9,344 research outputs found

    Means and method of measuring viscoelastic strain Patent

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    Photographic method for measuring viscoelastic strain in solid propellants and other material

    Miniature stress transducer Patent

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    Miniature solid state, direction sensitive, stress transducer design with bonded semiconductive piezoresistive element for sensing residual stresse

    Band topology and quantum spin Hall effect in bilayer graphene

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    We consider bilayer graphene in the presence of spin orbit coupling, to assess its behavior as a topological insulator. The first Chern number nn for the energy bands of single and bilayer graphene is computed and compared. It is shown that for a given valley and spin, nn in a bilayer is doubled with respect to the monolayer. This implies that bilayer graphene will have twice as many edge states as single layer graphene, which we confirm with numerical calculations and analytically in the case of an armchair terminated surface. Bilayer graphene is a weak topological insulator, whose surface spectrum is susceptible to gap opening under spin-mixing perturbations. We also assess the stability of the associated topological bulk state of bilayer graphene under various perturbations. Finally, we consider an intermediate situation in which only one of the two layers has spin orbit coupling, and find that although individual valleys have non-trivial Chern numbers, the spectrum as a whole is not gapped, so that the system is not a topological insulator.Comment: 9 pages. 9 figures include

    Bound on distributed entanglement

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    Using the convex-roof extended negativity and the negativity of assistance as quantifications of bipartite entanglement, we consider the possible remotely-distributed entanglement. For two pure states ∣ϕ⟩AB\ket{\phi}_{AB} and ∣ψ⟩CD\ket{\psi}_{CD} on bipartite systems ABAB and CDCD, we first show that the possible amount of entanglement remotely distributed on the system ACAC by joint measurement on the system BDBD is not less than the product of two amounts of entanglement for the states ∣ϕ⟩AB\ket{\phi}_{AB} and ∣ψ⟩CD\ket{\psi}_{CD} in two-qubit and two-qutrit systems. We also provide some sufficient conditions, for which the result can be generalized into higher-dimensional quantum systems.Comment: 5 page

    Neighborhood models of minority opinion spreading

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    We study the effect of finite size population in Galam's model [Eur. Phys. J. B 25 (2002) 403] of minority opinion spreading and introduce neighborhood models that account for local spatial effects. For systems of different sizes N, the time to reach consensus is shown to scale as ln N in the original version, while the evolution is much slower in the new neighborhood models. The threshold value of the initial concentration of minority supporters for the defeat of the initial majority, which is independent of N in Galam's model, goes to zero with growing system size in the neighborhood models. This is a consequence of the existence of a critical size for the growth of a local domain of minority supporters

    Universal scaling of current fluctuations in disordered graphene

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    We analyze the full transport statistics of graphene with smooth disorder at low dopings. First we consider the case of 1D disorder for which the transmission probability distribution is given analytically in terms of the graphene-specific mean free path. All current cumulants are shown to scale with system parameters (doping, size, disorder strength and correlation length) in an identical fashion for large enough systems. In the case of 2D disorder, numerical evidence is given for the same kind of identical scaling of all current cumulants, so that the ratio of any two such cumulants is universal. Specific universal values are given for the Fano factor, which is smaller than the pseudodiffusive value of ballistic graphene (F=1/3) both for 1D (F=0.243) and 2D (F=0.295) disorder. On the other hand, conductivity in wide samples is shown to grow without saturation as \sqrt{L} and Log L with system length L in the 1D and 2D cases respectively.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures. Published version, includes corrected figure for Fano facto

    Contact Atomic Structure and Electron Transport Through Molecules

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    Using benzene sandwiched between two Au leads as a model system, we investigate from first principles the change in molecular conductance caused by different atomic structures around the metal-molecule contact. Our motivation is the variable situations that may arise in break junction experiments; our approach is a combined density functional theory and Green function technique. We focus on effects caused by (1) the presence of an additional Au atom at the contact and (2) possible changes in the molecule-lead separation. The effects of contact atomic relaxation and two different lead orientations are fully considered. We find that the presence of an additional Au atom at each of the two contacts will increase the equilibrium conductance by up to two orders of magnitude regardless of either the lead orientation or different group-VI anchoring atoms. This is due to a LUMO-like resonance peak near the Fermi energy. In the non-equilibrium properties, the resonance peak manifests itself in a large negative differential conductance. We find that the dependence of the equilibrium conductance on the molecule-lead separation can be quite subtle: either very weak or very strong depending on the separation regime.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
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