3,221 research outputs found
Depressed clad hollow optical fiber with fundamental LP01 mode cut-off
We propose a depressed clad hollow optical fiber with fundamental (LP01) mode cut-off suitable for high power short-wavelength, especially three-level, fiber laser operation by introducing highly wavelength dependent losses at longer wavelengths. The cut-off characteristic of such fiber structure was investigated. A Yb-doped depressed clad hollow optical fiber laser generating 59.1W of output power at 1046nm with 86% of slope efficiency with respect to the absorbed pump power was realised by placing the LP01 mode cut-off at ~1100nm
Ethnicity and Consumption South Asian food shopping patterns in Britain, 1947-75
Authors' draft version also available on University of Surrey e-print repository. Final version published by Sage and available at http://joc.sagepub.com/This article reviews the literature that explores the relationship between ethnic
identities and food consumption, with particular reference to business management
studies. It focuses on the food shopping practices of south Asians in Britain in the
period 1947 to 1975, to illustrate the need for more historically contextualized studies
that can provide a more nuanced exploration of any interconnections between ethnic
identity and shopping behaviour. The article draws on a reasonably long-standing
interest in ethnicity and consumption in marketing studies, and explores the
conceptual use of acculturation within this literature. The arguments put forward are
framed by recent interdisciplinary studies of the broader relationship between
consumption and identity, which stress the importance of contextualizing any
influence of ethnic identifications through a wider consideration of other factors
including societal status, gender and age, rather than giving it singular treatment. The
article uses a body of empirical research drawn from recent oral histories, to explore
how these factors informed everyday shopping practices among south Asians in Britain. It examines some of the shopping and wider food provisioning strategies
adopted by early immigrants on arrival in Britain. It considers the interaction between
the south Asian population and the changing retail structure, in the context of the
development of self-service and the supermarket. Finally, it demonstrates how age,
gender and socioeconomic status interacted with ethnic identities to produce
variations in shopping patterns
Production of photons by the parametric resonance in the dynamical Casimir effect
We calculate the number of photons produced by the parametric resonance in a
cavity with vibrating walls. We consider the case that the frequency of
vibrating wall is which is a generalization of other
works considering only , where is the fundamental-mode
frequency of the electromagnetic field in the cavity. For the calculation of
time-evolution of quantum fields, we introduce a new method which is borrowed
from the time-dependent perturbation theory of the usual quantum mechanics.
This perturbation method makes it possible to calculate the photon number for
any and to observe clearly the effect of the parametric resonance.Comment: 15 pages, RevTeX, no figure
Current carrying capacity of carbon nanotubes
The current carrying capacity of ballistic electrons in carbon nanotubes that
are coupled to ideal contacts is analyzed. At small applied voltages, where
electrons are injected only into crossing subbands, the differential
conductance is . At applied voltages larger than
( is the energy level spacing of first non crossing subbands),
electrons are injected into non crossing subbands. The contribution of these
electrons to current is determined by the competing processes of Bragg
reflection and Zener type inter subband tunneling. In small diameter nanotubes,
Bragg reflection dominates, and the maximum differential conductance is
comparable to . Inter subband Zener tunneling can be non negligible as
the nanotube diameter increases because is inversely
proportional to the diameter. As a result, with increasing nanotube diameter,
the differential conductance becomes larger than , though not
comparable to the large number of subbands into which electrons are injected
from the contacts. These results may be relevant to recent experiments in large
diameter multi-wall nanotubes that observed conductances larger than .Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
High-Field Electrical Transport in Single-Wall Carbon Nanotubes
Using low-resistance electrical contacts, we have measured the intrinsic
high-field transport properties of metallic single-wall carbon nanotubes.
Individual nanotubes appear to be able to carry currents with a density
exceeding 10^9 A/cm^2. As the bias voltage is increased, the conductance drops
dramatically due to scattering of electrons. We show that the current-voltage
characteristics can be explained by considering optical or zone-boundary phonon
emission as the dominant scattering mechanism at high field.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figure
A model for spin-polarized transport in perovskite manganite bi-crystal grain boundaries
We have studied the temperature dependence of low-field magnetoresistance and
current-voltage characteristics of a low-angle bi-crystal grain boundary
junction in perovskite manganite La_{2/3}Sr_{1/3}MnO_3 thin film. By gradually
trimming the junction we have been able to reveal the non-linear behavior of
the latter. With the use of the relation M_{GB} \propto M_{bulk}\sqrt{MR^*} we
have extracted the grain boundary magnetization. Further, we demonstrate that
the built-in potential barrier of the grain boundary can be modelled by
V_{bi}\propto M_{bulk}^2 - M_{GB}^2. Thus our model connects the
magnetoresistance with the potential barrier at the grain boundary region. The
results indicate that the band-bending at the grain boundary interface has a
magnetic origin.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Mesoscale magnetism at the grain boundaries in colossal magnetoresistive films
We report the discovery of mesoscale regions with distinctive magnetic
properties in epitaxial LaSrMnO films which exhibit
tunneling-like magnetoresistance across grain boundaries. By using
temperature-dependent magnetic force microscopy we observe that the mesoscale
regions are formed near the grain boundaries and have a different Curie
temperature (up to 20 K {\it higher}) than the grain interiors. Our images
provide direct evidence for previous speculations that the grain boundaries in
thin films are not magnetically and electronically sharp interfaces. The size
of the mesoscale regions varies with temperature and nature of the underlying
defect.Comment: 4 pages of text, 4 figure
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