2,026 research outputs found
Testing dark matter and geometry sustained circular velocities in the Milky Way with Gaia DR2
Flat rotation curves in disk galaxies represent the main evidence for large
amounts of surrounding dark matter. Despite of the difficulty in identifying
the dark matter contribution to the total mass density in our Galaxy, stellar
kinematics, as tracer of gravitational potential, is the most reliable
observable for gauging different matter components. This work tests the
flatness of the MW rotation curve with a simple general relativistic model
suitable to represent the geometry of a disk as a stationary axisymmetric dust
metric at a sufficiently large distance from a central body. Circular
velocities of unprecedented accuracy were derived from the Gaia DR2 data for a
carefully selected sample of disk stars. We then fit these velocities to both
the classical, i.e. including a dark matter halo, rotation curve model and a
relativistic analogue, as derived form the solution of Einstein's equation. The
GR-compliant MW rotational curve model results statistically indistinguishable
from its state-of-the-art DM analogue. This supports our ansatz that a
stationary and axisymmetric galaxy-scale metric could "fill the gap" in a
baryons-only Milky Way, suggestive of star orbits dragged along the background
geometry. We confirmed that geometry is a manifestation of gravity according to
the Einstein theory, in particular the weak gravitational effect due to the
off-diagonal term of the metric could mimic for a "DM-like" effect in the
observed flatness of the MW rotation curve. In the context of Local Cosmology,
our findings are suggestive of a Galaxy phase-space as the exterior
gravitational field of a Kerr-like source (inner rotating bulge) without the
need of extra-matter.Comment: Acknowledgments and references updated; 18 pages, 2 figures, improved
version after referee's comment
Deferring the learning for better generalization in radial basis neural networks
Proceeding of: International Conference Artificial Neural Networks — ICANN 2001. Vienna, Austria, August 21–25, 2001The level of generalization of neural networks is heavily dependent on the quality of the training data. That is, some of the training patterns can be redundant or irrelevant. It has been shown that with careful dynamic selection of training patterns, better generalization performance may be obtained. Nevertheless, generalization is carried out independently of the novel patterns to be approximated. In this paper, we present a learning method that automatically selects the most appropriate training patterns to the new sample to be predicted. The proposed method has been applied to Radial Basis Neural Networks, whose generalization capability is usually very poor. The learning strategy slows down the response of the network in the generalisation phase. However, this does not introduces a significance limitation in the application of the method because of the fast training of Radial Basis Neural Networks
Spin dynamics in electrochemically charged CdSe quantum dots
We use time-resolved Faraday rotation to measure coherent spin dynamics in
colloidal CdSe quantum dots charged in an electrochemical cell at room
temperature. Filling of the 1Se electron level is demonstrated by the bleaching
of the 1Se-1S3/2 absorption peak. One of the two Lande g-factors observed in
uncharged quantum dots disappears upon filling of the 1Se electron state. The
transverse spin coherence time, which is over 1 ns and is limited by
inhomogeneous dephasing, also appears to increase with charging voltage. The
amplitude of the spin precession signal peaks near the half-filling potential.
Its evolution at charging potentials without any observable bleaching of the
1Se-1S3/2 transition suggests that the spin dynamics are influenced by
low-energy surface states.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Gluon Condensate and Beyond
We review briefly and in retrospect the development which brought about the
QCD sum rules based on introduction of the gluon condensate (M.A. Shifman, A.I.
Vainshtein, and V.I. Zakharov (1978)).Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, uses sprocl.sty (included). The 1999 Sakurai
Prize Lectur
Local Manipulation of Nuclear Spin in a Semiconductor Quantum Well
The shaping of nuclear spin polarization profiles and the induction of
nuclear resonances are demonstrated within a parabolic quantum well using an
externally applied gate voltage. Voltage control of the electron and hole wave
functions results in nanometer-scale sheets of polarized nuclei positioned
along the growth direction of the well. RF voltages across the gates induce
resonant spin transitions of selected isotopes. This depolarizing effect
depends strongly on the separation of electrons and holes, suggesting that a
highly localized mechanism accounts for the observed behavior.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure
Observation of vortex-nucleated magnetization reversal in individual ferromagnetic nanotubes
The reversal of a uniform axial magnetization in a ferromagnetic nanotube
(FNT) has been predicted to nucleate and propagate through vortex domains
forming at the ends. In dynamic cantilever magnetometry measurements of
individual FNTs, we identify the entry of these vortices as a function of
applied magnetic field and show that they mark the nucleation of magnetization
reversal. We find that the entry field depends sensitively on the angle between
the end surface of the FNT and the applied field. Micromagnetic simulations
substantiate the experimental results and highlight the importance of the ends
in determining the reversal process. The control over end vortex formation
enabled by our findings is promising for the production of FNTs with tailored
reversal properties.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figure
Quantum dot opto-mechanics in a fully self-assembled nanowire
We show that fully self-assembled optically-active quantum dots (QDs)
embedded in MBE-grown GaAs/AlGaAs core-shell nanowires (NWs) are coupled to the
NW mechanical motion. Oscillations of the NW modulate the QD emission energy in
a broad range exceeding 14 meV. Furthermore, this opto-mechanical interaction
enables the dynamical tuning of two neighboring QDs into resonance, possibly
allowing for emitter-emitter coupling. Both the QDs and the coupling mechanism
-- material strain -- are intrinsic to the NW structure and do not depend on
any functionalization or external field. Such systems open up the prospect of
using QDs to probe and control the mechanical state of a NW, or conversely of
making a quantum non-demolition readout of a QD state through a position
measurement.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figure
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