17,643 research outputs found
Coherent Graphene Devices: Movable Mirrors, Buffers and Memories
We theoretically report that, at a sharp electrostatic step potential in
graphene, massless Dirac fermions can obtain Goos-H\"{a}nchen-like shifts under
total internal reflection. Based on these results, we study the coherent
propagation of the quasiparticles along a sharp graphene \emph{p-n-p} waveguide
and derive novel dispersion relations for the guided modes. Consequently,
coherent graphene devices (e.g. movable mirrors, buffers and memories) induced
only by the electric field effect can be proposed.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
One-shot rates for entanglement manipulation under non-entangling maps
We obtain expressions for the optimal rates of one- shot entanglement
manipulation under operations which generate a negligible amount of
entanglement. As the optimal rates for entanglement distillation and dilution
in this paradigm, we obtain the max- and min-relative entropies of
entanglement, the two logarithmic robustnesses of entanglement, and smoothed
versions thereof. This gives a new operational meaning to these entanglement
measures. Moreover, by considering the limit of many identical copies of the
shared entangled state, we partially recover the recently found reversibility
of entanglement manipu- lation under the class of operations which
asymptotically do not generate entanglement.Comment: 7 pages; no figure
Efficient implementation of the nonequilibrium Green function method for electronic transport calculations
An efficient implementation of the nonequilibrium Green function (NEGF)
method combined with the density functional theory (DFT) using localized
pseudo-atomic orbitals (PAOs) is presented for electronic transport
calculations of a system connected with two leads under a finite bias voltage.
In the implementation, accurate and efficient methods are developed especially
for evaluation of the density matrix and treatment of boundaries between the
scattering region and the leads. Equilibrium and nonequilibrium contributions
in the density matrix are evaluated with very high precision by a contour
integration with a continued fraction representation of the Fermi-Dirac
function and by a simple quadratureon the real axis with a small imaginary
part, respectively. The Hartree potential is computed efficiently by a
combination of the two dimensional fast Fourier transform (FFT) and a finite
difference method, and the charge density near the boundaries is constructed
with a careful treatment to avoid the spurious scattering at the boundaries.
The efficiency of the implementation is demonstrated by rapid convergence
properties of the density matrix. In addition, as an illustration, our method
is applied for zigzag graphene nanoribbons, a Fe/MgO/Fe tunneling junction, and
a LaMnOSrMnO superlattice, demonstrating its applicability to a wide
variety of systems.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figure
Rapidly rotating strange stars for a new equation of state of strange quark matter
For a new equation of state of strange quark matter, we construct equilibrium
sequences of rapidly rotating strange stars in general relativity. The
sequences are the normal and supramassive evolutionary sequences of constant
rest mass. We also calculate equilibrium sequences for a constant value of
corresponding to the most rapidly rotating pulsar PSR 1937 + 21. In
addition to this, we calculate the radius of the marginally stable orbit and
its dependence on , relevant for modeling of kilo-Hertz quasi-periodic
oscillations in X-ray binaries.Comment: Two figures, uses psbox.tex and emulateapj5.st
Self-Stabilizing Token Distribution with Constant-Space for Trees
Self-stabilizing and silent distributed algorithms for token distribution in rooted tree networks are given. Initially, each process of a graph holds at most l tokens. Our goal is to distribute the tokens in the whole network so that every process holds exactly k tokens. In the initial configuration, the total number of tokens in the network may not be equal to nk where n is the number of processes in the network. The root process is given the ability to create a new token or remove a token from the network. We aim to minimize the convergence time, the number of token moves, and the space complexity. A self-stabilizing token distribution algorithm that converges within O(n l) asynchronous rounds and needs Theta(nh epsilon) redundant (or unnecessary) token moves is given, where epsilon = min(k,l-k) and h is the height of the tree network. Two novel ideas to reduce the number of redundant token moves are presented. One reduces the number of redundant token moves to O(nh) without any additional costs while the other reduces the number of redundant token moves to O(n), but increases the convergence time to O(nh l). All algorithms given have constant memory at each process and each link register
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