672 research outputs found
Cryogenic metallic positive expulsion bellows evaluation
Cryogenic metallic positive expulsion bellows evaluatio
High field magneto-transport in high mobility gated InSb/InAlSb quantum well heterostructures
We present high field magneto-transport data from a range of 30nm wide
InSb/InAlSb quantum wells. The low temperature carrier mobility of the samples
studied ranged from 18.4 to 39.5 m2V-1s-1 with carrier densities between
1.5x1015 and 3.28x1015 m-2. Room temperature mobilities are reported in excess
of 6 m2V-1s-1. It is found that the Landau level broadening decreases with
carrier density and beating patterns are observed in the magnetoresistance with
non-zero node amplitudes in samples with the narrowest broadening despite the
presence of a large g-factor. The beating is attributed to Rashba splitting
phenomenon and Rashba coupling parameters are extracted from the difference in
spin populations for a range of samples and gate biases. The influence of
Landau level broadening and spin-dependent scattering rates on the observation
of beating in the Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations is investigated by simulations
of the magnetoconductance. Data with non-zero beat node amplitudes are
accompanied by asymmetric peaks in the Fourier transform, which are
successfully reproduced by introducing a spin-dependent broadening in the
simulations. It is found that the low-energy (majority) spin up state suffers
more scattering than the high-energy (minority) spin down state and that the
absence of beating patterns in the majority of (lower density) samples can be
attributed to the same effect when the magnitude of the level broadening is
large
Material properties of Islamic paper
In contrast to scientific research focussing on European paper, there is a significant gap in our knowledge of Islamic papermaking. This research surveys the evidence of techniques and materials typically used in Islamic papermaking, to deduce what might be considered as the most significant characteristics. A substantial collection of 228 Islamic papers (~18th–20th century) was characterized using chemical analytical methods: surface profilometry, gloss measurements, specular vs. diffuse reflectance ratio at 457 nm, scanning electron microscopy and infrared spectroscopy for identification of polishing, iodine test for identification of starch, Raspail test for identification of rosin, and fibre furnish analysis. Morphological analysis was performed to examine the presence of watermarks and sieve patterns. In addition, acidity and degree of polymerization of cellulose in paper were determined to explore the average material state of paper in the collection. Near infrared spectroscopic data of the collection were correlated to chemical properties with the aid of multivariate data analysis methods. Four different models were developed focusing on two main characteristics of Islamic paper: two for identification of polishing and starch, and two quantitative models to determine the acidity and degree of polymerization of cellulose in paper. While no single defining characteristic of Islamic paper was identified, 88 % of all papers in the studied collection either contain starch or are polished, or both. ~2 % of papers contain rosin. The majority of papers are neutral to mildly acidic, which is in contrast to their extensive degradation: ~69 % have DP < 1000. Polishing and starch appear to be associated with current values of pH and DP. The developed non-destructive characterization methodology could be applied to Islamic collections in libraries and archives to expand the database with the material properties of papers of known age and provenance and thus better understand geographic and temporal distributions of papermaking practices in Islamic countries
Can Light Signals Travel Faster than c in Nontrivial Vacuua in Flat space-time? Relativistic Causality II
In this paper we show that the Scharnhorst effect (Vacuum with boundaries or
a Casimir type vacuum) cannot be used to generate signals showing measurable
faster-than-c speeds. Furthermore, we aim to show that the Scharnhorst effect
would violate special relativity, by allowing for a variable speed of light in
vacuum, unless one can specify a small invariant length scale. This invariant
length scale would be agreed upon by all inertial observers. We hypothesize the
approximate scale of the invariant length.Comment: 12 pages no figure
Sigurðar saga fóts (The Saga of Sigurðr Foot): A Translation
This is the first English translation of the short Icelandic romance Sigurðar saga fóts, with an introduction presenting the evidence for its dating and immediate literary context. Like most Icelandic romances, Sigurðar saga is a bridal-quest story; the support of a foster-brother is key to the hero winning the bride; and the foster-brothers start out as opponents before recognising their mutual excellence and swearing foster-brotherhood. Uniquely, however, the men who become foster-brothers begin by competing for the same bride (Signý): the eponymous Sigurðr fótr wins Signý only because Ásmundr gives her to him in exchange for foster-brotherhood. Ásmundr’s decision can be read as demonstrating with unusual starkness the superior importance in much Icelandic romance of homosocial relationships over heterosexual ones, giving the saga a certain paradigmatic status. Translating the saga in an open-access forum and reconstructing its literary context will, we hope, encourage further analyses
Quantum state transformation by dispersive and absorbing four-port devices
The recently derived input-output relations for the radiation field at a
dispersive and absorbing four-port device [T. Gruner and D.-G. Welsch, Phys.
Rev. A 54, 1661 (1996)] are used to derive the unitary transformation that
relates the output quantum state to the input quantum state, including
radiation and matter and without placing frequency restrictions. It is shown
that for each frequency the transformation can be regarded as a well-behaved
SU(4) group transformation that can be decomposed into a product of U(2) and
SU(2) group transformations. Each of them may be thought of as being realized
by a particular lossless four-port device. If for narrow-bandwidth radiation
far from the medium resonances the absorption matrix of the four-port device
can be disregarded, the well-known SU(2) group transformation for a lossless
device is recognized. Explicit formulas for the transformation of Fock-states
and coherent states are given.Comment: 24 pages, RevTe
On the existence and structure of a mush at the inner core boundary of the Earth
It has been suggested about 20 years ago that the liquid close to the inner
core boundary (ICB) is supercooled and that a sizable mushy layer has developed
during the growth of the inner core. The morphological instability of the
liquid-solid interface which usually results in the formation of a mushy zone
has been intensively studied in metallurgy, but the freezing of the inner core
occurs in very unusual conditions: the growth rate is very small, and the
pressure gradient has a key role, the newly formed solid being hotter than the
adjacent liquid. We investigate the linear stability of a solidification front
under such conditions, pointing out the destabilizing role of the thermal and
solutal fields, and the stabilizing role of the pressure gradient. The main
consequence of the very small solidification rate is the importance of
advective transport of solute in liquid, which tends to remove light solute
from the vicinity of the ICB and to suppress supercooling, thus acting against
the destabilization of the solidification front. For plausible phase diagrams
of the core mixture, we nevertheless found that the ICB is likely to be
morphologically unstable, and that a mushy zone might have developed at the
ICB. The thermodynamic thickness of the resulting mushy zone can be
significant, from km to the entire inner core radius, depending on
the phase diagram of the core mixture. However, such a thick mushy zone is
predicted to collapse under its own weight, on a much smaller length scale
( km). We estimate that the interdendritic spacing is probably
smaller than a few tens of meter, and possibly only a few meters
Structural changes and conductance thresholds in metal-free intrinsic SiOx resistive random access memory
We present an investigation of structural changes in silicon-rich silicon oxide metal-insulator-metal resistive RAM devices. The observed unipolar switching, which is intrinsic to the bulk oxide material and does not involve movement of metal ions, correlates with changes in the structure of the oxide. We use atomic force microscopy, conductive atomic force microscopy, x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and secondary ion mass spectroscopy to examine the structural changes occurring as a result of switching. We confirm that protrusions formed at the surface of samples during switching are bubbles, which are likely to be related to the outdiffusion of oxygen. This supports existing models for valence-change based resistive switching in oxides. In addition, we describe parallel linear and nonlinear conduction pathways and suggest that the conductance quantum, G0, is a natural boundary between the high and low resistance states of our devices
Optimal Monitoring of Position in Nonlinear Quantum Systems
We discuss a model of repeated measurements of position in a quantum system
which is monitored for a finite amount of time with a finite instrumental
error. In this framework we recover the optimum monitoring of a harmonic
oscillator proposed in the case of an instantaneous collapse of the
wavefunction into an infinite-accuracy measurement result. We also establish
numerically the existence of an optimal measurement strategy in the case of a
nonlinear system. This optimal strategy is completely defined by the spectral
properties of the nonlinear system.Comment: 4 pages, REVTeX 3.0, 4 PostScript figure
Entanglement and visibility at the output of a Mach-Zehnder interferometer
We study the entanglement between the two beams exiting a Mach-Zehnder
interferometer fed by a couple of squeezed-coherent states with arbitrary
squeezing parameter. The quantum correlations at the output are function of the
internal phase-shift of the interferometer, with the output state ranging from
a totally disentangled state to a state whose degree of entanglement is an
increasing function of the input squeezing parameter. A couple of squeezed
vacuum at the input leads to maximum entangled state at the output. The fringes
visibilities resulting from measuring the coincidence counting rate or the
squared difference photocurrent are evaluated and compared each other.
Homodyne-like detection turns out to be preferable in almost all situations,
with the exception of the very low signals regime.Comment: 6 figs, accepted for publication on PRA, see also
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