519 research outputs found
Experimental ratchet effect in superconducting films with periodic arrays of asymmetric potentials
A vortex lattice ratchet effect has been investigated in Nb films grown on
arrays of nanometric Ni triangles, which induce periodic asymmetric pinning
potentials. The vortex lattice motion yields a net dc-voltage when an ac
driving current is applied to the sample and the vortex lattice moves through
the field of asymmetric potentials. This ratchet effect is studied taking into
account the array geometry, the temperature, the number of vortices per unit
cell of the array and the applied ac currents.Comment: 15 pages, figures include
Vortex motion channeling effects in Nb with mesoscopic arrays of Ni lines
Ordered arrays of submicrometric Ni lines have been fabricated in sputtered Nb films. Magnetotransport R(H) and (I, V) curves were measured close to the critical temperature using a cross-shape bridge that allows us to apply current in two directions: parallel or perpendicular to the lines. The experimental results show anisotropic vortex motion with clear channeling effects. In R(H) data, magnetic features appear but they are absent in the (I, V) curves
Lattice effects and current reversal in superconducting ratchets
Competition between the vortex lattice and a lattice of asymmetric artificial
defects is shown to play a crucial role in ratchet experiments in
superconducting films. We present a novel and collective mechanism for current
reversal based on a reconfiguration of the vortex lattice. In contrast to
previous models of vortex current reversal, the mechanism is based on the
global response of the vortex lattice to external forces.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
Anisotropic pinning enhancement in Nb films with arrays of submicrometric Ni lines
Arrays of submicrometric Ni lines have been fabricated in superconducting Nb films by electron beam lithography. In the mixed state, these arrays induce strong anisotropy in the dissipation behavior. The dissipation is reduced several orders of magnitude, in the whole applied magnetic field range, when the vortex motion is perpendicular to the Ni lines (applied current parallel to them) in comparison with dissipation of vortices moving parallel to the lines. In addition, for the samples studied in this work, a change in the slope of the rho(B) curves is observed when the vortices move perpendicular to the lines and the vortex lattice parameter matches the width of the Ni lines
Active Sampling-based Binary Verification of Dynamical Systems
Nonlinear, adaptive, or otherwise complex control techniques are increasingly
relied upon to ensure the safety of systems operating in uncertain
environments. However, the nonlinearity of the resulting closed-loop system
complicates verification that the system does in fact satisfy those
requirements at all possible operating conditions. While analytical proof-based
techniques and finite abstractions can be used to provably verify the
closed-loop system's response at different operating conditions, they often
produce conservative approximations due to restrictive assumptions and are
difficult to construct in many applications. In contrast, popular statistical
verification techniques relax the restrictions and instead rely upon
simulations to construct statistical or probabilistic guarantees. This work
presents a data-driven statistical verification procedure that instead
constructs statistical learning models from simulated training data to separate
the set of possible perturbations into "safe" and "unsafe" subsets. Binary
evaluations of closed-loop system requirement satisfaction at various
realizations of the uncertainties are obtained through temporal logic
robustness metrics, which are then used to construct predictive models of
requirement satisfaction over the full set of possible uncertainties. As the
accuracy of these predictive statistical models is inherently coupled to the
quality of the training data, an active learning algorithm selects additional
sample points in order to maximize the expected change in the data-driven model
and thus, indirectly, minimize the prediction error. Various case studies
demonstrate the closed-loop verification procedure and highlight improvements
in prediction error over both existing analytical and statistical verification
techniques.Comment: 23 page
Black Silicon with high density and high aspect ratio nanowhiskers
Physical properties of black Silicon (b-Si) formed on Si wafers by reactive
ion etching in chlorine plasma are reported in an attempt to clarify the
formation mechanism and the origin of the observed optical and electrical
phenomena which are promising for a variety of applications. The b-Si
consisting of high density and high aspect ratio sub-micron length whiskers or
pillars with tip diameters of well under 3 nm exhibits strong photoluminescence
(PL) both in visible and infrared, which are interpreted in conjunction with
defects, confinement effects and near band-edge emission. Structural analysis
indicate that the whiskers are all crystalline and encapsulated by a thin Si
oxide layer. Infrared vibrational spectrum of Si-O-Si bondings in terms of
transverse-optic (TO) and longitudinal-optic (LO) phonons indicates that
disorder induced LO-TO optical mode coupling can be an effective tool in
assessing structural quality of the b-Si. The same phonons are likely coupled
to electrons in visible region PL transitions. Field emission properties of
these nanoscopic features are demonstrated indicating the influence of the tip
shape on the emission. Overall properties are discussed in terms of surface
morphology of the nano whiskers
Automated Discrimination of Pathological Regions in Tissue Images: Unsupervised Clustering vs Supervised SVM Classification
Recognizing and isolating cancerous cells from non pathological tissue areas (e.g. connective stroma) is crucial for fast and objective immunohistochemical analysis of tissue images. This operation allows the further application of fully-automated techniques for quantitative evaluation of protein activity, since it avoids the necessity of a preventive manual selection of the representative pathological areas in the image, as well as of taking pictures only in the pure-cancerous portions of the tissue. In this paper we present a fully-automated method based on unsupervised clustering that performs tissue segmentations highly comparable with those provided by a skilled operator, achieving on average an accuracy of 90%. Experimental results on a heterogeneous dataset of immunohistochemical lung cancer tissue images demonstrate that our proposed unsupervised approach overcomes the accuracy of a theoretically superior supervised method such as Support Vector Machine (SVM) by 8%
Transverse rectification in superconducting thin films with arrays of asymmetric defects
Superconducting Nb films have been grown on top of arrays of Cu nanotriangles. These asymmetric pinning centers strongly modify the vortex lattice dynamics. Two rectification effects have been observed: (i) longitudinal ratchet effect when the input currents are injected perpendicular to the triangle reflection symmetry axis and (ii) transverse rectification effect hen the input currents are injected parallel to the triangle reflection symmetry axis and the output voltage drop occurs perpendicular to the triangle reflection symmetry axis. Increasing the applied magnetic field, the former shows a change of the output voltage polarity, the transverse output voltage does not show any polarity reversal
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