852 research outputs found
Fast switching current detection at low critical currents
A pulse-and-hold technique is used to measure the switching of small critical
current Josephson junctions. This technique allows one to achieve a good binary
detection and therefore measure switching probabilities. The technique
overcomes limitations on simple square pulses and allows for the measurement of
junctions with critical currents of the order of 10nA with bias pulses of the
order of 100ns. A correlation analysis of the switching events is performed to
show how the switching probability depends on the wait time between repeated
bias pulses.Comment: Changed abstract Added reference 1
Calculation of subsonic and supersonic steady and unsteady aerodynamic forces using velocity potential aerodynamic elements
Expressions for calculation of subsonic and supersonic, steady and unsteady aerodynamic forces are derived, using the concept of aerodynamic elements applied to the downwash velocity potential method. Aerodynamic elements can be of arbitrary out of plane polygon shape, although numerical calculations are restricted to rectangular elements, and to the steady state case in the supersonic examples. It is suggested that the use of conforming, in place of rectangular elements, would give better results. Agreement with results for subsonic oscillating T tails is fair, but results do not converge as the number of collocation points is increased. This appears to be due to the form of expression used in the calculations. The methods derived are expected to facilitate automated flutter analysis on the computer. In particular, the aerodynamic element concept is consistent with finite element methods already used for structural analysis. The method is universal for the complete Mach number range, and, finally, the calculations can be arranged so that they do not have to be repeated completely for every reduced frequency
Dynamic Calibration of Higher Eigenmode Parameters of a Cantilever in Atomic Force Microscopy Using Tip-Surface Interactions
We present a theoretical framework for the dynamic calibration of the higher
eigenmode parameters (stiffness and optical lever responsivity) of a
cantilever. The method is based on the tip-surface force reconstruction
technique and does not require any prior knowledge of the eigenmode shape or
the particular form of the tip-surface interaction. The calibration method
proposed requires a single-point force measurement using a multimodal drive and
its accuracy is independent of the unknown physical amplitude of a higher
eigenmode.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Coulomb Blockade and Coherent Single-Cooper-Pair Tunneling in Single Josephson Junctions
We have measured the current-voltage characteristics of small-capacitance
single Josephson junctions at low temperatures (T < 0.04 K), where the strength
of the coupling between the single junction and the electromagnetic environment
was controlled with one-dimensional arrays of dc SQUIDs. We have clearly
observed Coulomb blockade of Cooper-pair tunneling and even a region of
negative differential resistance, when the zero-bias resistance of the SQUID
arrays is much higher than the quantum resistance h/e^2 = 26 kohm. The negative
differential resistance is evidence of coherent single-Cooper-pair tunneling in
the single Josephson junction.Comment: RevTeX, 4 pages with 6 embedded figure
The Moment Problem for Continuous Positive Semidefinite Linear functionals
Let be a locally convex topology on the countable dimensional
polynomial -algebra \rx:=\reals[X_1,...,X_n]. Let be a closed
subset of , and let be a finitely generated
quadratic module in \rx. We investigate the following question: When is the
cone \Pos(K) (of polynomials nonnegative on ) included in the closure of
? We give an interpretation of this inclusion with respect to representing
continuous linear functionals by measures. We discuss several examples; we
compute the closure of M=\sos with respect to weighted norm- topologies.
We show that this closure coincides with the cone \Pos(K) where is a
certain convex compact polyhedron.Comment: 14 page
Imaging high-speed friction at the nanometer scale
Friction is a complicated phenomenon involving nonlinear dynamics at
different length and time scales[1, 2]. The microscopic origin of friction is
poorly understood, due in part to a lack of methods for measuring the force on
a nanometer-scale asperity sliding at velocity of the order of cm/s.[3, 4]
Despite enormous advance in experimental techniques[5], this combination of
small length scale and high velocity remained illusive. Here we present a
technique for rapidly measuring the frictional forces on a single asperity (an
AFM tip) over a velocity range from zero to several cm/s. At each image pixel
we obtain the velocity dependence of both conservative and dissipative forces,
revealing the transition from stick-slip to a smooth sliding friction[1, 6]. We
explain measurements on graphite using a modified Prandtl-Tomlinson model that
takes into account the damped elastic deformation of the asperity. With its
greatly improved force sensitivity and very small sliding amplitude, our method
enables rapid and detailed surface mapping of the full velocity-dependence of
frictional forces with less than 10~nm spatial resolution.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
A Dynamic Duo: Emotion and Development (Commentary on M.D. Lewis, A Dynamic Systems Approach to Emotion)
A dynamic systems (DS) approach uncovers important connections between emotion and neurophysiology. It is critical, however, to include a developmental perspective. Strides in the understanding of emotional development, as well as the present use of DS in developmental science, add significantly to the study of emotion. Examples include stranger fear during infancy, intermodal perception of emotion, and development of individual emotional systems
Perturbation Effects on Deer Mouse Populations in Corn Agroecosystems
Author Institution: Department of Zoology, Miami UniversityPeromyscus maniculatus living in or near agricultural fields are often exposed simultaneously to insecticide stress and temporary lack of cover at the time of planting. The effects of these two perturbations on P. maniculatus populations in experimental agroecosystems were investigated. Eight 0.1-ha enclosures were planted in field corn (Zea mayes). Four enclosures were treated with COUNTER® insecticide at the time of planting and four were left as untreated controls. Four pair of adult P. maniculatus were released into each enclosure and their population dynamics monitored for five weeks following treatment. No significant differences were found between Peromyscus densities in control and insecticide-treated plots or between sex ratios and trapping efficiencies. Also, no significant differences were found in habitat use by male and female mice. Predation, however, appeared to have caused a decline in population densities during week two in both treated and control plots
Diode Effect in Asymmetric Double Tunnel Barriers with Single Metal Nanoclusters
Asymmetric double tunnel barriers with the center electrode being a metal
cluster in the quantum regime are studied. The zero dimensionality of the
clusters used and the associated quantized energy spectra are manifest in
well-defined steps in the current voltage characteristic (IVC). Record high
current rectification ratios of 10000 for tunneling through such clusters are
demonstrated at room temperature. We are able to account for all of the
experimentally observed features by modeling our double barrier structures
using a combination of discrete states and charging effects for tunneling
through quantum dots.Comment: 8 pages and 3 figures. Accepted for publication in Applied Physics
Letters in 15 march 200
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