33,637 research outputs found
Population inversion in optically pumped asymmetric quantum well terahertz lasers
Intersubband carrier lifetimes and population ratios are calculated for three- and four-level optically pumped terahertz laser structures. Laser operation is based on intersubband transitions between the conduction band states of asymmetric GaAs-Ga(1 – x)Al(x)As quantum wells. It is shown that the carrier lifetimes in three-level systems fulfill the necessary conditions for stimulated emission only at temperatures below 200 K. The addition of a fourth level, however, enables fast depopulation of the lower laser level by resonant longitudinal optical phonon emission and thus offers potential for room temperature laser operation. © 1997 American Institute of Physics
Zapotec Language Activism And Talking Dictionaries
Online dictionaries have become a key tool for some indigenous communities to promote and preserve their languages, often in collaboration with linguists. They can provide a pathway for crossing the digital divide and for establishing a first-ever presence on the internet. Many questions around digital lexicography have been explored, although primarily in relation to large and well-resourced languages. Lexical projects on small and under-resourced languages can provide an opportunity to examine these questions from a different perspective and to raise new questions (Mosel, 2011). In this paper, linguists, technical experts, and Zapotec language activists, who have worked together in Mexico and the United States to create a multimedia platform to showcase and preserve lexical, cultural, and environmental knowledge, share their experience and insight in creating trilingual online Talking Dictionaries in several Zapotec languages. These dictionaries sit opposite from big data mining and illustrate the value of dictionary projects based on small corpora, including having the flexibility to make design decisions to maximize community impact and elevate the status of marginalized languages
Maxwell Fields in Spacetimes Admitting Non-Null Killing Vectors
We consider source-free electromagnetic fields in spacetimes possessing a
non-null Killing vector field, . We assume further that the
electromagnetic field tensor, , is invariant under the action of the
isometry group induced by . It is proved that whenever the two
potentials associated with the electromagnetic field are functionally
independent the entire content of Maxwell's equations is equivalent to the
relation \n^aT_{ab}=0. Since this relation is implied by Einstein's equation
we argue that it is enough to solve merely Einstein's equation for these
electrovac spacetimes because the relevant equations of motion will be
satisfied automatically. It is also shown that for the exceptional case of
functionally related potentials \n^aT_{ab}=0 implies along with one of the
relevant equations of motion that the complementary equation concerning the
electromagnetic field is satisfied.Comment: 7 pages,PACS numbers: 04.20.Cv, 04.20.Me, 04.40.+
Heisenberg exchange in magnetic monoxides
The superexchange intertacion in transition-metal oxides, proposed initially
by Anderson in 1950, is treated using contemporary tight-binding theory and
existing parameters. We find also a direct exchange for nearest-neighbor metal
ions, larger by a factor of order five than the superexchange. This direct
exchange arises from Vddm coupling, rather than overlap of atomic charge
densities, a small overlap exchange contribution which we also estimate. For
FeO and CoO there is also an important negative contribution, related to Stoner
ferromagnetism, from the partially filled minority-spin band which broadens
when ionic spins are aligned. The corresponding J1 and J2 parameters are
calculated for MnO, FeO, CoO, and NiO. They give good accounts of the Neel and
the Curie-Weiss temperatures, show appropriate trends, and give a reasonable
account of their volume dependences. For MnO the predicted value for the
magnetic susceptibility at the Neel temperature and the crystal distortion
arising from the antiferromagnetic transition were reasonably well given.
Application to CuO2 planes in the cuprates gives J=1220oK, compared to an
experimental 1500oK, and for LiCrO2 gives J1=4 50oK compared to an experimental
230oK.Comment: 21 pages, 1 figure, submitted to Phys. Rev. B 1/19/07. Realized
J=4V^2/U applies generally, as opposed to J=2V^2/U from one-electron theory
(1/28 revision
Power laws, scale invariance, and generalized Frobenius series: Applications to Newtonian and TOV stars near criticality
We present a self-contained formalism for analyzing scale invariant
differential equations. We first cast the scale invariant model into its
equidimensional and autonomous forms, find its fixed points, and then obtain
power-law background solutions. After linearizing about these fixed points, we
find a second linearized solution, which provides a distinct collection of
power laws characterizing the deviations from the fixed point. We prove that
generically there will be a region surrounding the fixed point in which the
complete general solution can be represented as a generalized Frobenius-like
power series with exponents that are integer multiples of the exponents arising
in the linearized problem. This Frobenius-like series can be viewed as a
variant of Liapunov's expansion theorem. As specific examples we apply these
ideas to Newtonian and relativistic isothermal stars and demonstrate (both
numerically and analytically) that the solution exhibits oscillatory power-law
behaviour as the star approaches the point of collapse. These series solutions
extend classical results. (Lane, Emden, and Chandrasekhar in the Newtonian
case; Harrison, Thorne, Wakano, and Wheeler in the relativistic case.) We also
indicate how to extend these ideas to situations where fixed points may not
exist -- either due to ``monotone'' flow or due to the presence of limit
cycles. Monotone flow generically leads to logarithmic deviations from scaling,
while limit cycles generally lead to discrete self-similar solutions.Comment: 35 pages; IJMPA style fil
Relativistic Model of Detonation Transition from Neutron to Strange Matter
We study the conversion of neutron matter into strange matter as a detonation
wave. The detonation is assumed to originate from a central region in a
spherically symmetric background of neutrons with a varying radial density
distribution. We present self-similar solutions for the propagation of
detonation in static and collapsing backgrounds of neutron matter. The
solutions are obtained in the framework of general relativistic hydrodynamics,
and are relevant for the possible transition of neutron into strange stars.
Conditions for the formation of either bare or crusted strange stars are
discussed.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to IJMP
Fully Electrified Neugebauer Spacetimes
Generalizing a method presented in an earlier paper, we express the complex
potentials E and Phi of all stationary axisymmetric electrovac spacetimes that
correspond to axis data of the form E(z,0) = (U-W)/(U+W) , Phi(z,0) = V/(U+W) ,
where U = z^{2} + U_{1} z + U_{2} , V = V_{1} z + V_{2} , W = W_{1} z + W_{2} ,
in terms of the complex parameters U_{1}, V_{1}, W_{1}, U_{2}, V_{2} and W_{2},
that are directly associated with the various multipole moments. (Revised to
clarify certain subtle points.)Comment: 25 pages, REVTE
Wireless integrated circuit for 100-channel neural stimulation
Journal ArticleWe present the design of an integrated circuit for wireless neural stimulation, along with bench-top and in-vivo experimental results. The chip has the ability to drive 100 individual stimulation electrodes with constant-current pulses of varying amplitude, duration, interphasic delay, and repetition rate. The stimulation is done using a biphasic (cathodic and anodic) current source, injecting and retracting charge from the nervous system. Wireless communication and power are achieved over a 2.765-MHz inductive link. Only two off-chip components are needed to operate the stimulator: a 10-nF capacitor to aid in power supply regulation and a coil for power and command reception. The chip was fabricated in a commercially available 0.6-ÎĽm 2P3M BiCMOS process. The chip was able to activate motor fibers to produce muscle twitches via a Utah Slanted Electrode Array implanted in cat sciatic nerve, and to activate sensory fibers to recruit evoked potentials in somatosensory cortex
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