452 research outputs found
Spiking Neural P Systems: A Short Introduction and New Normal Forms
Spiking neural P systems are a class of P systems inspired from the way
the neurons communicate with each other by means of electrical impulses (called
\spikes"). In the few years since this model was introduced, many results related
to the computing power and e ciency of these computing devices were reported.
The present paper quickly surveys the basic ideas of this research area and the basic
results, then, as typical proofs about the universality of spiking neural P systems,
we present some new normal forms for them. Speci cally, we consider a natural
restriction in the architecture of a spiking neural P system, to have neurons of a
small number of types (i.e., using a small number of sets of rules). We prove that
three types of neurons are su cient in order to generate each recursively enumerable
set of numbers as the distance between the rst two spikes emitted by the system;
the problem remains open for accepting SN P systems. The paper ends with the
complete bibliography of this domain, at the level of April 2009.Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia TIN2006-13452Junta de Andalucía P08-TIC-0420
Atomic Force Microscopy Study of an Ideally Hard Contact: The Diamond(111)/Tungsten Carbide Interface
A comprehensive nanotribological study of a hydrogen-terminated diamond(111)/tungsten carbide interface has been performed using ultrahigh vacuum atomic force microscopy. Both contact conductance, which is proportional to contact area, and friction have been measured as a function of applied load. We demonstrate for the first time that the load dependence of the contact area in UHV for this extremely hard single asperity contact is described by the Derjaguin-Müller-Toporov continuum mechanics model. Furthermore, the frictional force is found to be directly proportional to the contact area
Macroscopic nucleation phenomena in continuum media with long-range interactions
Nucleation, commonly associated with discontinuous transformations between
metastable and stable phases, is crucial in fields as diverse as atmospheric
science and nanoscale electronics. Traditionally, it is considered a
microscopic process (at most nano-meter), implying the formation of a
microscopic nucleus of the stable phase. Here we show for the first time, that
considering long-range interactions mediated by elastic distortions, nucleation
can be a macroscopic process, with the size of the critical nucleus
proportional to the total system size. This provides a new concept of
"macroscopic barrier-crossing nucleation". We demonstrate the effect in
molecular dynamics simulations of a model spin-crossover system with two
molecular states of different sizes, causing elastic distortions.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures. Supplementary information accompanies this paper
at http://www.nature.com/scientificreport
Phase Transition in a One-Dimensional Extended Peierls-Hubbard Model with a Pulse of Oscillating Electric Field: I. Threshold Behavior in Ionic-to-Neutral Transition
Photoinduced dynamics of charge density and lattice displacements is
calculated by solving the time-dependent Schr\"odinger equation for a
one-dimensional extended Peierls-Hubbard model with alternating potentials for
the mixed-stack organic charge-transfer complex, TTF-CA. A pulse of oscillating
electric field is incorporated into the Peierls phase of the transfer integral.
The frequency, the amplitude, and the duration of the pulse are varied to study
the nonlinear and cooperative character of the photoinduced transition. When
the dimerized ionic phase is photoexcited, the threshold behavior is clearly
observed by plotting the final ionicity as a function of the increment of the
total energy. Above the threshold photoexcitation, the electronic state reaches
the neutral one with equidistant molecules after the electric field is turned
off. The transition is initiated by nucleation of a metastable neutral domain,
for which an electric field with frequency below the linear absorption peak is
more effective than that at the peak. When the pulse is strong and short, the
charge transfer takes place on the same time scale with the disappearance of
dimerization. As the pulse becomes weak and long, the dimerization-induced
polarization is disordered to restore the inversion symmetry on average before
the charge transfer takes place to bring the system neutral. Thus, a
paraelectric ionic phase is transiently realized by a weak electric field. It
is shown that infrared light also induces the ionic-to-neutral transition,
which is characterized by the threshold behavior.Comment: 24 pages, 11 figure
On Reducing Communication Energy Using Cross-Sensor Coding Technique
This paper addresses the uneven communication energy problem in data gathering sensor networks where the nodes closer to the sink tend to consume more energy than those of the farther nodes. Consequently, the lifetime of a network is significantly shortened. We propose a cross-sensor coding technique using On-Off keying which exploits (a) the tradeoff between delay and energy consumption and (b) the network topology in order to alleviate the problem of unequal energy consumption. We formulate our coding problem as an integer linear programming problem and show how to construct a number of codes based on different criteria. We show that the proposed technique can extend the lifetime of a small sensor network
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