46,685 research outputs found
Fiber optic crossbar switch for automatically patching optical signals
A system for automatically optically switching fiber optic data signals between a plurality of input optical fibers and selective ones of a plurality of output fibers is described. The system includes optical detectors which are connected to each of the input fibers for converting the optic data signals appearing at the respective input fibers to an RF signal. A plurality of RF to optical signal converters are arranged in rows and columns. The output of each of the optical detectors are each applied to a respective row of optical signal converted for being converters back to an optical signal when the particular optical signal converter is selectively activated by a dc voltage
Stoichiometry control of the electronic properties of the LaAlO_3/SrTiO_3 heterointerface
We investigate the effect of the laser parameters of pulsed laser deposition
on the film stoichiometry and electronic properties of LaAlO_3/SrTiO_3 (001)
heterostructures. The La/Al ratio in the LaAlO_3 films was varied over a wide
range from 0.88 to 1.15, and was found to have a strong effect on the interface
conductivity. In particular, the carrier density is modulated over more than
two orders of magnitude. The film lattice expansion, caused by cation
vacancies, is found to be the important functional parameter. These results can
be understood to arise from the variations in the electrostatic boundary
conditions, and their resolution, with stoichiometry.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted for publicatio
Dramatic Mobility Enhancements in Doped SrTiO3 Thin Films by Defect Management
We report bulk-quality n-type SrTiO3 (n-SrTiO3) thin films fabricated by
pulsed laser deposition, with electron mobility as high as 6600 cm2 V-1 s-1 at
2 K and carrier density as low as 2.0 x 10^18cm-3 (~ 0.02 at. %), far exceeding
previous pulsed laser deposition films. This result stems from precise
strontium and oxygen vacancy defect chemistry management, providing a general
approach for defect control in complex oxide heteroepitaxy.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Constructing N-qubit entanglement monotones from anti-linear operators
We present a method to construct entanglement measures for pure states of
multipartite qubit systems. The key element of our approach is an antilinear
operator that we call {\em comb} in reference to the {\em hairy-ball theorem}.
For qubits (or spin 1/2) the combs are automatically invariant under
SL(2,\CC). This implies that the {\em filters} obtained from the combs are
entanglement monotones by construction. We give alternative formulae for the
concurrence and the 3-tangle as expectation values of certain antilinear
operators. As an application we discuss inequivalent types of genuine
four-qubit entanglement.Comment: 5 pages, revtex4; more detailed illustration of the metho
No Signalling and Quantum Key Distribution
Standard quantum key distribution protocols are provably secure against
eavesdropping attacks, if quantum theory is correct. It is theoretically
interesting to know if we need to assume the validity of quantum theory to
prove the security of quantum key distribution, or whether its security can be
based on other physical principles. The question would also be of practical
interest if quantum mechanics were ever to fail in some regime, because a
scientifically and technologically advanced eavesdropper could perhaps use
post-quantum physics to extract information from quantum communications without
necessarily causing the quantum state disturbances on which existing security
proofs rely. Here we describe a key distribution scheme provably secure against
general attacks by a post-quantum eavesdropper who is limited only by the
impossibility of superluminal signalling. The security of the scheme stems from
violation of a Bell inequality.Comment: Clarifications and minor revisions in response to comments. Final
version; to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Fermi surface and superconductivity in low-density high-mobility {\delta}-doped SrTiO3
The electronic structure of low-density n-type SrTiO3 delta-doped
heterostructures is investigated by angular dependent Shubnikov-de Haas
oscillations. In addition to a controllable crossover from a three- to
two-dimensional Fermi surface, clear beating patterns for decreasing dopant
layer thicknesses are found. These indicate the lifting of the degeneracy of
the conduction band due to subband quantization in the two-dimensional limit.
Analysis of the temperature-dependent oscillations shows that similar effective
masses are found for all components, associated with the splitting of the light
electron pocket. The dimensionality crossover in the superconducting state is
found to be distinct from the normal state, resulting in a rich phase diagram
as a function of dopant layer thickness.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, submitted for publicatio
Dominant mobility modulation by the electric field effect at the LaAlO_3 / SrTiO_3 interface
Caviglia et al. [Nature (London) 456, 624 (2008)] have found that the
superconducting LaAlO_3 / SrTiO_3 interface can be gate modulated. A central
issue is to determine the principal effect of the applied electric field. Using
magnetotransport studies of a gated structure, we find that the mobility
variation is almost five times as large as the sheet carrier density.
Furthermore, superconductivity can be suppressed at both positive and negative
gate bias. These results indicate that the relative disorder strength strongly
increases across the superconductor-insulator transition.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
A 3-component laser-Doppler velocimeter data acquisition and reduction system
A laser doppler velocimeter capable of measuring all three components of velocity simultaneously in low-speed flows is described. All the mean velocities, Reynolds stresses, and higher-order products can be evaluated. The approach followed is to split one of the two colors used in a 2-D system, thus creating a third set of beams which is then focused in the flow from an off-axis direction. The third velocity component is computed from the known geometry of the system. The laser optical hardware and the data acquisition electronics are described in detail. In addition, full operating procedures and listings of the software (written in BASIC and ASSEMBLY languages) are also included. Some typical measurements obtained with this system in a vortex/mixing layer interaction are presented and compared directly to those obtained with a cross-wire system
Bell inequalities for three particles
We present tight Bell inequalities expressed by probabilities for three four-
and five-dimensional systems. The tight structure of Bell inequalities for
three -dimensional systems (qudits) is proposed. Some interesting Bell
inequalities of three qubits reduced from those of three qudits are also
studied.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Visual Search for Galaxies near the Northern Crossing of the Supergalactic plane by the Milky Way
We have visually examined twelve Palomar red Plates for galaxies at low
Galactic latitude b, where the Supergalactic Plane (SGP) is crossed by the
Galactic Plane (GP), at Galactic longitude l ~135 degrees. The catalogue
consists of 2575 galaxy candidates, of which 462 have major axis diameters d >=
0.8 arc min (uncorrected for extinction). Galaxy candidates can be identified
down to |b| ~ 0 degrees. One of our galaxy candidates (J24 = Dwingeloo 1) has
recently been discovered independently in 21cm by Kraan-Korteweg et al. (1994)
as a nearby galaxy. Comparisons with the structures seen in the IRAS and UGC
catalogues are made. We compare the success rate of identifying galaxies using
the IRAS Point Source Catalogue under different colour selection criteria. The
criteria that require both the 60 micron and 100 micron fluxes to be of high
quality, have the highest probability of selecting a galaxy (with d >= 0.6 arc
min), but at the expense of selecting a smaller number of galaxies in total.Comment: uuencoded compressed postscript, without figures. The figures are
available at http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/preprint/PrePrint.htm
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