2,472 research outputs found
Electrostatic charging artefacts in Lorentz electron tomography of MFM tip stray fields
Using the technique of differential phase contrast (DPC) Lorentz electron microscopy, the magnetic stray field distribution from magnetic force microscopy (MFM) tips can be calculated in a plane in front of the tip using tomographic reconstruction techniques. Electrostatic charging of the tip during DPC imaging can significantly distort these field reconstructions. Using a simple point charge model, this paper illustrates the effect of electrostatic charging of the sample on the accuracy of tomographic field reconstructions. A procedure for separating electrostatic and magnetic effects is described, and is demonstrated using experimental tomographic data obtained from a modified MFM tip
Just-in-time control of time-varying discrete event dynamic systems in (max,+) algebra
We deal with timed event graphs whose holding times associated with places are variable. Defining a first-in-first-out functioning rule, we show that such graphs can be linearly described in (max,+) algebra. Moreover, this linear representation allows extending the just-in-time control synthesis existing for timed event graphs with constant holding times. An example is proposed in order to illustrate how the approach can be applied as a just-in-time strategy for production lines
Superconductivity in ropes of carbon nanotubes
Recent experimental and theoretical results on intrinsic superconductivity in
ropes of single-wall carbon nanotubes are reviewed and compared. We find strong
experimental evidence for superconductivity when the distance between the
normal electrodes is large enough. This indicates the presence of attractive
phonon-mediated interactions in carbon nanotubes, which can even overcome the
repulsive Coulomb interactions. The effective low-energy theory of rope
superconductivity explains the experimental results on the
temperature-dependent resistance below the transition temperature in terms of
quantum phase slips. Quantitative agreement with only one fit parameter can be
obtained. Nanotube ropes thus represent superconductors in an extreme 1D limit
never explored before.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures, to appear in special issue of Sol. State Com
Tuning the proximity effect in a superconductor-graphene-superconductor junction
We have tuned in situ the proximity effect in a single graphene layer coupled
to two Pt/Ta superconducting electrodes. An annealing current through the
device changed the transmission coefficient of the electrode/graphene
interface, increasing the probability of multiple Andreev reflections. Repeated
annealing steps improved the contact sufficiently for a Josephson current to be
induced in graphene.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Microwave response of an NS ring coupled to a superconducting resonator
A long phase coherent normal (N) wire between superconductors (S) is
characterized by a dense phase dependent Andreev spectrum . We probe this
spectrum in a high frequency phase biased configuration, by coupling an NS ring
to a multimode superconducting resonator. We detect a dc flux and frequency
dependent response whose dissipative and non dissipative components are related
by a simple Debye relaxation law with a characteristic time of the order of the
diffusion time through the N part of the ring. The flux dependence exhibits
periodic oscillations with a large harmonics content at temperatures
where the Josephson current is purely sinusoidal. This is explained considering
that the populations of the Andreev levels are frozen on the time-scale of the
experiments.Comment: 5 pages,4 figure
Geometrical dependence of decoherence by electronic interactions in a GaAs/GaAlAs square network
We investigate weak localization in metallic networks etched in a two
dimensional electron gas between mK and mK when electron-electron
(e-e) interaction is the dominant phase breaking mechanism. We show that, at
the highest temperatures, the contributions arising from trajectories that wind
around the rings and trajectories that do not are governed by two different
length scales. This is achieved by analyzing separately the envelope and the
oscillating part of the magnetoconductance. For K we find
\Lphi^\mathrm{env}\propto{T}^{-1/3} for the envelope, and
\Lphi^\mathrm{osc}\propto{T}^{-1/2} for the oscillations, in agreement with
the prediction for a single ring \cite{LudMir04,TexMon05}. This is the first
experimental confirmation of the geometry dependence of decoherence due to e-e
interaction.Comment: LaTeX, 5 pages, 4 eps figure
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