8,413 research outputs found
On transport in quantum Hall systems with constrictions
Motivated by recent experimental findings, we study transport in a simple
phenomenological model of a quantum Hall edge system with a gate-voltage
controlled constriction lowering the local filling factor. The current
backscattered from the constriction is seen to arise from the matching of the
properties of the edge-current excitations in the constriction () and
bulk () regions. We develop a hydrodynamic theory for bosonic edge
modes inspired by this model, finding that a competition between two tunneling
process, related by a quasiparticle-quasihole symmetry, determines the fate of
the low-bias transmission conductance. In this way, we find satisfactory
explanations for many recent puzzling experimental results.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
GMRT observations of X-shaped radio sources
We present results from a study of X-shaped sources based on observations
using the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT). These observations were
motivated by our low frequency study of 3C 223.1 (Lal & Rao 2005), an X-shaped
radio source, which showed that the wings (or low-surface-brightness jets) have
flatter spectral indices than the active lobes (or high-surface-brightness
jets), a result not easily explained by most models. We have now obtained GMRT
data at 240 and 610 MHz for almost all the known X-shaped radio sources and
have studied the distribution of the spectral index across the sources. While
the radio morphologies of all the sources at 240 and 610 MHz show the
characteristic X-shape, the spectral characteristics of the X-shaped radio
sources, seem to fall into three categories, namely, sources in which (A) the
wings have flatter spectral indices than the active lobes, (B) the wings and
the active lobes have comparable spectral indices, and (C) the wings have
steeper spectral indices than the active lobes. We discuss the implications of
the new observational results on the various formation models that have been
proposed for X-shaped sources.Comment: The paper contains 12 figures and 3 tables, accepted for publication
in MNRAS Main Journal, please note, some figures are of lower qualit
Experimental Study of Cement Mortar Incorporating Pond Ash with Elevated Temperature Exposure
Pond ash is to be investigated for its use as a partial replacement for sand in cement mortar (1:4). The effort is to be made for the utilization of Pond Ash as sand replacement material in mortar which may introduces many benefits from economical, technical and environmental points of view. The project will present the results of the cement mortar of mix proportion 1:4 in which sand will partially replace with Pond Ash as 0%, 10%, 30%, 40% and 50% by weight of sand. It is proposed to prepare two set of mixture proportions. First will be a control mix (without Pond Ash with regional fine aggregate (sand) and the other mixing will contain Pond Ash obtained from Thermal Power plant industry. The compressive strength test is to be conducted with partial replacement of Pond Ash with sand. The strength property of mortar with Pond Ash for strength at 28 days as partial replacement with the cement in the cement mortar 1:4 is to be determined. Similarly the other set of cement mortar incorporating Pond Ash is to be kept in elevated temperature up to 1100° C and tested for its compressive strength. The results for controlled cement mortar and Pond Ash mortar for compressive strength at normal temperature and elevated temperature is to be compare
The use of orbitals and full spectra to identify misalignment
In this paper, a SpectraQuest demonstrator is used to introduce misalignment in a rotating set-up. The vibrations caused by misalignment is measured with both accelerometers on the bearings and eddy current probes on the shaft itself. A comparison is made between the classical spectral analysis, orbitals and full spectra. Orbitals are used to explain the physical interpretation of the vibration caused by misalignment. Full spectra allow to distinguish unbalance from misalignment by looking at the forward and reversed phenomena. This analysis is done for different kinds of misalignment, couplings, excitation forces and combined machinery faults
CONFLLVM: A Compiler for Enforcing Data Confidentiality in Low-Level Code
We present an instrumenting compiler for enforcing data confidentiality in
low-level applications (e.g. those written in C) in the presence of an active
adversary. In our approach, the programmer marks secret data by writing
lightweight annotations on top-level definitions in the source code. The
compiler then uses a static flow analysis coupled with efficient runtime
instrumentation, a custom memory layout, and custom control-flow integrity
checks to prevent data leaks even in the presence of low-level attacks. We have
implemented our scheme as part of the LLVM compiler. We evaluate it on the SPEC
micro-benchmarks for performance, and on larger, real-world applications
(including OpenLDAP, which is around 300KLoC) for programmer overhead required
to restructure the application when protecting the sensitive data such as
passwords. We find that performance overheads introduced by our instrumentation
are moderate (average 12% on SPEC), and the programmer effort to port OpenLDAP
is only about 160 LoC.Comment: Technical report for CONFLLVM: A Compiler for Enforcing Data
Confidentiality in Low-Level Code, appearing at EuroSys 201
Transport through constricted quantum Hall edge systems: beyond the quantum point contact
Motivated by surprises in recent experimental findings, we study transport in
a model of a quantum Hall edge system with a gate-voltage controlled
constriction. A finite backscattered current at finite edge-bias is explained
from a Landauer-Buttiker analysis as arising from the splitting of edge current
caused by the difference in the filling fractions of the bulk () and
constriction () quantum Hall fluid regions. We develop a hydrodynamic
theory for bosonic edge modes inspired by this model. The constriction region
splits the incident long-wavelength chiral edge density-wave excitations among
the transmitting and reflecting edge states encircling it. The competition
between two interedge tunneling processes taking place inside the constriction,
related by a quasiparticle-quasihole (qp-qh) symmetry, is accounted for by
computing the boundary theories of the system. This competition is found to
determine the strong coupling configuration of the system. A separatrix of
qp-qh symmetric gapless critical states is found to lie between the relevant RG
flows to a metallic and an insulating configuration of the constriction system.
This constitutes an interesting generalisation of the Kane-Fisher quantum
impurity model. The features of the RG phase diagram are also confirmed by
computing various correlators and chiral linear conductances of the system. In
this way, our results find excellent agreement with many recent puzzling
experimental results for the cases of . We also discuss and
make predictions for the case of a constriction system with .Comment: 18 pages, 9 figure
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