3,221 research outputs found
Temperature Measurement and Phonon Number Statistics of a Nanoelectromechanical Resonator
Measuring thermodynamic quantities can be easy or not, depending on the
system that is being studied. For a macroscopic object, measuring temperatures
can be as simple as measuring how much a column of mercury rises when in
contact with the object. At the small scale of quantum electromechanical
systems, such simple methods are not available and invariably detection
processes disturb the system state. Here we propose a method for measuring the
temperature on a suspended semiconductor membrane clamped at both ends. In this
method, the membrane is mediating a capacitive coupling between two
transmission line resonators (TLR). The first TLR has a strong dispersion, that
is, its decaying rate is larger than its drive, and its role is to pump in a
pulsed way the interaction between the membrane and the second TLR. By
averaging the pulsed measurements of the quadrature of the second TLR we show
how the temperature of the membrane can be determined. Moreover the statistical
description of the state of the membrane, which is directly accessed in this
approach is significantly improved by the addition of a Josephson Junction
coupled to the second TLR.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures. To appear in New Journal of Physic
Capacitive Coupling of Two Transmission Line Resonators Mediated by the Phonon Number of a Nanoelectromechanical Oscillator
Detection of quantum features in mechanical systems at the nanoscale
constitutes a challenging task, given the weak interaction with other elements
and the available technics. Here we describe how the interaction between two
monomodal transmission-line resonators (TLRs) mediated by vibrations of a
nano-electromechanical oscillator can be described. This scheme is then
employed for quantum non-demolition detection of the number of phonons in the
nano-electromechanical oscillator through a direct current measurement in the
output of one of the TLRs. For that to be possible an undepleted field inside
one of the TLR works as a amplifier for the interaction between the mechanical
resonator and the remaining TLR. We also show how how the non-classical nature
of this system can be used for generation of tripartite entanglement and
conditioned mechanical coherent superposition states, which may be further
explored for detection processes.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Two-species fermion mixtures with population imbalance
We analyze the phase diagram of uniform superfluidity for two-species fermion
mixtures from the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) to Bose-Einstein condensation
(BEC) limit as a function of the scattering parameter and population imbalance.
We find at zero temperature that the phase diagram of population imbalance
versus scattering parameter is asymmetric for unequal masses, having a larger
stability region for uniform superfluidity when the lighter fermions are in
excess. In addition, we find topological quantum phase transitions associated
with the disappearance or appearance of momentum space regions of zero
quasiparticle energies. Lastly, near the critical temperature, we derive the
Ginzburg-Landau equation, and show that it describes a dilute mixture of
composite bosons and unpaired fermions in the BEC limit.Comment: 4 pages with 3 figures, accepted version to PR
Divergência genética em germoplasma de mangueira baseada em caracteres qualitativos do fruto.
O objetivo deste trabalho foi determinar a divergência genética de 57 acessos de mangueira (Mangifera indica L.) utilizando escritores qualitativos do fruto
Fermi-Fermi Mixtures in the Strong Attraction Limit
The phase diagrams of low density Fermi-Fermi mixtures with equal or unequal
masses and equal or unequal populations are described at zero and finite
temperatures in the strong attraction limit. In this limit, the Fermi-Fermi
mixture can be described by a weakly interacting Bose-Fermi mixture, where the
bosons correspond to Feshbach molecules and the fermions correspond to excess
atoms. First, we discuss the three and four fermion scattering processes, and
use the exact boson-fermion and boson-boson scattering lengths to generate the
phase diagrams in terms of the underlying fermion-fermion scattering length. In
three dimensions, in addition to the normal and uniform superfluid phases, we
find two stable non-uniform states corresponding to (1) phase separation
between pure unpaired (excess) and pure paired fermions (molecular bosons); and
(2) phase separation between pure excess fermions and a mixture of excess
fermions and molecular bosons. Lastly, we also discuss the effects of the
trapping potential in the density profiles of condensed and non-condensed
molecular bosons, and excess fermions at zero and finite temperatures, and
discuss possible implications of our findings to experiments involving mixtures
of ultracold fermions.Comment: 12 Pages, 6 Figures and 1 Tabl
Diffraction and an infrared finite gluon propagator
We discuss some phenomenological applications of an infrared finite gluon
propagator characterized by a dynamically generated gluon mass. In particular
we compute the effect of the dynamical gluon mass on and
diffractive scattering. We also show how the data on photoproduction
and hadronic reactions can be derived from the and
forward scattering amplitudes by assuming vector meson dominance and
the additive quark model.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures, added references and figures, changed structure.
Contribution to Proceedings of XVIIIth Reuniao de Trabalho sobre Interacoes
Hadronicas, Sao Paulo, Brazil, 22-24 May, 200
Phase Fluctuations and Vortex Lattice Melting in Triplet Quasi-One-Dimensional Superconductors at High Magnetic Fields
Assuming that the order parameter corresponds to an equal spin triplet
pairing symmetry state, we calculate the effect of phase fluctuations in
quasi-one-dimensional superconductors at high magnetic fields applied along the
y (b') axis. We show that phase fluctuations can destroy the theoretically
predicted triplet reentrant superconducting state, and that they are
responsible for melting the magnetic field induced Josephson vortex lattice
above a magnetic field dependent melting temperature Tm.Comment: 4 pages (double column), 1 eps figur
Distance-based decision tree algorithms for label ranking
The problem of Label Ranking is receiving increasing attention from several research communities. The algorithms that have developed/adapted to treat rankings as the target object follow two different approaches: distribution-based (e.g., using Mallows model) or correlation-based (e.g., using Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient). Decision trees have been adapted for label ranking following both approaches. In this paper we evaluate an existing correlation-based approach and propose a new one, Entropy-based Ranking trees. We then compare and discuss the results with a distribution-based approach. The results clearly indicate that both approaches are competitive
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