769 research outputs found
Amensie en demensie met verwysing na die intellek
,,Es ist der Geist der sich den Kórper baut” het Goethe gesê en hy het daardeur die monistiese begrip in die psigiatrie beklemtoon. Dwarsdeur die eeue het die ontwikkelingsgeskiedenis van die mens maar telkens getoon hoedat daar by die mens veral, nie anders gedink kan word dan as 'n psigosomatiese eenheid nie.
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Molecular Beam Epitaxy Growth and Characterization of Germanium-Doped Cubic AlxGa1−xN
In cubic (c-)GaN Ge has emerged as a promising alternative to Si for n-type doping, offering the advantage of slightly improved electrical properties. Herein, a study on Ge doping of the ternary alloy c-AlxGa1−xN is presented. Ge-doped c-AlxGa1−xN layers are grown by plasma-assisted molecular beam epitaxy. In two sample series, both the Al mole fraction x and the doping level are varied. The incorporation of Ge is verified by time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry. Ge incorporation and donor concentrations rise exponentially with increasing Ge cell temperature. A maximum donor concentration of 1.4 × 1020 cm−3 is achieved. While the incorporation of Ge is almost independent of x, incorporation of O, which acts as an unintentional donor, increases for higher x. Dislocation densities start increasing when doping levels of around 3 × 1019 cm−3 are exceeded. Also photoluminescence intensities begin to drop at these high doping levels. Optical emission of layers with x > 0.25 is found to originate from a defect level 0.9 eV below the indirect bandgap, which is not related to Ge. In the investigated range 0 ≤ x ≤ 0.6, Ge is a suitable donor in c-AlxGa1−xN up to the low 1019 cm−3 range
Absence of correlation between built-in electric dipole moment and quantum Stark effect in InAs/GaAs self-assembled quantum dots
We report significant deviations from the usual quadratic dependence of the
ground state interband transition energy on applied electric fields in
InAs/GaAs self-assembled quantum dots. In particular, we show that conventional
second-order perturbation theory fails to correctly describe the Stark shift
for electric field below kV/cm in high dots. Eight-band calculations demonstrate this effect is predominantly due to
the three-dimensional strain field distribution which for various dot shapes
and stoichiometric compositions drastically affects the hole ground state. Our
conclusions are supported by two independent experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Colliding scalar pulses in the Einstein-Gauss-Bonnet gravity
We numerically investigated how the nonlinear dynamics depends on the dimensionality and on the higher-order curvature corrections in the form of Gauss-Bonnet (GB) terms, with a model of colliding scalar pulses in plane-symmetric space-time. We observed that a collision of large scalar pulses will produce a large-curvature region, of which the magnitude depends on αGB. The normal corrections (αGB > 0) work for avoiding the appearance of singularity, although it is inevitable
Beyond Survey Self-Reports: Using Physiology to Tap Political Orientations
Some aspects of our attitudes are composed of things outside of our consciousness. However, traditional survey research does not use measurements that are able to tap into these aspects of public opinion. We describe, recommend, and demonstrate a procedure by which non-self-reported responses can be measured in order to test whether these responses have independent effects on individuals’ preferences. We use one of the better-known physiological measures—electrodermal activity or skin conductance—and illustrate its potential by reporting our own study of attitudes toward President Barack Obama. We find that both self-reported emotional responses and physiological responses to Obama’s image independently correlate with variation in the intensity of attitudes regarding his job approval and his central policy proposal: health-care reform
Phase-Coherent Dynamics of a Superconducting Flux Qubit with Capacitive-Bias Readout
We present a systematic study of the phase-coherent dynamics of a
superconducting three-Josephson-junction flux qubit. The qubit state is
detected with the integrated-pulse method, which is a variant of the pulsed
switching DC SQUID method. In this scheme the DC SQUID bias current pulse is
applied via a capacitor instead of a resistor, giving rise to a narrow
band-pass instead of a pure low-pass filter configuration of the
electromagnetic environment. Measuring one and the same qubit with both setups
allows a direct comparison. With the capacitive method about four times faster
switching pulses and an increased visibility are achieved. Furthermore, the
deliberate engineering of the electromagnetic environment, which minimizes the
noise due to the bias circuit, is facilitated. Right at the degeneracy point
the qubit coherence is limited by energy relaxation. We find two main noise
contributions. White noise is limiting the energy relaxation and contributing
to the dephasing far from the degeneracy point. 1/f-noise is the dominant
source of dephasing in the direct vicinity of the optimal point. The influence
of 1/f-noise is also supported by non-random beatings in the Ramsey and spin
echo decay traces. Numeric simulations of a coupled qubit-oscillator system
indicate that these beatings are due to the resonant interaction of the qubit
with at least one point-like fluctuator, coupled especially strongly to the
qubit.Comment: Minor changes. 21 pages, 15 figure
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Towards time resolved core level photoelectron spectroscopy with femtosecond x-ray free-electron lasers
We have performed core level photoelectron spectroscopy on a W(110) single crystal with femtosecond XUV pulses from the free-electron laser at Hamburg (FLASH). We demonstrate experimentally and through theoretical modelling that for a suitable range of photon fluences per pulse, time-resolved photoemission experiments on solid surfaces are possible. Using FLASH pulses in combination with a synchronized optical laser, we have performed femtosecond time-resolved core-level photoelectron spectroscopy and observed sideband formation on the W 4f lines indicating a cross correlation between femtosecond optical and XUV pulses. © IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft
Fixing the BMS Frame of Numerical Relativity Waveforms with BMS Charges
The Bondi-van der Burg-Metzner-Sachs (BMS) group, which uniquely describes the symmetries of asymptotic infinity and therefore of the gravitational waves that propagate there, has become increasingly important for accurate modeling of waveforms. In particular, waveform models, such as post-Newtonian (PN) expressions, numerical relativity (NR), and black hole perturbation theory, produce results that are in different BMS frames. Consequently, to build a model for the waveforms produced during the merging of compact objects, which ideally would be a hybridization of PN, NR, and black hole perturbation theory, one needs a fast and robust method for fixing the BMS freedoms. In this work, we present the first means of fixing the entire BMS freedom of NR waveforms to match the frame of either PN waveforms or black hole perturbation theory. We achieve this by finding the BMS transformations that change certain charges in a prescribed way -- e.g., finding the center-of-mass transformation that maps the center-of-mass charge to a mean of zero. We find that this new method is 20 times faster, and more correct when mapping to the superrest frame, than previous methods that relied on optimization algorithms. Furthermore, in the course of developing this charge-based frame fixing method, we compute the PN expression for the Moreschi supermomentum to 3PN order without spins and 2PN order with spins. This Moreschi supermomentum is effectively equivalent to the energy flux or the null memory contribution at future null infinity . From this PN calculation, we also compute oscillatory ( modes) and spin-dependent memory terms that have not been identified previously or have been missing from strain expressions in the post-Newtonian literature. <br
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