15,777 research outputs found
Elementary Excitations in One-Dimensional Electromechanical Systems; Transport with Back-Reaction
Using an exactly solvable model, we study low-energy properties of a
one-dimensional spinless electron fluid contained in a quantum-mechanically
moving wire located in a static magnetic field. The phonon and electric current
are coupled via Lorentz force and the eigenmodes are described by two
independent boson fluids. At low energies, the two boson modes are charged
while one of them has excitation gap due to back-reaction of the Lorentz force.
The theory is illustrated by evaluating optical absorption spectra. Our results
are exact and show a non-perturbative regime of electron transport
Unambiguous determination of gravitational waveforms from binary black hole mergers
Gravitational radiation is properly defined only at future null infinity
(\scri), but in practice it is estimated from data calculated at a finite
radius. We have used characteristic extraction to calculate gravitational
radiation at \scri for the inspiral and merger of two equal mass non-spinning
black holes. Thus we have determined the first unambiguous merger waveforms for
this problem. The implementation is general purpose, and can be applied to
calculate the gravitational radiation, at \scri, given data at a finite
radius calculated in another computation.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, published versio
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Reliability modeling of a 1-out-of-2 system: Research with diverse Off-the-shelf SQL database servers
Fault tolerance via design diversity is often the only viable way of achieving sufficient dependability levels when using off-the-shelf components. We have reported previously on studies with bug reports of four open-source and commercial off-the-shelf database servers and later release of two of them. The results were very promising for designers of fault-tolerant solutions that wish to employ diverse servers: very few bugs caused failures in more than one server and none caused failure in more than two. In this paper we offer details of two approaches we have studied to construct reliability growth models for a 1-out-of-2 fault-tolerant server which utilize the bug reports. The models presented are of practical significance to system designers wishing to employ diversity with off-the-shelf components since often the bug reports are the only direct dependability evidence available to them
Predicting spinal hypotension during Caesarean section
Hypotension under spinal anaesthesia for Caesarean section remains a common problem with attendant maternal and foetal morbidity attached to it. This review examines some of the issues surrounding the prediction of spinal hypotension, including concerns with current evidence, debate regarding the mechanism of hypotension and the utility of prediction in this group of patients. It will then cover some of the more conventional and established preoperative predictors of hypotension. Particular attention will be paid to the assessment of autonomic function and some of the novel methods being used as predictors of severe maternal hypotension. The implications of autonomic dysfunction and areas for future research are discussed.Keywords: Spinal anaesthesia, hypotension, Caesarean section, prediction
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Toward a Formalism for Conservative Claims about the Dependability of Software-Based Systems
In recent work, we have argued for a formal treatment of confidence about the claims made in dependability cases for software-based systems. The key idea underlying this work is "the inevitability of uncertainty": It is rarely possible to assert that a claim about safety or reliability is true with certainty. Much of this uncertainty is epistemic in nature, so it seems inevitable that expert judgment will continue to play an important role in dependability cases. Here, we consider a simple case where an expert makes a claim about the probability of failure on demand (pfd) of a subsystem of a wider system and is able to express his confidence about that claim probabilistically. An important, but difficult, problem then is how such subsystem (claim, confidence) pairs can be propagated through a dependability case for a wider system, of which the subsystems are components. An informal way forward is to justify, at high confidence, a strong claim, and then, conservatively, only claim something much weaker: "I'm 99 percent confident that the pfd is less than 10-5, so it's reasonable to be 100 percent confident that it is less than 10-3." These conservative pfds of subsystems can then be propagated simply through the dependability case of the wider system. In this paper, we provide formal support for such reasoning
Spectral signatures of the Luttinger liquid to charge-density-wave transition
Electron- and phonon spectral functions of the one-dimensional,
spinless-fermion Holstein model at half filling are calculated in the four
distinct regimes of the phase diagram, corresponding to an attractive or
repulsive Luttinger liquid at weak electron-phonon coupling, and a band- or
polaronic insulator at strong coupling. The results obtained by means of kernel
polynomial and systematic cluster approaches reveal substantially different
physics in these regimes and further indicate that the size of the phonon
frequency significantly affects the nature of the quantum Peierls phase
transition.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; final version, accepted for publication in
Physical Review
Polarized Magnetic Wire Induced by Tunneling Through a Magnetic Impurity
Using the zero mode method we compute the conductance of a wire consisting of
a magnetic impurity coupled to two Luttinger liquid leads characterized by the
Luttinger exponent . We find for resonance conditions, in which
the Fermi energy of the leads is close to a single particle energy of the
impurity, the conductance as a function of temperature is , whereas for off-resonance conditions the conductance is
. By applying a gate voltage and/or
a magnetic field, one of the spin components can be in resonance while the
other is off-resonance causing a strong asymmetry between the spin-up and
spin-down conductances.Comment: 8 pages, submitted to PR
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