66,725 research outputs found
Systematic Effective Field Theory Investigation of Spiral Phases in Hole-Doped Antiferromagnets on the Honeycomb Lattice
Motivated by possible applications to the antiferromagnetic precursor of the
high-temperature superconductor NaCoOyHO, we use a systematic
low-energy effective field theory for magnons and holes to study different
phases of doped antiferromagnets on the honeycomb lattice. The effective action
contains a leading single-derivative term, similar to the Shraiman-Siggia term
in the square lattice case, which gives rise to spirals in the staggered
magnetization. Depending on the values of the low-energy parameters, either a
homogeneous phase with four or a spiral phase with two filled hole pockets is
energetically favored. Unlike in the square lattice case, at leading order the
effective action has an accidental continuous spatial rotation symmetry.
Consequently, the spiral may point in any direction and is not necessarily
aligned with a lattice direction.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
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A micro-electro-mechanical-system-based thermal shear-stress sensor with self-frequency compensation
By applying the micro-electro-mechanical-system (MEMS) fabrication technology, we developed a micro-thermal sensor to measure surface shear stress. The heat transfer from a polysilicon heater depends on the normal velocity gradient and thus provides the surface shear stress. However, the sensitivity of the shear-stress measurements in air is less than desirable due to the low heat capacity of air. A unique feature of this micro-sensor is that the heating element, a film 1 µm thick, is separated from the substrate by a vacuum cavity 2 µm thick. The vacuum cavity prevents the conduction of heat to the substrate and therefore improves the sensitivity by an order of magnitude. Owing to the low thermal inertia of the miniature sensing element, this shear-stress micro-sensor can provide instantaneous measurements of small-scale turbulence. Furthermore, MEMS technology allows us make multiple sensors on a single chip so that we can perform distributed measurements. In this study, we use multiple polysilicon sensor elements to improve the dynamic performance of the sensor itself. It is demonstrated that the frequency-response range of a constant-current sensor can be extended from the order of 100 Hz to 100 kHz
Macro aerodynamic devices controlled by micro systems
Micro-ElectroMechanical-Systems (MEMS) have emerged as a major enabling technology across the engineering disciplines. In this study, the possibility of applying MEMS to the aerodynamic field was explored. We have demonstrated that microtransducers can be used to control the motion of a delta wing in a wind tunnel and can even maneuver a scaled aircraft in flight tests. The main advantage of using micro actuators to replace the traditional control surface is the significant reduction of radar cross-sections. At a high angle of attack, a large portion of the suction loading on a delta wing is contributed by the leading edge separation vortices which originate from thin boundary layers at the leading edge. We used microactuators with a thickness comparable to that of the boundary layer in order to alter the separation process and thus achieved control of the global motion by minute perturbations
Baryon chiral perturbation theory transferred to hole-doped antiferromagnets on the honeycomb lattice
A systematic low-energy effective field theory for hole-doped
antiferromagnets on the honeycomb lattice is constructed. The formalism is then
used to investigate spiral phases in the staggered magnetization as well as the
formation of two-hole bound states.Comment: Talk delivered by C.P. Hofmann at the XIII Mexican Workshop on
Particles and Fields, October 19-26, 2011, Leon, Guanajuato, Mexico; 15
pages, 7 figure
High throughput data relay in uav wireless networks
As a result of their high mobility and reduced cost, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) have been found to be a promising tool in wireless networks. A UAV can perform the role of a base station as well as a mobile relay, connecting distant ground terminals. In this paper, we dispatch a UAV to a disaster area to help relay information for victims. We involve a bandwidth efficient technique called the Dual-Sampling (DS) method when planning the UAV flight trajectory, trying to maximize the data transmission throughput. We propose an iterative algorithm for solving this problem. The victim bandwidth scheduling and the UAV trajectory are alternately optimized in each iteration, meanwhile a power balance mechanism is implemented in the algorithm to ensure the proper functioning of the DS method. We compare the results of the DS-enabled scheme with two non-DS schemes, namely a fair bandwidth allocation scheme and a bandwidth contention scheme. The DS scheme outperforms the other two non-DS schemes regarding max-min average data rate among all the ground victims. Furthermore, we derive the theoretical optimal performance of the DS scheme for a given scenario, and find that the proposed approach can be regarded as a general method to solve this optimization problem. We also observe that the optimal UAV trajectory for the DS scheme is quite different from that of the non-DS bandwidth contention scheme
Current-driven vortex dynamics in untwinned superconducting single crystals
Current-driven vortex dynamics of type-II superconductors in the weak-pinning limit is investigated by quantitatively studying the current-dependent vortex dissipation of an untwinned YBa2Cu3O7 single crystal. For applied current densities (J) substantially larger than the critical current density (Jc), non-linear resistive peaks appear below the thermodynamic first-order vortex-lattice melting transition temperature (Tm), in contrast to the resistive hysteresis in the low-current limit (J < Jc). These resistive peaks are quantitatively analysed in terms of the current-driven coherent and plastic motion of vortex bundles in the vortex-solid phase, and the non-linear current - voltage characteristics are found to be consistent with the collective flux-creep model. The effects of high-density random point defects on the vortex dynamics are also investigated via proton irradiation of the same single crystal. Neither resistive hysteresis at low currents nor peak effects at high currents are found after the irradiation. Furthermore, the current-voltage characteristics within the instrumental resolution become completely ohmic over a wide range of currents and temperatures, despite theoretical predictions of much larger Jc-values for the given experimental variables. This finding suggests that the vortex-glass phase, a theoretically proposed low-temperature vortex state which is stabilized by point disorder and has a vanishing resistivity, may become unstable under applied currents significantly smaller than the theoretically predicted Jc. More investigation appears necessary in order to resolve this puzzling issue
Constraint Effective Potential of the Staggered Magnetization in an Antiferromagnet
We employ an improved estimator to calculate the constraint effective
potential of the staggered magnetization in the spin quantum
Heisenberg model using a loop-cluster algorithm. The first and second moment of
the probability distribution of the staggered magnetization are in excellent
agreement with the predictions of the systematic low-energy magnon effective
field theory. We also compare the Monte Carlo data with the universal shape of
the constraint effective potential of the staggered magnetization and study its
approach to the convex effective potential in the infinite volume limit. In
this way the higher-order low-energy parameter is determined from a fit
to the numerical data
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