4,596 research outputs found
Time-resolved charge detection in graphene quantum dots
We present real-time detection measurements of electron tunneling in a
graphene quantum dot. By counting single electron charging events on the dot,
the tunneling process in a graphene constriction and the role of localized
states are studied in detail. In the regime of low charge detector bias we see
only a single time-dependent process in the tunneling rate which can be modeled
using a Fermi-broadened energy distribution of the carriers in the lead. We
find a non-monotonic gate dependence of the tunneling coupling attributed to
the formation of localized states in the constriction. Increasing the detector
bias above 2 mV results in an increase of the dot-lead transition rate related
to back-action of the charge detector current on the dot.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Structural operational semantics for Kernel Andorra Prolog
Kernel Andorra Prolog is a framework for nondeterministic concurrent constraint logic programming languages. Many languages, such as Prolog, GHC, Parlog, and Atomic Herbrand, can be seen as instances of this framework, by adding specific constraint systems and constraint operations, and optionally by imposing further restrictions on the language and the control of the computation model. We systematically revisit the description in Haridi and Jarison [HJ90], adding the formal machinery which is necessary in order to completely formalize the control of the computation model. To this we add a formal description of the transformational semantics of Kernel Andorra Prolog. The semantics of Kernel Andorra Prolog is a set of or-trees which also captures infinite computations
A Brane model with two asymptotic regions
Some brane models rely on a generalization of the Melvin magnetic universe
including a complex scalar field among the sources. We argue that the geometric
interpretation of Kip.S.Thorne of this geometry restricts the kind of potential
a complex scalar field can display to keep the same asymptotic behavior. While
a finite energy is not obtained for a Mexican hat potential in this
interpretation, this is the case for a potential displaying a broken phase and
an unbroken one. We use for technical simplicity and illustrative purposes an
ad hoc potential which however shares some features with those obtained in some
supergravity models. We construct a sixth dimensional cylindrically symmetric
solution which has two asymptotic regions: the Melvin-like metric on one side
and a flat space displaying a conical singularity on the other. The causal
structure of the configuration is discussed. Unfortunately, gravity is not
localized on the brane.Comment: 9 pages revtex, 4 figures,version to appear in PR
Recombination in passivating contacts: investigation into the impact of the contact work function on the obtained passivation
Improving the passivation of contacts in silicon solar cells is crucial for reaching high-efficiency devices. Herein, the impact of the contact work function on the obtained passivation is examined and quantified using a novel method—quasi-steady-state photoluminescence—which provides access to the surface saturation current density after metallization (J 0s,m). The obtained J 0s,m indicates an improvement of the surface passivation when contacts with high work function are applied onto Si wafers passivated with aluminum oxide, regardless of the wafer doping type. This improvement is mainly due to the amplification of the imbalance between the electron and hole concentrations near the Si interface. The passivation quality is reduced when using contacts with low work function in which the recombination rate increases via the charge-assisted carrier population control. Herein, the vital importance of selecting suitable metals to minimize contact recombination in high-efficiency solar cells is pointed
The Versatile Transceiver Proof of Concept
SLHC experiment upgrades will make substantial use of optical links to enable high-speed data readout and control. The Versatile Link project will develop and assess optical link architectures and components suitable for deployment at SLHC. The on-detector element will be bidirectional optoelectronic module: the Versatile Transceiver that will be based on a commercially available module type minimally customized to meet the constraints of the SLHC on-detector environment in terms of mass, volume, power consumption, operational temperature and radiation environment. We report on the first proof of concept phase of the development, showing the steps towards customization and first results of the radiation resistance of candidate optoelectronic components
FPGA-based Bit-Error-Rate Tester for SEU-hardened Optical Links
The next generation of optical links for future High-Energy Physics experiments will require components qualified for use in radiation-hard environments. To cope with radiation induced single-event upsets, the physical layer protocol will include Forward Error Correction (FEC). Bit-Error-Rate (BER) testing is a widely used method to characterize digital transmission systems. In order to measure the BER with and without the proposed FEC, simultaneously on several devices, a multi-channel BER tester has been developed. This paper describes the architecture of the tester, its implementation in a Xilinx Virtex-5 FPGA device and discusses the experimental results
Schistosomiasis and the risk of bladder cancer in Alexandria, Egypt.
The relationship between history of schistosomiasis and bladder cancer risk was investigated using data from a case-control study conducted between January 1994 and July 1996 in Alexandria, Egypt. Cases were 190 subjects with incident, histologically confirmed invasive cancer of the bladder, and controls were 187 subjects admitted to hospital for acute, non-neoplastic, non-urinary tract conditions. Eighty-six cases (45%) vs 69 controls (37%) reported a history of urinary schistosomiasis. The corresponding multivariate odds ratio (OR) of bladder cancer -- after allowance for age, sex, education, smoking, other urinary infections and high-risk occupations -- was 1.72 (95% confidence interval (CI) 1.0-2.9). The ORs were 0.22 (95% CI 0.1-0.4) for intestinal schistosomiasis and 0.32 (95% CI 0.1-1.9) for schistosomiasis of other types. The OR for urinary schistosomiasis was higher in subjects who were younger at first diagnosis (OR of 3.3 for <15 years) and in those with a long time since first diagnosis (OR of 3.0 for > or = 35 years). The ORs were 15.8 for male ever-smokers with a history of urinary schistosomiasis, compared with never-smokers without such a history, and 3.2 for men ever-infected with urinary Schistosoma haematobium and ever-employed in high-risk occupations, compared with those never-infected and with no high-risk occupational history. This study confirms that clinical history of urinary schistosomiasis is significantly, but modestly, associated with increased bladder cancer risk, explaining some 16% of bladder cancer cases in this Egyptian population
- …