547 research outputs found
Analysis of plasma instabilities and verification of the BOUT code for the Large Plasma Device
The properties of linear instabilities in the Large Plasma Device [W.
Gekelman et al., Rev. Sci. Inst., 62, 2875 (1991)] are studied both through
analytic calculations and solving numerically a system of linearized
collisional plasma fluid equations using the 3D fluid code BOUT [M. Umansky et
al., Contrib. Plasma Phys. 180, 887 (2009)], which has been successfully
modified to treat cylindrical geometry. Instability drive from plasma pressure
gradients and flows is considered, focusing on resistive drift waves, the
Kelvin-Helmholtz and rotational interchange instabilities. A general linear
dispersion relation for partially ionized collisional plasmas including these
modes is derived and analyzed. For LAPD relevant profiles including strongly
driven flows it is found that all three modes can have comparable growth rates
and frequencies. Detailed comparison with solutions of the analytic dispersion
relation demonstrates that BOUT accurately reproduces all characteristics of
linear modes in this system.Comment: Published in Physics of Plasmas, 17, 102107 (2010
Energy dynamics in a simulation of LAPD turbulence
Energy dynamics calculations in a 3D fluid simulation of drift wave
turbulence in the linear Large Plasma Device (LAPD) [W. Gekelman et al., Rev.
Sci. Inst. 62, 2875 (1991)] illuminate processes that drive and dissipate the
turbulence. These calculations reveal that a nonlinear instability dominates
the injection of energy into the turbulence by overtaking the linear drift wave
instability that dominates when fluctuations about the equilibrium are small.
The nonlinear instability drives flute-like () density
fluctuations using free energy from the background density gradient. Through
nonlinear axial wavenumber transfer to fluctuations, the
nonlinear instability accesses the adiabatic response, which provides the
requisite energy transfer channel from density to potential fluctuations as
well as the phase shift that causes instability. The turbulence characteristics
in the simulations agree remarkably well with experiment. When the nonlinear
instability is artificially removed from the system through suppressing
modes, the turbulence develops a coherent frequency spectrum
which is inconsistent with experimental data
The Role of Interactions in an Electronic Fabry-Perot Interferometer Operating in the Quantum Hall Effect Regime
Interference of edge channels is expected to be a prominent tool for studying
statistics of charged quasiparticles in the quantum Hall effect (QHE) [A. Stern
(2008), Ann. Phys. 1:204; C. Chamon et al. (1997), Phys. Rev. B, 55:2331]. We
present here a detailed study of an electronic Fabry-Perot interferometer (FPI)
operating in the QHE regime [C. Chamon et al. (1997), Phys. Rev. B, 55:2331],
with the phase of the interfering quasiparticles controlled by the
Aharonov-Bohm (AB) effect. Our main finding is that Coulomb interactions among
the electrons dominate the interference, even in a relatively large area FPI,
leading to a strong dependence of the area enclosed by the interference loop on
the magnetic field. In particular, for a composite edge structure, with a few
independent edge channels propagating along the edge, interference of the
outmost edge channel (belonging to the lowest Landau level) was insensitive to
magnetic field; suggesting a constant enclosed flux. However, when any of the
inner edge channels interfered, the enclosed flux decreased when the magnetic
field increased. By intentionally varying the enclosed area with a biased
metallic gate and observing the periodicity of the interference pattern,
charges e (for integer filling factors) and e/3 (for a fractional filling
factor) were found to be expelled from the FPI. Moreover, these observations
provided also a novel way of detecting the charge of the interfering
quasiparticles.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Controlled dephasing of a quantum dot in the Kondo regime
Kondo correlation in a spin polarized quantum dot (QD) results from the
dynamical formation of a spin singlet between the dot's net spin and a Kondo
cloud of electrons in the leads, leading to enhanced coherent transport through
the QD. We demonstrate here significant dephasing of such transport by coupling
the QD and its leads to potential fluctuations in a near by 'potential
detector'. The qualitative dephasing is similar to that of a QD in the Coulomb
Blockade regime in spite of the fact that the mechanism of transport is quite
different. A much stronger than expected suppression of coherent transport is
measured, suggesting that dephasing is induced mostly in the 'Kondo cloud' of
electrons within the leads and not in the QD.Comment: to be published in PR
Presenting Survey Items One at a Time Compared to All at Once Decreases Missing Data without Sacrificing Validity in Research with Internet Volunteers
In two large web-based studies, across five distinct criteria, presenting survey items one-at-a-time was psychometrically either the same or better than presenting survey items all-at-once on a single web page to volunteer participants. In the one-at-a-time format, participants were no more likely to drop-out of the study (Criterion 1), and were much more likely to provide answers for the survey items (Criterion 2). Rehabilitating participants who otherwise would not have provided survey responses with the one-at-a-time format did not damage internal consistency of the measures (Criterion 3) nor did it negatively affect criterion validity (Criterion 4). Finally, the one-at-a-time format was more efficient with participants completing it more quickly than the all-at-once format (Criterion 5). In short, the one-at-a-time format results in less missing data with a shorter presentation time, and ultimately more power to detect relations among variables
The microscopic nature of localization in the quantum Hall effect
The quantum Hall effect arises from the interplay between localized and
extended states that form when electrons, confined to two dimensions, are
subject to a perpendicular magnetic field. The effect involves exact
quantization of all the electronic transport properties due to particle
localization. In the conventional theory of the quantum Hall effect,
strong-field localization is associated with a single-particle drift motion of
electrons along contours of constant disorder potential. Transport experiments
that probe the extended states in the transition regions between quantum Hall
phases have been used to test both the theory and its implications for quantum
Hall phase transitions. Although several experiments on highly disordered
samples have affirmed the validity of the single-particle picture, other
experiments and some recent theories have found deviations from the predicted
universal behaviour. Here we use a scanning single-electron transistor to probe
the individual localized states, which we find to be strikingly different from
the predictions of single-particle theory. The states are mainly determined by
Coulomb interactions, and appear only when quantization of kinetic energy
limits the screening ability of electrons. We conclude that the quantum Hall
effect has a greater diversity of regimes and phase transitions than predicted
by the single-particle framework. Our experiments suggest a unified picture of
localization in which the single-particle model is valid only in the limit of
strong disorder
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