840 research outputs found
Instruction-set architecture exploration of VLIW ASIPs using a genetic algorithm
Genetic algorithms are commonly used for automatically solving complex design problem because exploration using genetic algorithms can consistently deliver good results when the algorithm is given a long enough run-time. However, the exploration time for problems with huge design spaces can be very long, often making exploration using a genetic algorithm practically infeasible. In this work, we present a genetic algorithm for exploring the instruction-set architecture of VLIW ASIPs and demonstrate its effectiveness by comparing it to two heuristic algorithms. We present several optimizations to the genetic algorithm configuration, and demonstrate how caching of intermediate compilation and simulation results can reduce the exploration time by an order of magnitude
A universal high energy anomaly in angle resolved photoemission spectra of high temperature superconductors - possible evidence of spinon and holon branches
A universal high energy anomaly in the single particle spectral function is
reported in three different families of high temperature superconductors by
using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. As we follow the dispersing
peak of the spectral function from the Fermi energy to the valence band
complex, we find dispersion anomalies marked by two distinctive high energy
scales, E_1=~ 0.38 eV and E_2=~0.8 eV. E_1 marks the energy above which the
dispersion splits into two branches. One is a continuation of the near
parabolic dispersion, albeit with reduced spectral weight, and reaches the
bottom of the band at the gamma point at ~0.5 eV. The other is given by a peak
in the momentum space, nearly independent of energy between E_1 and E_2. Above
E_2, a band-like dispersion re-emerges. We conjecture that these two energies
mark the disintegration of the low energy quasiparticles into a spinon and
holon branch in the high T_c cuprates.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Bond stretching phonon softening and angle-resolved photoemission kinks in optimally doped Bi2Sr1.6La0.4Cu2O6 superconductors
We report the first measurement of the optical phonon dispersion in optimally
doped single layer Bi2Sr1.6La0.4Cu2O6+delta using inelastic x-ray scattering.
We found a strong softening of the Cu-O bond stretching phonon at about
q=(0.25,0,0) from 76 to 60 meV, similar to the one reported in other cuprates.
A direct comparison with angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy measurements
taken on the same sample, revealed an excellent agreement in terms of energy
and momentum between the ARPES nodal kink and the soft part of the bond
stretching phonon. Indeed, we find that the momentum space where a 63 meV kink
is observed can be connected with a vector q=(xi,0,0) with xi~0.22, which
corresponds exactly to the soft part of the bond stretching phonon mode. This
result supports an interpretation of the ARPES kink in terms of electron-phonon
coupling.Comment: submited to PR
Evidence for Weyl fermions in a canonical heavy-fermion semimetal YbPtBi
The manifestation of Weyl fermions in strongly correlated electron systems is
of particular interest. We report evidence for Weyl fermions in the heavy
fermion semimetal YbPtBi from electronic structure calculations, angle-resolved
photoemission spectroscopy, magnetotransport and calorimetric measurements. At
elevated temperatures where -electrons are localized, there are triply
degenerate points, yielding Weyl nodes in applied magnetic fields. These are
revealed by a contribution from the chiral anomaly in the magnetotransport,
which at low temperatures becomes negligible due to the influence of electronic
correlations. Instead, Weyl fermions are inferred from the topological Hall
effect, which provides evidence for a Berry curvature, and a cubic temperature
dependence of the specific heat, as expected from the linear dispersion near
the Weyl nodes. The results suggest that YbPtBi is a Weyl heavy fermion
semimetal, where the Kondo interaction renormalizes the bands hosting Weyl
points. These findings open up an opportunity to explore the interplay between
topology and strong electronic correlations.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, Supplementary Information available with open
access at https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-018-06782-
Mixed-length SIMD code generation for VLIW architectures with multiple native vector-widths
The degree of DLP parallelism in applications is not fixed and varies due to different computational characteristics of applications. On the contrary, most of the processors today include single-width SIMD (vector) hardware to exploit DLP. However, single-width SIMD architectures may not be optimal to serve applications with varying DLP and they may cause performance and energy inefficiency. We propose the usage of VLIW processors with multiple native vector-widths to better serve applications with changing DLP. SHAVE is an example of such VLIW processor and provides hardware support for the native 32-bit and 128-bit wide vector operations. This paper researches and implements the mixed-length SIMD code generation support for SHAVE processor. More specifically, we target generating 32-bit and 128/64-bit SIMD code for the native 32-bit and 128-bit wide vector units of SHAVE processor. In this way, we improved the performance of compiler generated SIMD code by reducing the number of overhead operations and by increasing the SIMD hardware utilization. Experimental results demonstrated that our methodology implemented in the compiler improves the performance of synthetic benchmarks up to 47%
Topological surface states above the Fermi energy in
We report a detailed experimental study of the band structure of the recently
discovered topological material . Using
the combination of scanning tunneling spectroscopy and angle-resolved
photo-emission spectroscopy with surface K-doping, we probe the band structure
of with energy and momentum resolution
above the Fermi level. Our experiments show the presence of multiple surface
states with a linear Dirac-like dispersion, consistent with the predictions
from previously reported band structure calculations. In particular, scanning
tunneling spectroscopy measurements provide the first experimental evidence for
the strong topological surface state predicted at 460 meV, which stems from the
band inversion between Hf-d and Te-p orbitals. This band inversion comprised of
more localized d-states could result in a better surface-to-bulk conductance
ratio relative to more traditional topological insulators.Comment: Supplementary materials available upon reques
Tracking Cooper Pairs in a Cuprate Superconductor by Ultrafast Angle-Resolved Photoemission
In high-temperature superconductivity, the process that leads to the
formation of Cooper pairs, the fundamental charge carriers in any
superconductor, remains mysterious. We use a femtosecond laser pump pulse to
perturb superconducting Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+{\delta}, and study subsequent dynamics
using time- and angle-resolved photoemission and infrared reflectivity probes.
Gap and quasiparticle population dynamics reveal marked dependencies on both
excitation density and crystal momentum. Close to the d-wave nodes, the
superconducting gap is sensitive to the pump intensity and Cooper pairs
recombine slowly. Far from the nodes pumping affects the gap only weakly and
recombination processes are faster. These results demonstrate a new window into
the dynamical processes that govern quasiparticle recombination and gap
formation in cuprates.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figure
- …