41,133 research outputs found
Corrugated structure insertion for extending the SASE bandwidth up to 3% at the European XFEL
The usage of x-ray free electron laser (XFEL) in femtosecond
nanocrystallography involves sequential illumination of many small crystals of
arbitrary orientation. Hence a wide radiation bandwidth will be useful in order
to obtain and to index a larger number of Bragg peaks used for determination of
the crystal orientation. Considering the baseline configuration of the European
XFEL in Hamburg, and based on beam dynamics simulations, we demonstrate here
that the usage of corrugated structures allows for a considerable increase in
radiation bandwidth. Data collection with a 3% bandwidth, a few microjoule
radiation pulse energy, a few femtosecond pulse duration, and a photon energy
of 5.4 keV is possible. For this study we have developed an analytical modal
representation of the short-range wake function of the flat corrugated
structures for arbitrary offsets of the source and the witness particles.Comment: 29 pages, 17 figure
Improved minimax predictive densities under Kullback--Leibler loss
Let and be
independent p-dimensional multivariate normal vectors with common unknown mean
. Based on only observing , we consider the problem of obtaining a
predictive density for that is close to as
measured by expected Kullback--Leibler loss. A natural procedure for this
problem is the (formal) Bayes predictive density
under the uniform prior , which is best
invariant and minimax. We show that any Bayes predictive density will be
minimax if it is obtained by a prior yielding a marginal that is superharmonic
or whose square root is superharmonic. This yields wide classes of minimax
procedures that dominate , including Bayes
predictive densities under superharmonic priors. Fundamental similarities and
differences with the parallel theory of estimating a multivariate normal mean
under quadratic loss are described.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/009053606000000155 in the
Annals of Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
On the Structure of the Bose-Einstein Condensate Ground State
We construct a macroscopic wave function that describes the Bose-Einstein
condensate and weakly excited states, using the su(1,1) structure of the
mean-field hamiltonian, and compare this state with the experimental values of
second and third order correlation functions.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Persistent spin current in spin-orbit coupling systems in the absence of an external magnetic field
The spin-orbit coupling systems with a zero magnetic field is studied under
the equilibrium situation, {\it i.e.}, without a voltage bias. A persistent
spin current is predicted to exist under most circumstances, although the
persistent charge current and the spin accumulation are identically zero. In
particular, a two-dimensional quantum wire is investigated in detail.
Surprisingly, a persistent spin current is found to flow along the confined
direction, due to the spin precession in accompany with the particle motion.
This provides an interesting example of constant spin flowing without inducing
a spin accumulation, contrary to common intuition.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Nature of Spin Hall Effect in a finite Ballistic Two-Dimensional System with Rashba and Dresselhaus spin-orbit interaction
The spin Hall effect in a finite ballistic two-dimensional system with Rashba
and Dresselhaus spin-orbit interaction is studied numerically. We find that the
spin Hall conductance is very sensitive to the transverse measuring location,
the shape and size of the device, and the strength of the spin-orbit
interaction. Not only the amplitude of spin Hall conductance but also its sign
can change. This non-universal behavior of the spin Hall effect is essentially
different from that of the charge Hall effect, in which the Hall voltage is
almost invariant with the transverse measuring site and is a monotonic function
of the strength of the magnetic field. These surprise behavior of the spin Hall
conductance are attributed to the fact that the eigenstates of the spin Hall
system is extended in the transverse direction and do not form the edge states.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Bias-controllable intrinsic spin polarization in a quantum dot
We propose a novel scheme to efficiently polarize and manipulate the electron
spin in a quantum dot. This scheme is based on the spin-orbit interaction and
it possesses following advantages: (1) The direction and the strength of the
spin polarization is well controllable and manipulatable by simply varying the
bias or the gate voltage. (2) The spin polarization is quite large even with a
weak spin-orbit interaction. (3) Both electron-electron interaction and
multi-energy levels do not weaken but strengthen the spin polarization. (4) It
has the short spin flip time. (5) The device is free of a magnetic field or a
ferromagnetic material. (6) It can be easily realized with present technology.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
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