20,590 research outputs found
Electronic reconstruction and enhanced superconductivity at LaNdSrCuO/LaSrCuO bilayer interface
We report enhanced superconductivity in bilayer thin films consisting of
superconducting LaNdSrCuO with 0.06
0.20 and metallic but non-superconducting LaSrCuO.
These bilayers show a maximum increase in superconducting transition
temperature () of more than 200% for = 0.06 while no change in
is observed for the bilayers with 0.20. The analysis of the critical
current and kinetic inductance data suggests 2-3 unit cells thick interfacial
layer electronically perturbed to have a higher . A simple charge transfer
model with cation intermixing explains the observed in bilayers. Still
the unusually large thickness of interfacial superconducting layers can not be
explained in terms of this model. We believe the stripe relaxation as well as
the proximity effect also influence the superconductivity of the interface
Sub-femtosecond electron bunches created by direct laser acceleration in a laser wakefield accelerator with ionization injection
In this work, we will show through three-dimensional particle-in-cell
simulations that direct laser acceleration in laser a wakefield accelerator can
generate sub-femtosecond electron bunches. Two simulations were done with two
laser pulse durations, such that the shortest laser pulse occupies only a
fraction of the first bubble, whereas the longer pulse fills the entire first
bubble. In the latter case, as the trapped electrons moved forward and
interacted with the high intensity region of the laser pulse, micro-bunching
occurred naturally, producing 0.5 fs electron bunches. This is not observed in
the short pulse simulation.Comment: AAC 201
Nanoscale Structure and Elasticity of Pillared DNA Nanotubes
We present an atomistic model of pillared DNA nanotubes (DNTs) and their
elastic properties which will facilitate further studies of these nanotubes in
several important nanotechnological and biological applications. In particular,
we introduce a computational design to create an atomistic model of a 6-helix
DNT (6HB) along with its two variants, 6HB flanked symmetrically by two double
helical DNA pillars (6HB+2) and 6HB flanked symmetrically by three double
helical DNA pillars (6HB+3). Analysis of 200 ns all-atom simulation
trajectories in the presence of explicit water and ions shows that these
structures are stable and well behaved in all three geometries. Hydrogen
bonding is well maintained for all variants of 6HB DNTs. We calculate the
persistence length of these nanotubes from their equilibrium bend angle
distributions. The values of persistence length are ~10 {\mu}m, which is 2
orders of magnitude larger than that of dsDNA. We also find a gradual increase
of persistence length with an increasing number of pillars, in quantitative
agreement with previous experimental findings. To have a quantitative
understanding of the stretch modulus of these tubes we carried out
nonequilibrium Steered Molecular Dynamics (SMD). The linear part of the force
extension plot gives stretch modulus in the range of 6500 pN for 6HB without
pillars which increases to 11,000 pN for tubes with three pillars. The values
of the stretch modulus calculated from contour length distributions obtained
from equilibrium MD simulations are similar to those obtained from
nonequilibrium SMD simulations. The addition of pillars makes these DNTs very
rigid.Comment: Published in ACS Nan
PONDER - A Real time software backend for pulsar and IPS observations at the Ooty Radio Telescope
This paper describes a new real-time versatile backend, the Pulsar Ooty Radio
Telescope New Digital Efficient Receiver (PONDER), which has been designed to
operate along with the legacy analog system of the Ooty Radio Telescope (ORT).
PONDER makes use of the current state of the art computing hardware, a
Graphical Processing Unit (GPU) and sufficiently large disk storage to support
high time resolution real-time data of pulsar observations, obtained by
coherent dedispersion over a bandpass of 16 MHz. Four different modes for
pulsar observations are implemented in PONDER to provide standard reduced data
products, such as time-stamped integrated profiles and dedispersed time series,
allowing faster avenues to scientific results for a variety of pulsar studies.
Additionally, PONDER also supports general modes of interplanetary
scintillation (IPS) measurements and very long baseline interferometry data
recording. The IPS mode yields a single polarisation correlated time series of
solar wind scintillation over a bandwidth of about four times larger (16 MHz)
than that of the legacy system as well as its fluctuation spectrum with high
temporal and frequency resolutions. The key point is that all the above modes
operate in real time. This paper presents the design aspects of PONDER and
outlines the design methodology for future similar backends. It also explains
the principal operations of PONDER, illustrates its capabilities for a variety
of pulsar and IPS observations and demonstrates its usefulness for a variety of
astrophysical studies using the high sensitivity of the ORT.Comment: 25 pages, 14 figures, Accepted by Experimental Astronom
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