237 research outputs found
Inertia compensation while scanning screw threads on coordinate-measuring machines
Usage of scanning coordinate-measuring machines for inspection of screw
threads has become a common practice nowadays. Compared to touch trigger
probing, scanning capabilities allow to speed up measuring process while still
maintaining high accuracy. However, in some cases accuracy drasticaly depends
on the scanning speed. In this paper a compensation method is proposed allowing
to reduce the influence of some dynamic effects while scanning screw threads on
coordinate-measuring machines
Shot noise in superconducting junctions with weak link formed by Anderson impurity
A theory is developed to study shot noise in superconducting (SAS) and hybrid
(SAN) junctions with singly occupied Anderson impurity (A) as a weak link. The
zero-frequency DC component of the shot noise spectral density is calculated at
zero temperature as a function of the bias at different Coulomb repulsion
strengths U, and show a remarkable structure resulting from combination of
electron-electron interaction and Andreev reflections.Comment: 4 two column pages including 4 .eps figure
Excess Noise in Biased Superconducting Weak Links
Non-equilibrium excess noise of a short quasi one-dimensional constriction
between two superconductors is considered. A general expression for the
current-current correlation function valid for arbitrary temperatures and bias
voltages is derived. This formalism is applied to a current-carrying quantum
channel with perfect transparency. Contrary to a transparent channel separating
two normal conductors, a weak link between two superconductors exhibits a
finite level of noise. The source of noise is fractional Andreev scattering of
quasiparticles with energies greater than the half-width of the
superconducting gap. For high bias voltages, , the relation
between the zero-frequency limit of the noise spectrum, , and the excess
current reads . As both the excess noise and the excess current vanish linearly in
, %, their ratio being constant.Comment: 8 pages (Latex), 1 figur
Noise in a Quantum Point Contact due to a Fluctuating Impurity Configuration
We propose a theoretical model for the low-frequency noise observed in a
quantum point contact (QPC) electrostatically defined in the 2D electron gas at
a GaAs-AlGaAs interface. In such contacts electron scattering by soft impurity-
or boundary potentials coherently splits an incoming wave function between
different transverse modes. Interference between these modes have been
suggested to explain observed non-linearities in the QPC-conductance. In this
study we invoke the same mechanism and the time-dependent current due to soft
dynamical impurity scattering in order to analyze the low-frequency
(telegraph-like) noise which has been observed along with a nonlinear
conductance. For the simplified case of a channel with two extended (current
carrying) modes, a simple analytical formula for the noise intensity is
derived. Generally we have found qualitative similarities between the noise and
the square of the transconductance. Nevertheless, incidentally there may be
situations when noise is suppressed but transconductance enhanced.Comment: 9 revte
Non-equilibrium current noise in mesoscopic disordered SNS junctions
Current noise in superconductor-normal metal-superconductor (SNS) junctions
is calculated within the scattering theory of multiple Andreev reflections
(MAR). It is shown that the noise exhibits subharmonic gap singularities at
, both in single-mode junctions with arbitrary
transparency and in multi-mode disordered junctions. The subharmonic
structure is superimposed with monotonic increase of the effective transferred
charge with decreasing bias voltage. Other features of the
noise include a step-like increase of in junctions with small , and a
divergence at small voltages and excess noise , where is the excess current, at large voltages, in
junctions with diffusive transport.Comment: 5 page
Finite voltage shot noise in normal-metal - superconductor junctions
We express the low-frequency shot noise in a disordered normal-metal -
superconductor (NS) junction at finite (subgap) voltage in terms of the normal
scattering amplitudes and the Andreev reflection amplitude. In the multichannel
limit, the conductance exhibits resonances which are accompanied by an
enhancement of the (differential) shot noise. In the study of multichannel
single and double barrier junctions we discuss the noise properties of coherent
transport at low versus high voltage with respect to the Andreev level spacing.Comment: 6 pages, Latex, 2 eps-figures, to be published in PRB, Appendix on
Bogoliubov equation
Radiation from the extremal black holes
The radiation from extreme Reissner-Nordstr\"{o}m black holes is computed by
explicitly considering the collapse of a spherical charged shell. No neutral
scalar radiation is found but there is emission of charged particles, provided
the charge to mass ratio be different from one. The absence of thermal effects
is in accord with the predictions of the euclidean theory but since the body
emits charged particles the entropy issue is not the same as for eternal
extreme black holes.Comment: 4 pages, LaTex, no figure
Flicker Noise Induced by Dynamic Impurities in a Quantum Point Contact
We calculate low-frequency noise (LFN) in a quantum point contact (QPC) which
is electrostatically defined in a 2D electron gas of a GaAs-AlGaAs
heterostructure. The conventional source of LFN in such systems are scattering
potentials fluctuating in time acting upon injected electrons. One can
discriminate between potentials of different origin -- noise may be caused by
the externally applied gate- and source-drain voltages, the motion of defects
with internal degrees of freedom close to the channel, electrons hopping
between localized states in the doped region, etc. In the present study we
propose a model of LFN based upon the assumption that there are many dynamic
defects in the surrounding of a QPC. A general expression for the
time-dependent current-current correlation function is derived and applied to a
QPC with quantized conductance. It is shown that the level of LFN is
significantly different at and between the steps in a plot of the conductance
vs. gate voltage. On the plateaus, the level of noise is found to be low and
strongly model-dependent. At the steps, LFN is much larger and only weakly
model-dependent. As long as the system is biased to be at a fixed position
relative the conductance step,Comment: 26 revtex APR 94-4
fpocket: online tools for protein ensemble pocket detection and tracking
Computational small-molecule binding site detection has several important applications in the biomedical field. Notable interests are the identification of cavities for structure-based drug discovery or functional annotation of structures. fpocket is a small-molecule pocket detection program, relying on the geometric α-sphere theory. The fpocket web server allows: (i) candidate pocket detection—fpocket; (ii) pocket tracking during molecular dynamics, in order to provide insights into pocket dynamics—mdpocket; and (iii) a transposition of mdpocket to the combined analysis of homologous structures—hpocket. These complementary online tools allow to tackle various questions related to the identification and annotation of functional and allosteric sites, transient pockets and pocket preservation within evolution of structural families. The server and documentation are freely available at http://bioserv.rpbs.univ-paris-diderot.fr/fpocket
Quantum Scalar Field on the Massless (2+1)-Dimensional Black Hole Background
The behavior of a quantum scalar field is studied in the metric ground state
of the (2+1)-dimensional black hole of Ba\~nados, Teitelboim and Zanelli which
contains a naked singularity. The one-loop BTZ partition function and the
associate black hole effective entropy, the expectation value of the quantum
fluctuation as well as the renormalized expectation value of the stress tensor
are explicitly computed in the framework of the -function procedure.
This is done for all values of the coupling with the curvature, the mass of the
field and the temperature of the quantum state. In the massless conformally
coupled case, the found stress tensor is used for determining the quantum back
reaction on the metric due to the scalar field in the quantum vacuum state, by
solving the semiclassical Einstein equations. It is finally argued that, within
the framework of the 1/N expansion, the Cosmic Censorship Hypothesis is
implemented since the naked singularity of the ground state metric is shielded
by an event horizon created by the back reaction.Comment: 18 pages, RevTeX, no figures, minor changes, final version accepted
for publication in Phys. Rev.
- …