1,105 research outputs found
Photoinduced Electron Pairing in a Driven Cavity
We demonstrate how virtual scattering of laser photons inside a cavity via two-photon processes can induce controllable long-range electron interactions in two-dimensional materials. We show that laser light that is red (blue) detuned from the cavity yields attractive (repulsive) interactions whose strength is proportional to the laser intensity. Furthermore, we find that the interactions are not screened effectively except at very low frequencies. For realistic cavity parameters, laser-induced heating of the electrons by inelastic photon scattering is suppressed and coherent electron interactions dominate. When the interactions are attractive, they cause an instability in the Cooper channel at a temperature proportional to the square root of the driving intensity. Our results provide a novel route for engineering electron interactions in a wide range of two-dimensional materials including AB-stacked bilayer graphene and the conducting interface between LaAlO3 and SrTiO3
Equilibrium states for potentials with \sup\phi - \inf\phi < \htop(f)
In the context of smooth interval maps, we study an inducing scheme approach
to prove existence and uniqueness of equilibrium states for potentials
with he `bounded range' condition \sup \phi - \inf \phi < \htop, first used
by Hofbauer and Keller. We compare our results to Hofbauer and Keller's use of
Perron-Frobenius operators. We demonstrate that this `bounded range' condition
on the potential is important even if the potential is H\"older continuous. We
also prove analyticity of the pressure in this context.Comment: Added Lemma 6 to deal with the disparity between leading eigenvalues
and operator norms. Added extra references and corrected some typo
Evaluation of an Internet Document Delivery Service
An Internet-based Document Delivery Service (DDS) has been developed within the framework of the CNR ( the Italian Research National Council) Project BiblioMIME, in order to take advantage of new Internet technologies and promote cooperation among CNR and Italian university libraries. Adopting such technologies changes the traditional organisation of DDS and may drastically reduce costs and delivery times. An information system managing DDS requests and monitoring the temporal evolution of the service has been implemented, running on the local-area network of a test-site library. It aims to track number and types of documents requested and received, user distribution, delivery times and types (surface mail, fax, Internet), to automate repetitive manual procedures and to deal with the various accounting methods used by other libraries. Transmission of documents is carried out by means of an e-mail/Web gateway system supporting document exchange via Internet, which assists receiving libraries in retrieving requested documents. This paper describes the architecture and main design features of the e-mail/Web gateway server (the BiblioMime server). This approach permits librarians to continue using e-mail service to send large documents, while resolving problems that users may encounter when downloading large size files with e-mail agents. The library operator sends the document as an attachment to the destination address; on fly the e-mail server extracts and saves the attachments in a web-server disk file and substitutes them with a new message part that includes an URL pointing to the saved document. The receiver can download these large objects by means of a user-friendly browser. We further discuss the data gathered during the triennium 1998-2000; this consists of about 5,000 DDS transactions per annum with 300 other Italian scientific and bio-medical libraries and commercial document suppliers. Use of the instruments described above allowed us to evaluate the performance of service "before" and "after" the use of Internet Document Delivery and to extract some critical data regarding DDS. Those include: a) libraries with which we have greater numbers of exchanges and their turnaround times; b) extraordinary reduction in costs and delivery times; c) the most frequently requested serial titles (allowing cost-effective decisions on new subscriptions); d) impact on DDS of library participation in consortia which allow user access to greater numbers of online serials
Fold-Saddle Bifurcation in Non-Smooth Vector Fields on the Plane
This paper presents results concerning bifurcations of 2D piecewise-smooth
dynamical systems governed by vector fields. Generic three parameter families
of a class of Non-Smooth Vector Fields are studied and its bifurcation diagrams
are exhibited. Our main result describes the unfolding of the so called
Fold-Saddle singularity
Thunkable come strumento di sviluppo a supporto dell'accessibilitaÌ
Oggigiorno sono disponibili molti strumenti di end-user development per lo sviluppo rapido di app e siti web. Il supporto dell'accessibilitaÌ di tali strumenti non eÌ sempre scontato. In questa sessione si vuol mostrare le funzionalitaÌ del framework Thunkable per sviluppare app accessibili e per il supporto all'accessibilitaÌ. In particolar modo saranno presentati gli aspetti piuÌ rilevanti di Thunkable che potrebbero essere utili nello sviluppo di interfacce utente, nella progettazione di app per l'autonomia, cosiÌ come nella fruizione di mappe interattive su touch screen. Scopo di questa sessione eÌ quello di presentare, tramite esempi concreti, i risultati ottenuti testando l'uso del framework Thunkable da un punto di vista di accessibilitaÌ
Imaging magnetic vortex configurations in ferromagnetic nanotubes
We image the remnant magnetization configurations of CoFeB and permalloy
nanotubes (NTs) using x-ray magnetic circular dichroism photo-emission electron
microscopy. The images provide direct evidence for flux-closure configurations,
including a global vortex state, in which magnetization points
circumferentially around the NT axis. Furthermore, micromagnetic simulations
predict and measurements confirm that vortex states can be programmed as the
equilibrium remnant magnetization configurations by reducing the NT aspect
ratio.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, link to supplementary informatio
Blood-Based Treatments for Severe Dry Eye Disease: The Need of a Consensus
The use of blood-based eye drops as therapy for various diseases of the ocular surface has become increasingly popular in ophthalmic practice during recent years. The rationale for their use is based on the promotion of cellular proliferation and migration thanks to the supply of metabolically active substances, in particular growth factors. Blood-derived eye drops have been used for the treatment of several ocular surface disorders, such as dry eye disease, corneal ulcer, persistent epithelial defect, neurotrophic keratitis, ocular surface burn, recurrent corneal erosion, and limbal stem-cell deficiency. Both autologous (from patients themselves) and heterologous (from adult donors or from cord blood sampled at birth)-derived products exist, and each source has specific pros and cons. Despite an extensive literature, several issues are still under debate and the aim of this manuscript is to review the indications, preparation methods and storage, characterization of content, rationale for clinical outcomes, patient stratification, length of treatment, and rationale for repeated treatments at disease relapse. A rationale based on a "5 Ws and 2 Hs" protocol is proposed as a way of thinking, with the attempt to clarify Who, Why, When, Where, What, and How to use these treatment options
Chains of infinite order, chains with memory of variable length, and maps of the interval
We show how to construct a topological Markov map of the interval whose
invariant probability measure is the stationary law of a given stochastic chain
of infinite order. In particular we caracterize the maps corresponding to
stochastic chains with memory of variable length. The problem treated here is
the converse of the classical construction of the Gibbs formalism for Markov
expanding maps of the interval
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