110,090 research outputs found
The conductance of a multi-mode ballistic ring: beyond Landauer and Kubo
The Landauer conductance of a two terminal device equals to the number of
open modes in the weak scattering limit. What is the corresponding result if we
close the system into a ring? Is it still bounded by the number of open modes?
Or is it unbounded as in the semi-classical (Drude) analysis? It turns out that
the calculation of the mesoscopic conductance is similar to solving a
percolation problem. The "percolation" is in energy space rather than in real
space. The non-universal structures and the sparsity of the perturbation matrix
cannot be ignored.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, with the correct version of Figs.6-
Gene expression analysis in microdissected renal tissue - Current challenges and strategies
The architecture and compartmentalization of the kidney has stimulated the development of an array of microtechniques to study the functional differences between the distinct nephron segments. With the vast amounts of genomic sequence data now available, the groundwork has been laid for a comprehensive characterization of the molecular pathways defining the differences in nephron function. With the development of sensitive gene expression techniques the tools for a comprehensive molecular analysis of specific renal microenvironments have been provided: Quantitative RT-PCR technologies now allow the analysis of specific mRNAs from as little as single microdissected renal cells. A more global view of gene expression regulation is a logical development from the application of large scale profiling techniques. In this review, we will discuss the power and pitfalls of these approaches, including their potential for the functional characterization of nephron heterogeneity and diagnostic application in renal disease. Copyright (C) 2002 S. Karger AG, Basel
Non-equilibrium steady state of sparse systems
A resistor-network picture of transitions is appropriate for the study of
energy absorption by weakly chaotic or weakly interacting driven systems. Such
"sparse" systems reach a novel non-equilibrium steady state (NESS) once coupled
to a bath. In the stochastic case there is an analogy to the physics of
percolating glassy systems, and an extension of the fluctuation-dissipation
phenomenology is proposed. In the mesoscopic case the quantum NESS might differ
enormously from the stochastic NESS, with saturation temperature determined by
the sparsity. A toy model where the sparsity of the system is modeled using a
log-normal random ensemble is analyzed.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, EPL accepted versio
Parametric Evolution for a Deformed Cavity
We consider a classically chaotic system that is described by a Hamiltonian
H(Q,P;x), where (Q,P) describes a particle moving inside a cavity, and x
controls a deformation of the boundary. The quantum-eigenstates of the system
are |n(x)>. We describe how the parametric kernel P(n|m) = , also
known as the local density of states, evolves as a function of x-x0. We
illuminate the non-unitary nature of this parametric evolution, the emergence
of non-perturbative features, the final non-universal saturation, and the
limitations of random-wave considerations. The parametric evolution is
demonstrated numerically for two distinct representative deformation processes.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, improved introduction, to be published in Phys.
Rev.
Diffractive energy spreading and its semiclassical limit
We consider driven systems where the driving induces jumps in energy space:
(1) particles pulsed by a step potential; (2) particles in a box with a moving
wall; (3) particles in a ring driven by an electro-motive-force. In all these
cases the route towards quantum-classical correspondence is highly non-trivial.
Some insight is gained by observing that the dynamics in energy space, where
is the level index, is essentially the same as that of Bloch electrons in a
tight binding model, where is the site index. The mean level spacing is
like a constant electric field and the driving induces long range hopping
1/(n-m).Comment: 19 pages, 11 figs, published version with some improved figure
Rate of energy absorption by a closed ballistic ring
We make a distinction between the spectroscopic and the mesoscopic
conductance of closed systems. We show that the latter is not simply related to
the Landauer conductance of the corresponding open system. A new ingredient in
the theory is related to the non-universal structure of the perturbation matrix
which is generic for quantum chaotic systems. These structures may created
bottlenecks that suppress the diffusion in energy space, and hence the rate of
energy absorption. The resulting effect is not merely quantitative: For a
ring-dot system we find that a smaller Landauer conductance implies a smaller
spectroscopic conductance, while the mesoscopic conductance increases. Our
considerations open the way towards a realistic theory of dissipation in closed
mesoscopic ballistic devices.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, published version with updated ref
Keck Observations of the Hidden Quasar IRAS P09104+4109
We present imaging and spectro- polarimetric observations of the
ultraluminous infrared galaxy IRAS P09104+4109 using the Keck 10-m Telescope.
We detect the clear presence of broad Hb, Hg, and MgII 2800 emission lines in
the polarized flux spectra of the nucleus and of an extranuclear emission
region ~ 4" away, confirming the presence of a hidden central quasar. The
polarization of the broad Mg II emission line is high (~ 29%), consistent with
the remarkably high polarization (~ 30%-40%) observed in the extended continuum
emission. The narrow emission lines are polarized in a stratified fashion, with
the high ionization lines being polarized 0.7%-1.7% and [O II] essentially
unpolarized. The line polarizations are positively correlated with critical
density, ionization potential, and velocity width of the emission lines. This
indicates that the NLR may be partially shadowed by the putative torus, with
the higher ionization lines originating closer to the nucleus. One notable
characteristic of the extranuclear knot is that all species of Fe are markedly
absent in its spectrum, while they appear prominently in the nucleus. Our
favored interpretation is that there is a large amount of dust in the
extranuclear regions, allowing gaseous refractory metals to deposit. The
extended emission regions are most likely material shredded from nearby cluster
members and not gas condensed from the cooling flow or expelled from the
obscured quasar. Our data provide strong evidence for matter-bounded clouds in
addition to ionization-bounded clouds in the NLR. Ionization by pure velocity
shocks can be ruled out. Shocks with photoionizing precursors may be present,
but are probably not a dominant contributor to the energy input.Comment: 32 pages, including 9 figs and 2 tables, to be published in the
Astronomical Journa
Asymptotic Methods for Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor Modeling
The behavior of metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistors (MOSFETs) with small aspect ratio and large doping levels is analyzed using formal perturbation techniques. Specifically, the influence of interface layers in the potential on the averaged channel conductivity is closely examined. The interface and internal layers that occur in the potential are resolved in the limit of large doping using the method of matched asymptotic expansions. This approach, together with other asymptotic techniques, provides both a pointwise description of the state variables as well as lumped current-voltage relations that vary uniformly across the various bias regimes. These current-voltage relations are derived for a variable doping model respresenting a particular class of devices
A Poset Connected to Artin Monoids of Simply Laced Type
Let W be a Weyl group whose type is a simply laced Dynkin diagram. On several
W-orbits of sets of mutually commuting reflections, a poset is described which
plays a role in linear representatons of the corresponding Artin group A. The
poset generalizes many properties of the usual order on positive roots of W
given by height. In this paper, a linear representation of the positive monoid
of A is defined by use of the poset
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