy and happiness. In particular, because of the often-cited shortage of employees in the natural sciences and technical professions, increasing motivation in natural sciences subjects is important. Because despite performance increases in international comparative tests, significantly fewer students in Germany want to take up such a profession than in other industrialized countries. It is therefore important to get students enthusiastic about scientific and technical subjects as early as possible and, in particular, to create a flow experience in the downright hated physics class. In the context of this work, the flow-experience of students is examined as a learning environment in classic laboratory experiments and FELS (inquiry-based learning with the smartphone, based on the German term: Forschend-Entdeckendes Lernen mit dem Smartphone). FELS is a learning environment adapted to the students' living environment, in which they use smartphones to experimentally examine their own living environment. It turns out that both classic laboratory experiments and smartphone-based experiments create flow-experiences. However, the smartphone-based experiments hardly cause any feelings of stress. The results found in this work provide a first approach, which should be expanded through follow-up studies. T2 - Examining the flow-experience in experiments as a physical learning opportunity KW - Flow KW - Smartphone KW - Experimente KW - Physikdidaktik KW - FELS KW - Lernumgebung KW - blended learning KW - Forschend Entdeckendes Lernen KW - inquiry based learning KW - physics education KW - learning environment KW - experiment Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-482879 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Omelʹchenko, Oleh E. T1 - Nonstationary coherence-incoherence patterns in nonlocally coupled heterogeneous phase oscillators JF - Chaos : an interdisciplinary journal of nonlinear science N2 - We consider a large ring of nonlocally coupled phase oscillators and show that apart from stationary chimera states, this system also supports nonstationary coherence-incoherence patterns (CIPs). For identical oscillators, these CIPs behave as breathing chimera states and are found in a relatively small parameter region only. It turns out that the stability region of these states enlarges dramatically if a certain amount of spatially uniform heterogeneity (e.g., Lorentzian distribution of natural frequencies) is introduced in the system. In this case, nonstationary CIPs can be studied as stable quasiperiodic solutions of a corresponding mean-field equation, formally describing the infinite system limit. Carrying out direct numerical simulations of the mean-field equation, we find different types of nonstationary CIPs with pulsing and/or alternating chimera-like behavior. Moreover, we reveal a complex bifurcation scenario underlying the transformation of these CIPs into each other. These theoretical predictions are confirmed by numerical simulations of the original coupled oscillator system. KW - chimera states KW - synchronization KW - networks KW - Kuramoto KW - populations KW - dynamics KW - bumps KW - model Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5145259 SN - 1054-1500 SN - 1089-7682 VL - 30 IS - 4 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Melville ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Pelisoli, Ingrid A1 - Vos, Joris A1 - Geier, Stephan A1 - Schaffenroth, Veronika A1 - Baran, Andrzej S. T1 - Alone but not lonely BT - observational evidence that binary interaction is always required to form hot subdwarf stars JF - Astronomy and astrophysics : an international weekly journal N2 - Context. Hot subdwarfs are core-helium burning stars that show lower masses and higher temperatures than canonical horizontal branch stars. They are believed to be formed when a red giant suffers an extreme mass-loss episode. Binary interaction is suggested to be the main formation channel, but the high fraction of apparently single hot subdwarfs (up to 30%) has prompted single star formation scenarios to be proposed.Aims. We investigate the possibility that hot subdwarfs could form without interaction by studying wide binary systems. If single formation scenarios were possible, there should be hot subdwarfs in wide binaries that have undergone no interaction.Methods. Angular momentum accretion during interaction is predicted to cause the hot subdwarf companion to spin up to the critical velocity. The effect of this should still be observable given the timescales of the hot subdwarf phase. To study the rotation rates of companions, we have analysed light curves from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite for all known hot subdwarfs showing composite spectral energy distributions indicating the presence of a main sequence wide binary companion. If formation without interaction were possible, that would also imply the existence of hot subdwarfs in very wide binaries that are not predicted to interact. To identify such systems, we have searched for common proper motion companions with projected orbital distances of up to 0.1 pc to all known spectroscopically confirmed hot subdwarfs using Gaia DR2 astrometry.Results. We find that the companions in composite hot subdwarfs show short rotation periods when compared to field main sequence stars. They display a triangular-shaped distribution with a peak around 2.5 days, similar to what is observed for young open clusters. We also report a shortage of hot subdwarfs with candidate common proper motion companions. We identify only 16 candidates after probing 2938 hot subdwarfs with good astrometry. Out of those, at least six seem to be hierarchical triple systems, in which the hot subdwarf is part of an inner binary.Conclusions. The observed distribution of rotation rates for the companions in known wide hot subdwarf binaries provides evidence of previous interaction causing spin-up. Additionally, there is a shortage of hot subdwarfs in common proper motion pairs, considering the frequency of such systems among progenitors. These results suggest that binary interaction is always required for the formation of hot subdwarfs. KW - subdwarfs KW - binaries: general KW - stars: variables: general Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202038473 SN - 0004-6361 SN - 1432-0746 VL - 642 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Perdigón-Toro, Lorena A1 - Zhang, Huotian A1 - Markina, Anastaa si A1 - Yuan, Jun A1 - Hosseini, Seyed Mehrdad A1 - Wolff, Christian Michael A1 - Zuo, Guangzheng A1 - Stolterfoht, Martin A1 - Zou, Yingping A1 - Gao, Feng A1 - Andrienko, Denis A1 - Shoaee, Safa A1 - Neher, Dieter T1 - Barrierless free charge generation in the high-performance PM6:Y6 bulk heterojunction non-fullerene solar cell JF - Advanced materials N2 - Organic solar cells are currently experiencing a second golden age thanks to the development of novel non-fullerene acceptors (NFAs). Surprisingly, some of these blends exhibit high efficiencies despite a low energy offset at the heterojunction. Herein, free charge generation in the high-performance blend of the donor polymer PM6 with the NFA Y6 is thoroughly investigated as a function of internal field, temperature and excitation energy. Results show that photocurrent generation is essentially barrierless with near-unity efficiency, regardless of excitation energy. Efficient charge separation is maintained over a wide temperature range, down to 100 K, despite the small driving force for charge generation. Studies on a blend with a low concentration of the NFA, measurements of the energetic disorder, and theoretical modeling suggest that CT state dissociation is assisted by the electrostatic interfacial field which for Y6 is large enough to compensate the Coulomb dissociation barrier. KW - driving force KW - non-fullerene acceptors KW - organic solar cells KW - photocurrent generation Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.201906763 SN - 0935-9648 SN - 1521-4095 VL - 32 IS - 9 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Petreska, Irina A1 - de Castro, Antonio S. M. A1 - Sandev, Trifce A1 - Lenzi, Ervin K. T1 - The time-dependent Schrödinger equation in non-integer dimensions for constrained quantum motion JF - Modern physics letters : A, Particles and fields, gravitation, cosmology, nuclear physics N2 - We propose a theoretical model, based on a generalized Schroedinger equation, to study the behavior of a constrained quantum system in non-integer, lower than two-dimensional space. The non-integer dimensional space is formed as a product space X x Y, comprising x-coordinate with a Hausdorff measure of dimension alpha(1) = D -1 (1 < D < 2) and y-coordinate with the Lebesgue measure of dimension of length (alpha(2) = 1). Geometric constraints are set at y = 0. Two different approaches to find the Green's function are employed, both giving the same form in terms of the Fox H-function. For D = 2, the solution for two-dimensional quantum motion on a comb is recovered. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Schrödinger equation KW - non-integer dimension KW - Green's function KW - Bessel functions KW - Fox H-function Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physleta.2020.126866 SN - 0375-9601 SN - 1873-2429 VL - 384 IS - 34 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Phuong, Le Quang A1 - Hosseini, Seyed Mehrdad A1 - Sandberg, Oskar J. A1 - Zou, Yingping A1 - Woo, Han Young A1 - Neher, Dieter A1 - Shoaee, Safa T1 - Quantifying quasi-fermi level splitting and open-circuit voltage losses in highly efficient nonfullerene organic solar cells JF - Solar RRL N2 - The power conversion efficiency (PCE) of state-of-the-art organic solar cells is still limited by significant open-circuit voltage (V-OC) losses, partly due to the excitonic nature of organic materials and partly due to ill-designed architectures. Thus, quantifying different contributions of the V-OC losses is of importance to enable further improvements in the performance of organic solar cells. Herein, the spectroscopic and semiconductor device physics approaches are combined to identify and quantify losses from surface recombination and bulk recombination. Several state-of-the-art systems that demonstrate different V-OC losses in their performance are presented. By evaluating the quasi-Fermi level splitting (QFLS) and the V-OC as a function of the excitation fluence in nonfullerene-based PM6:Y6, PM6:Y11, and fullerene-based PPDT2FBT:PCBM devices with different architectures, the voltage losses due to different recombination processes occurring in the active layers, the transport layers, and at the interfaces are assessed. It is found that surface recombination at interfaces in the studied solar cells is negligible, and thus, suppressing the non-radiative recombination in the active layers is the key factor to enhance the PCE of these devices. This study provides a universal tool to explain and further improve the performance of recently demonstrated high-open-circuit-voltage organic solar cells. KW - nonfullerene acceptors KW - organic solar cells KW - quasi-Fermi level KW - splitting KW - quasi-steady-state photoinduced absorptions KW - surface KW - recombinations KW - voltage losses Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/solr.202000649 SN - 2367-198X VL - 5 IS - 1 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - GEN A1 - Phuong, Le Quang A1 - Hosseini, Seyed Mehrdad A1 - Sandberg, Oskar J. A1 - Zou, Yingping A1 - Woo, Han Young A1 - Neher, Dieter A1 - Shoaee, Safa T1 - Quantifying quasi-fermi level splitting and open-circuit voltage losses in highly efficient nonfullerene organic solar cells T2 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - The power conversion efficiency (PCE) of state-of-the-art organic solar cells is still limited by significant open-circuit voltage (V-OC) losses, partly due to the excitonic nature of organic materials and partly due to ill-designed architectures. Thus, quantifying different contributions of the V-OC losses is of importance to enable further improvements in the performance of organic solar cells. Herein, the spectroscopic and semiconductor device physics approaches are combined to identify and quantify losses from surface recombination and bulk recombination. Several state-of-the-art systems that demonstrate different V-OC losses in their performance are presented. By evaluating the quasi-Fermi level splitting (QFLS) and the V-OC as a function of the excitation fluence in nonfullerene-based PM6:Y6, PM6:Y11, and fullerene-based PPDT2FBT:PCBM devices with different architectures, the voltage losses due to different recombination processes occurring in the active layers, the transport layers, and at the interfaces are assessed. It is found that surface recombination at interfaces in the studied solar cells is negligible, and thus, suppressing the non-radiative recombination in the active layers is the key factor to enhance the PCE of these devices. This study provides a universal tool to explain and further improve the performance of recently demonstrated high-open-circuit-voltage organic solar cells. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1384 KW - nonfullerene acceptors KW - organic solar cells KW - quasi-Fermi level KW - splitting KW - quasi-steady-state photoinduced absorptions KW - surface KW - recombinations KW - voltage losses Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-570018 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Poudel, Amit A1 - Tichy, Wolfgang A1 - Brügmann, Bernd A1 - Dietrich, Tim T1 - Increasing the accuracy of binary neutron star simulations with an improved vacuum treatment JF - Physical review : D, Particles, fields, gravitation, and cosmology N2 - Numerical-relativity simulations are essential for studying the last stages of the binary neutron star coalescence. Unfortunately, for stable simulations there is the need to add an artificial low-density atmosphere. Here we discuss a new framework in which we can effectively set the density surrounding the neutron stars to zero to ensure a more accurate simulation. We test our method with a number of single star test cases and for an equal-mass binary neutron star simulation. While the bulk motion of the system is not influenced, and hence there is no improvement with respect to the emitted gravitational-wave signal, we find that the new approach is superior with respect to mass conservation and it allows a much better tracking of outward moving material. This will allow a more accurate simulation of the ejected material and supports the interpretation of present and future multimessenger observations with more accurate numerical-relativity simulations. Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.102.104014 SN - 2470-0010 SN - 2470-0029 VL - 102 IS - 10 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Qiu, Xunlin A1 - Benjamin, Aravindan Joseph A1 - Raman Venkatesan, Thulasinath A1 - Schmidt, Georg C. A1 - Soler, Ricardo Alonso Quintana A1 - Panicker, Pramul Muraleedhara A1 - Gerhard, Reimund A1 - Hübler, Arved Carl T1 - Dielectric and electroacoustic assessment of screen-printed piezoelectric polymer layers as flexible transducers BT - influence of the electrode material JF - IEEE transactions on dielectrics and electrical insulation N2 - Here, piezoelectric transducers consisting of a P(VDF-TrFE) layer with either silver or PEDOT:PSS screen-printed electrodes are studied. The influence of electrodes on the dielectric and electroacoustic properties are studied in dielectric-spectroscopy and ferroelectric-hysteresis measurements. Only when both the bottom and the top electrodes are made of silver, the typical dielectric relaxation of the P(VDF-TrFE) layer is clearly observed. When one or two of the electrodes are of PEDOT:PSS, a Debye-like relaxation is present. Compared with silver electrodes, PEDOT:PSS electrodes allow for moderate self-healing. Consequently, samples with bottom and top PEDOT:PSS electrodes can be poled to saturation, while samples with silver electrodes can hardly be poled to saturation due to destructive electric breakdown. Acoustic transducer measurements show that silver electrodes facilitate higher and broader frequency operation, while PEDOT:PSS electrodes bring slightly lower total harmonic distortion. Overall, the acoustic performance shows no significant deviations between differently electroded samples so that silver electrodes do not offer any advantages for the transducers studied here due to their much higher tendency for destructive electric breakdown. KW - poly(vinylidenefluoride-trifluoroethylene) P(VDF-TrFE) KW - dielectric KW - spectroscopy KW - ferroelectricity and piezoelectricity in polymers KW - screen KW - printing KW - printed electroacoustic thin-film transducers Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/TDEI.2020.008864 SN - 1070-9878 SN - 1558-4135 SN - 0018-9367 VL - 27 IS - 5 SP - 1683 EP - 1690 PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers CY - New York, NY ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Quade, Markus A1 - Isele, Thomas A1 - Abel, Markus T1 - Machine learning control BT - explainable and analyzable methods JF - Physica : D, Nonlinear phenomena N2 - Recently, the term explainable AI came into discussion as an approach to produce models from artificial intelligence which allow interpretation. For a long time, symbolic regression has been used to produce explainable and mathematically tractable models. In this contribution, we extend previous work on symbolic regression methods to infer the optimal control of a dynamical system given one or several optimization criteria, or cost functions. In earlier publications, network control was achieved by automated machine learning control using genetic programming. Here, we focus on the subsequent path continuation analysis of the mathematical expressions which result from the machine learning model. In particular, we use AUTO to analyze the solution properties of the controlled oscillator system which served as our model. As a result, we show that there is a considerable advantage of explainable symbolic regression models over less accessible neural networks. In particular, the roadmap of future works may be to integrate such analyses into the optimization loop itself to filter out robust solutions by construction. KW - Explainable AI KW - Machine learning control KW - Dynamical systems KW - Synchronization control KW - Genetic programming Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physd.2020.132582 SN - 0167-2789 SN - 1872-8022 VL - 412 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER -