3 research outputs found
Microscopic examination of hot spots giving rise to nonlinearity in superconducting resonators
We investigate the microscopic origins of nonlinear rf response in
superconducting electromagnetic resonators. Strong nonlinearity appearing in
the transmission spectra at high input powers manifests itself through the
emergence of jumplike features near the resonant frequency that evolve toward
lower quality factor with higher insertion loss as the rf input power is
increased. We directly relate these characteristics to the dynamics of
localized normal regions (hot spots) caused by microscopic features in the
superconducting material making up the resonator. A clear observation of
hot-spot formation inside a Nb thin film self-resonant structure is presented
by employing the microwave laser scanning microscope, and a direct link between
microscopic and macroscopic manifestations of nonlinearity is established.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Saccadic dysmetria and adaptation after lesions of the cerebellar cortex.
We studied the effects of small lesions of the oculomotor vermis of the cerebellar cortex on the ability of monkeys to execute and adapt saccadic eye movements. For saccades in one horizontal direction, the lesions led to an initial gross hypometria and a permanent abolition of the capacity for rapid adaptation. Mean saccade amplitude recovered from the initial hypometria, although variability remained high. A series of hundreds of repetitive saccades in the same direction resulted in gradual decrement of amplitude. Saccades in other directions were less strongly affected by the lesions. We suggest the following. (1) The cerebellar cortex is constantly recalibrating the saccadic system, thus compensating for rapid biomechanical changes such as might be caused by muscle fatigue. (2) A mechanism capable of slow recovery from dysmetria is revealed despite the permanent absence of rapid adaptation