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This book contains most, but regrettably not all, the papers that
were presented at The Advanced Research Workshop, held July 1-5,
1997, at Smolenice Castle, Slovak Republic. The problem of angular
divergence is of great importance in quantum electronics: low
divergence is required not only in most of practical laser
applications, but also for achieving high efficiency of parametric
laser frequency conversion, and harmonic generation. The large
volume of available studies aimed at improving the pump systems and
the spectroscopic properties of lasing media, brought about no more
than 2-3 fold increases in laser efficiency, while concurrent
studies of angular divergence and the implementation of the
findings, resulted in several order of magnitude of increases in
radiance. The spatial beam structure that is formed in the laser
cavity together with the active element constitute the most
critical laser elements. The engineering devices, such as
excitation systems, lasing gas circulation systems, etc., are
usually at the top of the agenda of scientific meetings and of
gatherings of engineering experts. The divergence problem has never
been discussed by a broad community of experts in this field.
The Workshop Heterostructure Epitaxy and Devices HEAD'97 was held
from October 12 to 16, 1997 at Smolenice Castle, the House of
Scientists of the Slovak Academy of Sciences and was co-organized
by the Institute of Electrical Engineering, Slovak Academy of
Sciences, Bratislava and the Institute of Thin Film and Ion
Technology, Research Centre, liilich. It was the third in a series
of workshops devoted to topics related to heterostructure epitaxy
and devices and the second included into the category of Advanced
Research Workshops (ARW) under sponsorship of the NATO. More than
70 participants from 15 countries attended (Austria, Belarus,
Belgium, Czech Republic, Finland, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy,
Poland, Russia, Slovakia, Ukraine, the United Kingdom and the USA).
Novel microelectronic and optoelectronic devices are based on
semiconductor heterostructures. The goal of the ARW HEAD'97 was to
discuss various questions related to the use of new materials (e.g.
compound semiconductors based on high band-gap nitrides and low
band-gap antimonides) and new procedures (low-temperature epitaxial
growth), as well as new principles (nanostructures, quantum wires
and dots, etc.) aimed at realizing high-performance heterostructure
based electronic devices. Almost 70 papers (invited and contributed
oral presentations as well as posters) were presented at the ARW
HEAD'97 and the main part of them is included into these
Proceedings.
Five questions dominated the ARW on Physics and Materials Science
of High Temperature Superconductors, of which this book forms the
permanent record. Briefly, these are: (i) How close are we to a
unified theory? The consensus is that we are not. (ii) Flux
pinning: can it be achieved in bulk materials? Still an open
question. The following three questions are related. (iii) Can
grain boundary contributions be brought under control? (iv) What is
the real requirement for purity and general chemistry control?
(v)What is the practical outlook for bulk products - tapes and
wires? One of the conclusions is that the geometry and dimensions
in thin films are the key parameters that facilitate the
realization of high current densities and, consequently, their
commercial application. On the other hand, the very large number of
poorly understood microstructural, chemical and mechanical
variables involved in the preparation of bulk materials are
currently prohibiting large scale commercialization of wires and
tapes.
From October 15 to 19, 1995 a Workshop on Hetero-
structureEpitaxyandDeviceswasheldatSmoleniceCastlenear
Slovakia'scapital Bratislava. The intention ofthisWorkshop was
toestablishandstrengthentiesbetweenscientistsoftheformerly
Socialist East and Middle-European states with their colleagues
fromtheWesterncountries. WiththisaimtheWorkshopfoundthe
financialsupportbyNATOwhichtremendouslyhelpedtofacilitate
organizingthemeeting That the Workshop was also a scientific
success is evidenced by the present volume comprising a selection
of the contributed papers. We are confident that the reader of
these Proceedings can convincehimselfofthe highqualityofthe work
whose results are presented here. We hope that this and the
numerousdiscussionsbetweenthe participants ofthe Workshop will
promote cooperations among scientists from the countries
representedatthemeeting. It is a pleasure to express our gratitude
to NATO and, as representatives ofthe institutions involved in the
organization, to Lubomir Malacky (Institute of Electrical
Engineering, Slovak Academy of Sciences) and Hergo-Heinrich Wehmann
(Institute for Semiconductor Technology, Technical University
Braun- schweig) whose dedicated work was most essential for the
Workshop. A. Schlachetzki J. Novak November1995 xiii
SIMULATIONOFIII-VLAYERGROWTH y. ARIMA DepartmentofPhysics,
Gakushuin University 1-5-1 Mejiro, Toshima-ku, Tokyo 171, Japan AND
T. IRISAWA ComputerCenter, Gakushuin University 1-5-1 Mejiro,
Toshima-ku, Tokyo 171, Japan 1. Introduction Since it was reported
[1] that the intensities of RHEED for the growing surface of aGaAs
crystal in the process of MBE oscillate with a period
correspondingto the completion of a monolayer, this phenomenon has
been applied to the thin layer growth of man-made superlattices.
Five questions dominated the ARW on Physics and Materials Science
of High Temperature Superconductors, of which this book forms the
permanent record. Briefly, these are: (i) How close are we to a
unified theory? The consensus is that we are not. (ii) Flux
pinning: can it be achieved in bulk materials? Still an open
question. The following three questions are related. (iii) Can
grain boundary contributions be brought under control? (iv) What is
the real requirement for purity and general chemistry control?
(v)What is the practical outlook for bulk products - tapes and
wires? One of the conclusions is that the geometry and dimensions
in thin films are the key parameters that facilitate the
realization of high current densities and, consequently, their
commercial application. On the other hand, the very large number of
poorly understood microstructural, chemical and mechanical
variables involved in the preparation of bulk materials are
currently prohibiting large scale commercialization of wires and
tapes.
This book contains most, but regrettably not all, the papers that
were presented at The Advanced Research Workshop, held July 1-5,
1997, at Smolenice Castle, Slovak Republic. The problem of angular
divergence is of great importance in quantum electronics: low
divergence is required not only in most of practical laser
applications, but also for achieving high efficiency of parametric
laser frequency conversion, and harmonic generation. The large
volume of available studies aimed at improving the pump systems and
the spectroscopic properties of lasing media, brought about no more
than 2-3 fold increases in laser efficiency, while concurrent
studies of angular divergence and the implementation of the
findings, resulted in several order of magnitude of increases in
radiance. The spatial beam structure that is formed in the laser
cavity together with the active element constitute the most
critical laser elements. The engineering devices, such as
excitation systems, lasing gas circulation systems, etc., are
usually at the top of the agenda of scientific meetings and of
gatherings of engineering experts. The divergence problem has never
been discussed by a broad community of experts in this field.
The Workshop Heterostructure Epitaxy and Devices HEAD'97 was held
from October 12 to 16, 1997 at Smolenice Castle, the House of
Scientists of the Slovak Academy of Sciences and was co-organized
by the Institute of Electrical Engineering, Slovak Academy of
Sciences, Bratislava and the Institute of Thin Film and Ion
Technology, Research Centre, liilich. It was the third in a series
of workshops devoted to topics related to heterostructure epitaxy
and devices and the second included into the category of Advanced
Research Workshops (ARW) under sponsorship of the NATO. More than
70 participants from 15 countries attended (Austria, Belarus,
Belgium, Czech Republic, Finland, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy,
Poland, Russia, Slovakia, Ukraine, the United Kingdom and the USA).
Novel microelectronic and optoelectronic devices are based on
semiconductor heterostructures. The goal of the ARW HEAD'97 was to
discuss various questions related to the use of new materials (e.g.
compound semiconductors based on high band-gap nitrides and low
band-gap antimonides) and new procedures (low-temperature epitaxial
growth), as well as new principles (nanostructures, quantum wires
and dots, etc.) aimed at realizing high-performance heterostructure
based electronic devices. Almost 70 papers (invited and contributed
oral presentations as well as posters) were presented at the ARW
HEAD'97 and the main part of them is included into these
Proceedings.
Dieser Buchtitel ist Teil des Digitalisierungsprojekts Springer
Book Archives mit Publikationen, die seit den Anfangen des Verlags
von 1842 erschienen sind. Der Verlag stellt mit diesem Archiv
Quellen fur die historische wie auch die disziplingeschichtliche
Forschung zur Verfugung, die jeweils im historischen Kontext
betrachtet werden mussen. Dieser Titel erschien in der Zeit vor
1945 und wird daher in seiner zeittypischen politisch-ideologischen
Ausrichtung vom Verlag nicht beworben.
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