1,108 research outputs found
Nonlinear absorption of surface acoustic waves by composite fermions
Absorption of surface acoustic waves by a two-dimensional electron gas in a
perpendicular magnetic field is considered. The structure of such system at the
filling factor close to 1/2 can be understood as a gas of {\em composite
fermions}. It is shown that the absorption at can be strongly
nonlinear, while small deviation form 1/2 will restore the linear absorption.
Study of nonlinear absorption allows one to determine the force acting upon the
composite fermions from the acoustic wave at turning points of their
trajectories.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, submitted to Europhysics letter
The 2011 Nucleic Acids Research Database Issue and the online Molecular Biology Database Collection
The current 18th Database Issue of Nucleic Acids Research features descriptions of 96 new and 83 updated online databases covering various areas of molecular biology. It includes two editorials, one that discusses COMBREX, a new exciting project aimed at figuring out the functions of the āconserved hypotheticalā proteins, and one concerning BioDBcore, a proposed description of the āminimal information about a biological databaseā. Papers from the members of the International Nucleotide Sequence Database collaboration (INSDC) describe each of the participating databases, DDBJ, ENA and GenBank, principles of data exchange within the collaboration, and the recently established Sequence Read Archive. A testament to the longevity of databases, this issue includes updates on the RNA modification database, Definition of Secondary Structure of Proteins (DSSP) and Homology-derived Secondary Structure of Proteins (HSSP) databases, which have not been featured here in >12 years. There is also a block of papers describing recent progress in protein structure databases, such as Protein DataBank (PDB), PDB in Europe (PDBe), CATH, SUPERFAMILY and others, as well as databases on protein structure modeling, proteināprotein interactions and the organization of inter-protein contact sites. Other highlights include updates of the popular gene expression databases, GEO and ArrayExpress, several cancer gene databases and a detailed description of the UK PubMed Central project. The Nucleic Acids Research online Database Collection, available at: http://www.oxfordjournals.org/nar/database/a/, now lists 1330 carefully selected molecular biology databases. The full content of the Database Issue is freely available online at the Nucleic Acids Research web site (http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/)
Point contact spectroscopy of hopping transport: effects of a magnetic field
The conductance of a point contact between two hopping insulators is expected
to be dominated by the individual localized states in its vicinity. Here we
study the additional effects due to an external magnetic field. Combined with
the measured conductance, the measured magnetoresistance provides detailed
information on these states (e.g. their localization length, the energy
difference and the hopping distance between them). We also calculate the
statistics of this magnetoresistance, which can be collected by changing the
gate voltage in a single device. Since the conductance is dominated by the
quantum interference of particular mesoscopic structures near the point
contact, it is predicted to exhibit Aharonov-Bohm oscillations, which yield
information on the geometry of these structures. These oscillations also depend
on local spin accumulation and correlations, which can be modified by the
external field. Finally, we also estimate the mesoscopic Hall voltage due to
these structures.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figur
Coulomb-enhanced resonance transmission of quantum SINIS junctions
Coherent charge transfer through a ballistic gated SINIS junction is mediated
by the resonant tunneling via the Andreev states. Extra charge accommodated on
the Andreev levels partially compensates the charge induced by the gate voltage
preserving the electron wavelength and maintaining the resonance conditions in
a broad range of gate voltages. As a result, the transparency of the junction
as well as the supercurrent trough it can be substantially increased as
compared to the zero-Coulomb case
Cooling by Heating: Restoration of the Third Law of Thermodynamics
We have made a simple and natural modification of a recent quantum
refrigerator model presented by Cleuren et al. in Phys. Rev, Lett.108, 120603
(2012). The original model consist of two metal leads acting as heat baths, and
a set of quantum dots that allow for electron transport between the baths. It
was shown to violate the dynamic third law of thermodynamics (the
unattainability principle, which states that cooling to absolute zero in finite
time is impossible), but by taking into consideration the finite energy level
spacing in metals we restore the third law, while keeping all of the original
model's thermodynamic properties intact.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
- ā¦