20,777 research outputs found
Quasi-Langmuir-Blodgett Thin Film Deposition of Carbon Nanotubes
The handling and manipulation of carbon nanotubes continues to be a challenge
to those interested in the application potential of these promising materials.
To this end, we have developed a method to deposit pure nanotube films over
large flat areas on substrates of arbitrary composition. The method bears some
resemblance to the Langmuir-Blodgett deposition method used to lay down thin
organic layers. We show that this redeposition technique causes no major
changes in the films' microstructure and that they retain the electronic
properties of as-deposited film laid down on an alumina membrane.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures, submitted Journal of Applied Physic
Peaks and Troughs in Helioseismology: The Power Spectrum of Solar Oscillations
I present a matched-wave asymptotic analysis of the driving of solar
oscillations by a general localised source. The analysis provides a simple
mathematical description of the asymmetric peaks in the power spectrum in terms
of the relative locations of eigenmodes and troughs in the spectral response.
It is suggested that the difference in measured phase function between the
modes and the troughs in the spectrum will provide a key diagnostic of the
source of the oscillations. I also suggest a form for the asymmetric line
profiles to be used in the fitting of solar power spectra.
Finally I present a comparison between the numerical and asymptotic
descriptions of the oscillations. The numerical results bear out the
qualitative features suggested by the asymptotic analysis but suggest that
numerical calculations of the locations of the troughs will be necessary for a
quantitative comparison with the observations.Comment: 18 pages + 8 separate figures. To appear in Ap
Resource costs for fault-tolerant linear optical quantum computing
Linear optical quantum computing (LOQC) seems attractively simple:
information is borne entirely by light and processed by components such as beam
splitters, phase shifters and detectors. However this very simplicity leads to
limitations, such as the lack of deterministic entangling operations, which are
compensated for by using substantial hardware overheads. Here we quantify the
resource costs for full scale LOQC by proposing a specific protocol based on
the surface code. With the caveat that our protocol can be further optimised,
we report that the required number of physical components is at least five
orders of magnitude greater than in comparable matter-based systems. Moreover
the resource requirements grow higher if the per-component photon loss rate is
worse than one in a thousand, or the per-component noise rate is worse than
. We identify the performance of switches in the network as the single
most influential factor influencing resource scaling
Polynomial Interpretation of Multipole Vectors
Copi, Huterer, Starkman and Schwarz introduced multipole vectors in a tensor
context and used them to demonstrate that the first-year WMAP quadrupole and
octopole planes align at roughly the 99.9% confidence level. In the present
article the language of polynomials provides a new and independent derivation
of the multipole vector concept. Bezout's Theorem supports an elementary proof
that the multipole vectors exist and are unique (up to rescaling). The
constructive nature of the proof leads to a fast, practical algorithm for
computing multipole vectors. We illustrate the algorithm by finding exact
solutions for some simple toy examples, and numerical solutions for the
first-year WMAP quadrupole and octopole. We then apply our algorithm to Monte
Carlo skies to independently re-confirm the estimate that the WMAP quadrupole
and octopole planes align at the 99.9% level.Comment: Version 1: 6 pages. Version 2: added uniqueness proof to Corollary 2;
added proper citation (to Starkman et al.) for Open Question; other minor
improvement
Permutation-invariant distance between atomic configurations
We present a permutation-invariant distance between atomic configurations,
defined through a functional representation of atomic positions. This distance
enables to directly compare different atomic environments with an arbitrary
number of particles, without going through a space of reduced dimensionality
(i.e. fingerprints) as an intermediate step. Moreover, this distance is
naturally invariant through permutations of atoms, avoiding the time consuming
associated minimization required by other common criteria (like the Root Mean
Square Distance). Finally, the invariance through global rotations is accounted
for by a minimization procedure in the space of rotations solved by Monte Carlo
simulated annealing. A formal framework is also introduced, showing that the
distance we propose verifies the property of a metric on the space of atomic
configurations. Two examples of applications are proposed. The first one
consists in evaluating faithfulness of some fingerprints (or descriptors), i.e.
their capacity to represent the structural information of a configuration. The
second application concerns structural analysis, where our distance proves to
be efficient in discriminating different local structures and even classifying
their degree of similarity
Strong lensing by fermionic dark matter in galaxies
It has been shown that a self-gravitating system of massive keV fermions in
thermodynamic equilibrium correctly describes the dark matter (DM) distribution
in galactic halos and predicts a denser quantum core towards the center of the
configuration. Such a quantum core, for a fermion mass in the range of keV
keV, can be an alternative interpretation of the
central compact object in Sgr A*. We present in this work the gravitational
lensing properties of this novel DM model in Milky Way-like spiral galaxies. We
describe the lensing effects of the pure DM component both on halo scales,
where we compare them to the effects of the Navarro-Frenk-White and the
Non-Singular Isothermal Sphere DM models, and near the galaxy center, where we
compare them with the effects of a Schwarzschild BH. For the particle mass
leading to the most compact DM core, keV, we draw the
following conclusions. At distances pc from the center of the
lens the effect of the central object on the lensing properties is negligible.
However, we show that measurements of the deflection angle produced by the DM
distribution in the outer region at a few kpc, together with rotation curve
data, could help to discriminate between different DM models. We show that at
distances pc strong lensing effects, such as multiple images and
Einstein rings, may occur. Large differences in the deflection angle produced
by a DM central core and a central BH appear at distances
pc; in this regime the weak-field formalism is no longer applicable and the
exact general-relativistic formula has to be used. We find that quantum DM
cores do not show a photon sphere what implies that they do not cast a shadow.
Similar conclusions apply to the other DM distributions for other fermion
masses in the above specified range and for other galaxy types.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures. v2: Version published in PR
On the classification and properties of noncommutative duplicates
We give an explicit description of the set of all factorization structures,
or twisting maps, existing between the algebras k^2 and k^2, and classify the
resulting algebras up to isomorphism. In the process we relate several
different approaches formerly taken to deal with this problem, filling a gap
that appeared in a recent paper by Cibils. We also provide a counterexample to
a result concerning the Hochschild (co)homology appeared in a paper by J.A.
Guccione and J.J. Guccione.Comment: 11 pages, no figure
Onsager-Manning-Oosawa condensation phenomenon and the effect of salt
Making use of results pertaining to Painleve III type equations, we revisit
the celebrated Onsager-Manning-Oosawa condensation phenomenon for charged stiff
linear polymers, in the mean-field approximation with salt. We obtain
analytically the associated critical line charge density, and show that it is
severely affected by finite salt effects, whereas previous results focused on
the no salt limit. In addition, we obtain explicit expressions for the
condensate thickness and the electric potential. The case of asymmetric
electrolytes is also briefly addressed.Comment: to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Can a Reasonable Doubt Have an Unreasonable Price? Limitations on Attorneys\u27 Fee in Criminal Cases
The disciplinary rules of every state prohibit attorneys from charging unreasonable fees. These provisions, however; are virtually never enforced; virtually all instances where the rules are invoked involve independent forms of dishonesty or misconduct. The only two cases in which attorneys have been disciplined solely based on the size of the fee involved blue-chip civil attorneys who represented working-class defendants in criminal matters. In both cases, the rationale for discipline was questionable; the clients were completely exonerated of criminal charges and the fees would have been unexceptional in elite civil practice. These disciplinary prosecutions were particularly doubtful because the Sixth Amendment right to counsel of choice prohibits the government from limiting the amount of money criminal defendants can pay their lawyers. The reasonable fee rules are either unenforced or questionably enforced because they are not designed to limit lawyer\u27s fees or incomes per se, but to ensure that lawyers do not take advantage of clients, and that clients understand the nature of the legal services they are buying. The mismatch between the purpose of the rules and their language should be remedied by making clear that lawyers are obligated to talk with their clients about their legal options and offer some estimate of what they might cost. But fees negotiated after appropriate disclosure should not subject an attorney to discipline
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