562 research outputs found
Spontaneous decay of an excited atom placed near a rectangular plate
Using the Born expansion of the Green tensor, we consider the spontaneous
decay rate of an excited atom placed in the vicinity of a rectangular plate. We
discuss the limitations of the commonly used simplifying assumption that the
plate extends to infinity in the lateral directions and examine the effects of
the atomic dipole moment orientation, atomic position, and plate boundary and
thickness on the atomic decay rate. In particular, it is shown that in the
boundary region, the spontaneous decay rate can be strongly modified.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Transport in bilayer graphene near charge neutrality: Which scattering mechanisms are important?
Using the semiclassical quantum Boltzmann equation (QBE), we numerically
calculate the DC transport properties of bilayer graphene near charge
neutrality. We find, in contrast to prior discussions, that phonon scattering
is crucial even at temperatures below 40K. Nonetheless, electron-electron
scattering still dominates over phonon collisions allowing a hydrodynamic
approach. We introduce a simple two-fluid hydrodynamic model of electrons and
holes interacting via Coulomb drag and compare our results to the full QBE
calculation. We show that the two-fluid model produces quantitatively accurate
results for conductivity, thermopower, and thermal conductivity.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Quantum Boltzmann equation for bilayer graphene
A-B stacked bilayer graphene has massive electron and hole-like excitations
with zero gap in the nearest-neighbor hopping approximation. In equilibrium,
the quasiparticle occupation approximately follows the usual Fermi-Dirac
distribution. In this paper we consider perturbing this equilibrium
distribution so as to determine DC transport coefficients near charge
neutrality. We consider the regime (with the
inverse temperature and the chemical potential) where there is not a well
formed Fermi surface. Starting from the Kadanoff-Baym equations, we obtain the
quantum Boltzmann equation of the electron and hole distribution functions when
the system is weakly perturbed out of equilibrium. The effect of phonons,
disorder, and boundary scattering for finite sized systems are incorporated
through a generalized collision integral. The transport coefficients, including
the electrical and thermal conductivity, thermopower, and shear viscosity, are
calculated in the linear response regime. We also extend the formalism to
include an external magnetic field. We present results from numerical solutions
of the quantum Boltzmann equation. Finally, we derive a simplified two-fluid
hydrodynamic model appropriate for this system, which reproduces the salient
results of the full numerical calculations.Comment: 27 pages, 7 figures, fixed typos, add a section on a two-fluid mode
Interaction effects and charge quantization in single-particle quantum dot emitters
We discuss a theoretical model of an on-demand single-particle emitter that
employs a quantum dot, attached to an integer or fractional quantum Hall edge
state. Via an exact mapping of the model onto the spin-boson problem we show
that Coulomb interactions between the dot and the chiral quantum Hall edge
state, unavoidable in this setting, lead to a destruction of precise charge
quantization in the emitted wave-packet. Our findings cast doubts on the
viability of this set-up as a single-particle source of quantized charge
pulses. We further show how to use a spin-boson master equation approach to
explicitly calculate the current pulse shape in this set-up.Comment: 5+5 pages, 3 figures, fixed typos, update Supplement Material and
update figure
Transport properties of multilayer graphene
We apply the semi-classical quantum Boltzmann formalism for the computation
of transport properties to multilayer graphene. We compute the electrical
conductivity as well as the thermal conductivity and thermopower for
Bernal-stacked multilayers with an even number of layers. We show that the
window for hydrodynamic transport in multilayer graphene is similar to the case
of bilayer graphene. We introduce a simple hydrodynamic model which we dub the
multi-fluid model and which can be used to reproduce the results for the
electrical conductivity and thermopower from the quantum Boltzmann equation.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figure
Fermi arc reconstruction in synthetic photonic lattice
The chiral surface states of Weyl semimetals have an open Fermi surface
called Fermi arc. At the interface between two Weyl semimetals, these Fermi
arcs are predicted to hybridize and alter their connectivity. In this letter,
we numerically study a one-dimensional (1D) dielectric trilayer grating where
the relative displacements between adjacent layers play the role of two
synthetic momenta. The lattice emulates 3D crystals without time-reversal
symmetry, including Weyl semimetal, nodal line semimetal, and Chern insulator.
Besides showing the phase transition between Weyl semimetal and Chern insulator
at telecom wavelength, this system allows us to observe the Fermi arc
reconstruction between two Weyl semimetals, confirming the theoretical
predictions.Comment: Main text: 4 pages, 4 figures. Supplemental materials: 19 pages, 18
figure
Enhancing Few-shot Image Classification with Cosine Transformer
This paper addresses the few-shot image classification problem, where the
classification task is performed on unlabeled query samples given a small
amount of labeled support samples only. One major challenge of the few-shot
learning problem is the large variety of object visual appearances that
prevents the support samples to represent that object comprehensively. This
might result in a significant difference between support and query samples,
therefore undermining the performance of few-shot algorithms. In this paper, we
tackle the problem by proposing Few-shot Cosine Transformer (FS-CT), where the
relational map between supports and queries is effectively obtained for the
few-shot tasks. The FS-CT consists of two parts, a learnable prototypical
embedding network to obtain categorical representations from support samples
with hard cases, and a transformer encoder to effectively achieve the
relational map from two different support and query samples. We introduce
Cosine Attention, a more robust and stable attention module that enhances the
transformer module significantly and therefore improves FS-CT performance from
5% to over 20% in accuracy compared to the default scaled dot-product
mechanism. Our method performs competitive results in mini-ImageNet, CUB-200,
and CIFAR-FS on 1-shot learning and 5-shot learning tasks across backbones and
few-shot configurations. We also developed a custom few-shot dataset for Yoga
pose recognition to demonstrate the potential of our algorithm for practical
application. Our FS-CT with cosine attention is a lightweight, simple few-shot
algorithm that can be applied for a wide range of applications, such as
healthcare, medical, and security surveillance. The official implementation
code of our Few-shot Cosine Transformer is available at
https://github.com/vinuni-vishc/Few-Shot-Cosine-Transforme
Magic configurations in Moir\'e Superlattice of Bilayer Photonic crystal: Almost-Perfect Flatbands and Unconventional Localization
We investigate the physics of photonic band structures of the moir\'e
patterns that emerged when overlapping two uni-dimensional (1D) photonic
crystal slabs with mismatched periods. The band structure of our system is a
result of the interplay between intra-layer and inter-layer coupling
mechanisms, which can be fine-tuned via the distance separating the two layers.
We derive an effective Hamiltonian that captures the essential physics of the
system and reproduces all numerical simulations of electromagnetic solutions
with high accuracy. Most interestingly, \textit{magic distances} corresponding
to the emergence of photonic flatbands within the whole Brillouin zone of the
moir\'e superlattice are observed. We demonstrate that these flatband modes are
tightly localized within a moir\'e period. Moreover, we suggest a single-band
tight-binding model that describes the moir\'e minibands, of which the
tunnelling rate can be continuously tuned via the inter-layer strength. Our
results show that the band structure of bilayer photonic moir\'e can be
engineered in the same fashion as the electronic/excitonic counterparts. It
would pave the way to study many-body physics at photonic moir\'e flatbands and
novel optoelectronic devices.Comment: 6 pages + Supplement. Comments are welcome
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