2,094 research outputs found
High-frequency spin valve effect in ferromagnet-semiconductor-ferromagnet structure based on precession of injected spins
New mechanism of magnetoresistance, based on tunneling-emission of spin
polarized electrons from ferromagnets (FM) into semiconductors (S) and
precession of electron spin in the semiconductor layer under external magnetic
field, is described. The FM-S-FM structure is considered, which includes very
thin heavily doped (delta-doped) layers at FM-S interfaces. At certain
parameters the structure is highly sensitive at room-temperature to variations
of the field with frequencies up to 100 GHz. The current oscillates with the
field, and its relative amplitude is determined only by the spin polarizations
of FM-S junctions at relatively large bias voltage.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, (v2) new plot with a dependence of current J on
magnetic field H added in Fig.2 (top panel), minor amendments in the text;
(v3) minor typos corrected. To appear in Phys. Rev. Letter
Streamflow, groundwater and ground response data
CER70-71DBS-EVR-MAS-JHD-VCD-50.August 1971.VIMHEX is an intensive program of tropical meteorological and hydrological observations taken in northeast Venezuela during the summer of 1969 to support a study of tropical atmospheric physics and the resulting effects of rainfall. The objectives of the program are to express the meso-scale weather structure in terms of the synoptic-scale envelope and to formulate the ground response to the rainfall produced by tropical weather disturbances over relatively flat tropical topography. The Volume II Hydrology Report is a compilation of the data obtained on streamflow, groundwater, and ground response in the VIMHEX study area during the summer of 1969. The report includes 2-hourly stream flow and mean daily discharge records at 25 river discharge gaging stations; measured suspended sediment at 4 river locations; river bed material size analyses at 30 locations; river bank material descriptions; groundwater table levels in 38 wells; chemical quality analysis and specific conductance for various discharges at selected river stations; soil moisture content at 4 locations; infiltration test results and soil descriptions for various areas in the drainage basins; and soil temperature data at 1 station.VIMHEX was sponsored by the Department of Defense through its THEMIS program
Tunnelling between non-centrosymmetric superconductors with significant spin-orbit splitting studied theoretically within a two-band treatment
Tunnelling between non-centrosymmetric superconductors with significant
spin-orbit splitting is studied theoretically in a two-band treatment of the
problem. We find that the critical Josephson current may be modulated by
changing the relative angle between the vectors describing absence of inversion
symmetry on each side of the junction. The presence of two gaps also results in
multiple steps in the quasiparticle current-voltage characteristics. We argue
that both these effects may help to determine the pairing states in materials
like CePtSi, UIr and CdReO. We propose experimental tests of
these ideas, including scanning tunnelling microscopy.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure. Minor changes. Some new references added.
Journal-ref. adde
Report of the Terrestrial Bodies Science Working Group. Volume 4: The moon
A rationale for furture exploration of the moon is given. Topics discussed include the objectives of the lunar polar orbiter mission, the mission profile, and general characteristics of the spacraft to be used
Precipitation data and analysis
CER70-71DBS-EJR-MAS-JHD-VCD-HR50.May 1971.VIMHEX is an intensive program of tropical meteorological and hydrological observations taken in northeast Venezuela during the summer of 1969 to support a study of tropical atmospheric physics and the resulting effects of rainfall. The objectives of the program are to express the meso-scale weather structure in terms of the synoptic-scale envelope and to formulate the ground response to the rainfall produced by tropical weather disturbances over relatively flat tropical topography. The Volume I Hydrology Report lists all the precipitation data collected during the summer of 1969 in the study area of northeast Venezuela. Most of the precipitation data is in the form of hourly rainfall. In addition, weekly and other longer period isohyetal maps are presented for the study area. The weekly and monthly average precipitations over the drainage basins have been determined. For the summer months of July, August, and September an average of 4.8 mm of precipitation per day fell on the drainage basins. In subsequent reports, these data will be related to the hydrology and stream response of the area.VIMHEX was sponsored by the Department of Defense through its THEMIS program
A first generation BAC-based physical map of the channel catfish genome
BACKGROUND: Channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus, is the leading species in North American aquaculture. Genetic improvement of catfish is performed through selective breeding, and genomic tools will help improve selection efficiency. A physical map is needed to integrate the genetic map with the karyotype and to support fine mapping of phenotypic trait alleles such as Quantitative Trait Loci (QTL) and the effective positional cloning of genes. RESULTS: A genome-wide physical map of the channel catfish was constructed by High-Information-Content Fingerprinting (HICF) of 46,548 Bacterial Artificial Chromosomes (BAC) clones using the SNaPshot technique. The clones were assembled into contigs with FPC software. The resulting assembly contained 1,782 contigs and covered an estimated physical length of 0.93 Gb. The validity of the assembly was demonstrated by 1) anchoring 19 of the largest contigs to the microsatellite linkage map 2) comparing the assembly of a multi-gene family to Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (RFLP) patterns seen in Southern blots, and 3) contig sequencing. CONCLUSION: This is the first physical map for channel catfish. The HICF technique allowed the project to be finished with a limited amount of human resource in a high throughput manner. This physical map will greatly facilitate the detailed study of many different genomic regions in channel catfish, and the positional cloning of genes controlling economically important production traits
Tunnel junctions of unconventional superconductors
The phenomenology of Josephson tunnel junctions between unconventional
superconductors is developed further. In contrast to s-wave superconductors,
for d-wave superconductors the direction dependence of the tunnel matrix
elements that describe the barrier is relevant. We find the full I-V
characteristics and comment on the thermodynamical properties of these
junctions. They depend sensitively on the relative orientation of the
superconductors. The I-V characteristics differ from the normal s-wave RSJ-like
behavior.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, 4 (encapsulated postscript) figures (figures
replaced
Efficient nonlinear room-temperature spin injection from ferromagnets into semiconductors through a modified Schottky barrier
We suggest a consistent microscopic theory of spin injection from a
ferromagnet (FM) into a semiconductor (S). It describes tunneling and emission
of electrons through modified FM-S Schottky barrier with an ultrathin heavily
doped interfacial S layer . We calculate nonlinear spin-selective properties of
such a reverse-biased FM-S junction, its nonlinear I-V characteristic, current
saturation, and spin accumulation in S. We show that the spin polarization of
current, spin density, and penetration length increase with the total current
until saturation. We find conditions for most efficient spin injection, which
are opposite to the results of previous works, since the present theory
suggests using a lightly doped resistive semiconductor. It is shown that the
maximal spin polarizations of current and electrons (spin accumulation) can
approach 100% at room temperatures and low current density in a nondegenerate
high-resistance semiconductor.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures; provides detailed comparison with earlier works
on spin injectio
The Angstrom Project Alert System: real-time detection of extragalactic microlensing
The Angstrom Project is undertaking an optical survey of stellar microlensing
events across the bulge region of the Andromeda Galaxy (M31) using a
distributed network of two-meter class telescopes. The Angstrom Project Alert
System (APAS) has been developed to identify in real time candidate
microlensing and transient events using data from the Liverpool and Faulkes
North robotic telescopes. This is the first time that real-time microlensing
discovery has been attempted outside of the Milky Way and its satellite
galaxies. The APAS is designed to enable follow-up studies of M31 microlensing
systems, including searches for gas giant planets in M31. Here we describe the
APAS and we present a few example light curves obtained during its
commissioning phase which clearly demonstrate its real-time capability to
identify microlensing candidates as well as other transient sources.Comment: 4 pages, submitted to ApJ Letter
Khinchin theorem for integral points on quadratic varieties
We prove an analogue the Khinchin theorem for the Diophantine approximation
by integer vectors lying on a quadratic variety. The proof is based on the
study of a dynamical system on a homogeneous space of the orthogonal group. We
show that in this system, generic trajectories visit a family of shrinking
subsets infinitely often.Comment: 19 page
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