0000000000283445

AUTHOR

Matti Manninen

showing 8 related works from this author

Electronic structure of quantum dots

2002

researchProduct

Spherical solid model for muon and hydrogen in metals

1979

The spherical solid model and the spin density functional formalism have been applied to calculate the screening of a positive point charge at different lattice sites in Al, Na and Cu. Results are obtained for the Knight shift, the electric field gradient, the heat of solution and the diffusion barrier. It is found essential to use the spin-polarised form to evaluate the Knight shift, especially at low metallic densities and for impurities with a high nuclear charge. Both the Knight shift and the electric field gradient are found to be markedly different for substitutional and interstitial positions. The calculated heat of solution of hydrogen is lowest for the octahedral position in FCC Al…

MuonPhysics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)Condensed matter physicsHydrogenChemistryPoint particleMetals and AlloysGeneral Engineeringchemistry.chemical_elementKnight shiftEffective nuclear chargeMetalCondensed Matter::Materials ScienceImpurityvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumCondensed Matter::Strongly Correlated ElectronsElectric field gradientJournal of Physics F: Metal Physics
researchProduct

Magnetic properties of quantum dots and rings

2001

Exact many-body methods as well as current-spin-density functional theory are used to study the magnetism and electron localization in two-dimensional quantum dots and quasi-one-dimensional quantum rings. Predictions of broken-symmetry solutions within the density functional model are confirmed by exact configuration interaction (CI) calculations: In a quantum ring the electrons localize to form an antiferromagnetic chain which can be described with a simple model Hamiltonian. In a quantum dot the magnetic field localizes the electrons as predicted with the density functional approach.

Quantum phase transitionPhysicssymbols.namesakePauli exclusion principleCondensed matter physicsQuantum dotJelliumPrincipal quantum numbersymbolsElectronic structureMagnetic quantum numberQuantum numberAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsThe European Physical Journal D
researchProduct

Muon states in metals: Recent progress

1984

We report on our results in two interesting questions related to muon spin rotation studies in condensed matter: (i) energetics of muons in metals, including lattice relaxation and zero point motion in self-trapping phenomena, and (ii) systematics of Knight shifts and hyperfine fields.

Nuclear physicsPhysicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsMuonLattice (order)Zero-point energyCondensed Matter::Strongly Correlated ElectronsKnight shiftPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryMuon spin spectroscopyCondensed Matter PhysicsHyperfine structureAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsHyperfine Interactions
researchProduct

Vortex localization in rotating clouds of bosons and fermions

2006

Finite quantal systems at high angular momenta may exhibit vortex formation and localization. These phenomena occur independent of the statistics of the repulsively interacting particles, which may be of bosonic or fermionic nature. We analyze the relation between vortex localization and formation of stable Wigner molecules at high angular momenta in the view of particle-hole duality.Trial wave functions for the vortex states and the corresponding fermion-boson relations are discussed.

PhysicsCondensed Matter::Quantum GasesAngular momentumCondensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale PhysicsStrongly Correlated Electrons (cond-mat.str-el)Duality (optimization)FOS: Physical sciencesFermionAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsVortexCondensed Matter - Strongly Correlated ElectronsQuantum dotQuantum electrodynamicsQuantum mechanicsMesoscale and Nanoscale Physics (cond-mat.mes-hall)Wigner distribution functionWave functionBoson
researchProduct

Positron detrapping from defects: A thermodynamic approach

1981

The rate of positron detrapping in thermal equilibrium from lattice defects has been calculated by relating it to the specific trapping rate. The results for vacancies, dislocations and surfaces each show a different temperature dependence for the escape rate. For vacancies a measure of the importance of the detrapping can be obtained from the ratio of the vacancy formation energy to the positron binding energy in the defect. The positronium desorption rate from a surface is also calculated and agreement with experimental results is found.

Thermal equilibriumPhysics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)ChemistryBinding energyGeneral EngineeringGeneral ChemistryTrappingPositroniumCondensed Matter::Materials SciencePositronLattice defectsDesorptionVacancy defectPhysics::Atomic and Molecular ClustersGeneral Materials ScienceAtomic physicsApplied Physics A Solids and Surfaces
researchProduct

Bright beaches of nanoscale potassium islands on graphite in STM imaging,

2009

We demonstrate, via scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) measurements performed at 48 K, the existence of “bright beaches” at the edges of K islands (diameter ∼ 5 – 500     nm ) on the graphite surface. The enhanced tunneling current is only observed in monolayer-high islands on graphite, and not in islands of similar geometry on top of a K monolayer film. First-principles density functional calculations and STM simulations suggest that this is an STM field effect, which appears as the positive tip attracts donated electrons back to the metallic K islands. The restored charge accumulates preferentially at the island edges. peerReviewed

researchProduct

The Kadanoff-Baym approach to double excitations in finite systems

2012

We benchmark many-body perturbation theory by studying neutral, as well as non-neutral, excitations of finite lattice systems. The neutral excitation spectra are obtained by time-propagating the Kadanoff–Baym equations in the Hartree–Fock and the second Born approximations. Our method is equivalent to solving the Bethe–Salpeter equation with a high-level kernel while respecting self-consistency, which guarantees the fulfillment of a frequency sum rule. As a result, we find that a time-local method, such as Hartree–Fock, can give incomplete spectra, while already the second Born approximation, which is the simplest time-non-local approximation, reproduces well most of the additional excitati…

kadanoff-baymNuclear Theory
researchProduct