10,642 research outputs found
Casimir pistons with hybrid boundary conditions
The Casimir effect giving rise to an attractive or repulsive force between
the configuration boundaries that confine the massless scalar field is
reexamined for one to three-dimensional pistons in this paper. Especially, we
consider Casimir pistons with hybrid boundary conditions, where the boundary
condition on the piston is Neumann and those on other surfaces are Dirichlet.
We show that the Casimir force on the piston is always repulsive, in contrast
with the same problem where the boundary conditions are Dirichlet on all
surfaces.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures,references added, minor typos correcte
Two-dimensional molecular para-hydrogen and ortho-deuterium at zero temperature
We study molecular para-hydrogen (p-) and ortho-deuterium
(o-) in two dimensions and in the limit of zero temperature by
means of the diffusion Monte Carlo method. We report energetic and structural
properties of both systems like the total and kinetic energy per particle,
radial pair distribution function, and Lindemann's ratio in the low pressure
regime. By comparing the total energy per particle as a function of the density
in liquid and solid p-, we show that molecular para-hydrogen, and
also ortho-deuterium, remain solid at zero temperature. Interestingly, we
assess the quality of three different symmetrized trial wave functions, based
on the Nosanow-Jastrow model, in the p- solid film at the
variational level. In particular, we analyze a new type of symmetrized trial
wave function which has been used very recently to describe solid He and
found that also characterizes hydrogen satisfactorily. With this wave function,
we show that the one-body density matrix of solid p- possesses off-diagonal long range order, with a condensate fraction
that increases sizably in the negative pressure regime.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
Towards Unification for Pointing Task Evaluation in 3D Desktop Virtual Environment
International audienceNew visualization systems for large and complex datasets are emerging and 3D Virtual Environments turn out to be a relevant solution. Interaction tasks in these 3D VE have been defined, especially to support evaluation of these applications. Nevertheless there is a lack of unified protocol to assess these elementary tasks in this context. Moreover it can be complex to determine the appropriate technique to perform these tasks as there is a lack of reference data. A standard is available for 2D pointing task, but there is no equivalence in 3D. In this paper, we propose an adaptation of this standard to a pointing task in a 3D VE. We detail our protocol and an instrumentation, which aims at assessing performance, comfort of techniques and satisfaction of users. We also present results of a user experimentation conducted according to this standard’s adaptation
Criterion for bosonic superfluidity in an optical lattice
We show that the current method of determining superfluidity in optical
lattices based on a visibly sharp bosonic momentum distribution
can be misleading, for even a normal Bose gas can have a similarly sharp
. We show that superfluidity in a homogeneous system can be
detected from the so-called visibility of that must
be 1 within , where is the number of bosons. We also show that
the T=0 visibility of trapped lattice bosons is far higher than what is
obtained in some current experiments, suggesting strong temperature effects and
that these states can be normal. These normal states allow one to explore the
physics in the quantum critical region.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; published versio
CARISMA: a context-sensitive approach to race-condition sample-instance selection for multithreaded applications
Dynamic race detectors can explore multiple thread schedules of a multithreaded program over the same input to detect data races. Although existing sampling-based precise race detectors reduce overheads effectively so that lightweight precise race detection can be performed in testing or post-deployment environments, they are ineffective in detecting races if the sampling rates are low. This paper presents CARISMA to address this problem. CARISMA exploits the insight that along an execution trace, a program may potentially handle many accesses to the memory locations created at the same site for similar purposes. Iterating over multiple execution trials of the same input, CARISMA estimates and distributes the sampling budgets among such location creation sites, and probabilistically collects a fraction of all accesses to the memory locations associated with such sites for subsequent race detection. Our experiment shows that, compared with PACER on the same platform and at the same sampling rate (such as 1%), CARISMA is significantly more effective. © 2012 ACM.postprin
Superconducting magnesium diboride films on Silicon with Tc0 about 24K grown via vacuum annealing from stoichiometric precursors
Superconducting magnesium diboride films with Tc0 ~ 24 K and sharp transition
\~ 1 K were successfully prepared on silicon substrates by pulsed laser
deposition from a stoichiometric MgB2 target. Contrary to previous reports,
anneals at 630 degree and a background of 2x10^(-4) torr Ar/4%H2 were performed
without the requirement of Mg vapor or an Mg cap layer. This integration of
superconducting MgB2 films on silicon may thus prove enabling in
superconductor-semiconductor device applications. Images of surface morphology
and cross-section profiles by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) show that the
films have a uniform surface morphology and thickness. Energy dispersive
spectroscopy (EDS) reveals these films were contaminated with oxygen,
originating either from the growth environment or from sample exposure to air.
The oxygen contamination may account for the low Tc for those in-situ annealed
films, while the use of Si as the substrate does not result in a decrease in Tc
as compared to other substrates.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 15 references; due to file size limit, images
were blure
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