15,134 research outputs found
Parity Effect in a Small Superconducting Particle
Matveev and Larkin calculated the parity effect on the ground state energy of
a small superconducting particle in the regimes where the mean level spacing is
either large or small compared to the bulk gap. We perform a numerical
calculation which extends their results into the intermediate regime, where the
level spacing is of the same order as the bulk gap.Comment: 6 LaTeX pages, including 2 EPS figures; corrected reference and
spellin
Tunneling Anomaly in Superconductor above Paramagnetic Limit
We study the tunneling density of states (DoS) in the superconducting systems
driven by Zeeman splitting E_Z into the paramagnetic phase. We show that, even
though the BCS gap disappears, superconducting fluctuations cause a strong DoS
singularity in the vicinity of energies -E^* for electrons polarized along the
magnetic field and E^* for the opposite polarization. The position of the
singularity E^*=(1/2) (E_Z + \sqrt{E_Z^2- \Delta^2}) (where \Delta is BCS gap
at E_Z=0) is universal. We found analytically the shape of the DoS for
different dimensionality of the system. For ultrasmall grains the singularity
has the form of the hard gap, while in higher dimensions it appears as a
significant though finite dip. Our results are consistent with recent
experiments in superconducting films.Comment: 4 pages, 2 .eps figures include
Data and the city – accessibility and openness. a cybersalon paper on open data
This paper showcases examples of bottom–up open data and smart city applications and identifies lessons for future such efforts. Examples include Changify, a neighbourhood-based platform for residents, businesses, and companies; Open Sensors, which provides APIs to help businesses, startups, and individuals develop applications for the Internet of Things; and Cybersalon’s Hackney Treasures. a location-based mobile app that uses Wikipedia entries geolocated in Hackney borough to map notable local residents. Other experiments with sensors and open data by Cybersalon members include Ilze Black and Nanda Khaorapapong's The Breather, a "breathing" balloon that uses high-end, sophisticated sensors to make air quality visible; and James Moulding's AirPublic, which measures pollution levels. Based on Cybersalon's experience to date, getting data to the people is difficult, circuitous, and slow, requiring an intricate process of leadership, public relations, and perseverance. Although there are myriad tools and initiatives, there is no one solution for the actual transfer of that data
Effect of Time Reversal Symmetry Breaking on the Density of States in Small Superconducting Grains
We show that in ultra-small superconducting grains any concentration of
magnetic impurities or infinitely small orbital effect of magnetic field leads
to destruction of the hard gap in the tunneling density of states. Instead,
though exponentially suppressed at low energies, the tunneling density of
states exhibits the ``soft gap'' behavior, vanishing linearly with excitation
energy, as the energy approaches zero.Comment: 4 pages, 1 eps figur
Hopf algebras and characters of classical groups
Schur functions provide an integral basis of the ring of symmetric functions.
It is shown that this ring has a natural Hopf algebra structure by identifying
the appropriate product, coproduct, unit, counit and antipode, and their
properties. Characters of covariant tensor irreducible representations of the
classical groups GL(n), O(n) and Sp(n) are then expressed in terms of Schur
functions, and the Hopf algebra is exploited in the determination of
group-subgroup branching rules and the decomposition of tensor products. The
analysis is carried out in terms of n-independent universal characters. The
corresponding rings, CharGL, CharO and CharSp, of universal characters each
have their own natural Hopf algebra structure. The appropriate product,
coproduct, unit, counit and antipode are identified in each case.Comment: 9 pages. Uses jpconf.cls and jpconf11.clo. Presented by RCK at
SSPCM'07, Myczkowce, Poland, Sept 200
Decoherence in qubits due to low-frequency noise
The efficiency of the future devices for quantum information processing is
limited mostly by the finite decoherence rates of the qubits. Recently a
substantial progress was achieved in enhancing the time, which a solid-state
qubit demonstrates a coherent dynamics. This progress is based mostly on a
successful isolation of the qubits from external decoherence sources. Under
these conditions the material-inherent sources of noise start to play a crucial
role. In most cases the noise that quantum device demonstrate has 1/f spectrum.
This suggests that the environment that destroys the phase coherence of the
qubit can be thought of as a system of two-state fluctuators, which experience
random hops between their states. In this short review we discuss the current
state of the theory of the decoherence due to the qubit interaction with the
fluctuators. We describe the effect of such an environment on different
protocols of the qubit manipulations - free induction and echo signal. It turns
out that in many important cases the noise produced by the fluctuators is
non-Gaussian. Consequently the results of the interaction of the qubit with the
fluctuators are not determined by the pair correlation function only.
We describe the effect of the fluctuators using so-called spin-fluctuator
model. Being quite realistic this model allows one to evaluate the qubit
dynamics in the presence of one fluctuator exactly. This solution is found, and
its features, including non-Gaussian effects are analyzed in details. We extend
this consideration for the systems of large number of fluctuators, which
interact with the qubit and lead to the 1/f noise. We discuss existing
experiments on the Josephson qubit manipulation and try to identify
non-Gaussian behavior.Comment: 25 pages, 7 figure
Solar energy for self-contained power supply
Solar energy relevance in self-contained utility system as well as economic feasibility for each class of consumers considered. The article will outline utilising features of self-contained photovoltaic stations in Middle East and Northern Africa
Non-Gaussian dephasing in flux qubits due to 1/f-noise
Recent experiments by F. Yoshihara et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 167001
(2006)] and by K. Kakuyanagi et al. (cond-mat/0609564) provided information on
decoherence of the echo signal in Josephson-junction flux qubits at various
bias conditions. These results were interpreted assuming a Gaussian model for
the decoherence due to 1/f noise. Here we revisit this problem on the basis of
the exactly solvable spin-fluctuator model reproducing detailed properties of
the 1/f noise interacting with a qubit. We consider the time dependence of the
echo signal and conclude that the results based on the Gaussian assumption need
essential reconsideration.Comment: Improved fitting parameters, new figur
Observation of Collective-Emission-Induced Cooling inside an Optical Cavity
We report the observation of collective-emission-induced, velocity-dependent
light forces. One third of a falling sample containing 3 x 10^6 cesium atoms
illuminated by a horizontal standing wave is stopped by cooperatively emitting
light into a vertically oriented confocal resonator. We observe decelerations
up to 1500 m/s^2 and cooling to temperatures as low as 7 uK, well below the
free space Doppler limit. The measured forces substantially exceed those
predicted for a single two-level atom.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
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