3,036 research outputs found
Gravity as Backreaction
Quadratic theory of gravity is a complicated constraint system. We
investigate some consequences of treating quadratic terms perturbatively
(higher derivative version of backreaction effects). This approach is shown to
overcome some well known problems associated with higher derivative theories,
i.e., the physical gravitational degree of freedom remains unchanged from those
of Einstein gravity.
Using such an interpretation of gravity, we investigate a
classical and Wheeler DeWitt evolution of gravity for a
particular sign of , corresponding to non- tachyon case. Matter is
described by a phenomenological . It is concluded that
both the Friedmann potential () and the
Wheeler DeWitt potential () develop repulsive barriers near for
(i.e., ). The interpretations is clear. Repulsive
barrier in implies that a contracting FRW universe ()
will bounce to an expansion phase without a total gravitational collapse.
Repulsive barrier in means that is a classically forbidden
region. Therefore, probability of finding a universe with the big bang
singularity ( ) is exponentially suppressed.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phy. Rev. D.,18 pages, 6 figures, Latex
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Dependence of the flux creep activation energy on current density and magnetic field for MgB2 superconductor
Systematic ac susceptibility measurements have been performed on a MgB
bulk sample. We demonstrate that the flux creep activation energy is a
nonlinear function of the current density , indicating a
nonlogarithmic relaxation of the current density in this material. The
dependence of the activation energy on the magnetic field is determined to be a
power law , showing a steep decline in the activation
energy with the magnetic field, which accounts for the steep drop in the
critical current density with magnetic field that is observed in MgB. The
irreversibility field is also found to be rather low, therefore, the pinning
properties of this new material will need to be enhanced for practical
applications.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, Revtex forma
Towards hardware acceleration of neuroevolution for multimedia processing applications on mobile devices
This paper addresses the problem of accelerating large artificial neural networks (ANN), whose topology and weights can evolve via the use of a genetic algorithm. The proposed digital hardware architecture is capable of processing any evolved network topology, whilst at the same time providing a good trade off between throughput, area and power consumption. The latter is vital for a longer battery life on mobile devices. The architecture uses multiple parallel arithmetic units in each processing element (PE). Memory partitioning and data caching are used to minimise the effects of PE pipeline stalling. A first order minimax polynomial approximation scheme, tuned via a genetic algorithm, is used for the activation function generator. Efficient arithmetic circuitry, which leverages modified Booth recoding, column compressors and carry save adders, is adopted throughout the design
Probing the inter-layer exciton physics in a MoS/MoSe/MoS van der Waals heterostructure
Stacking atomic monolayers of semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenides
(TMDs) has emerged as an effective way to engineer their properties. In
principle, the staggered band alignment of TMD heterostructures should result
in the formation of inter-layer excitons with long lifetimes and robust valley
polarization. However, these features have been observed simultaneously only in
MoSe/WSe heterostructures. Here we report on the observation of long
lived inter-layer exciton emission in a MoS/MoSe/MoS trilayer van
der Waals heterostructure. The inter-layer nature of the observed transition is
confirmed by photoluminescence spectroscopy, as well as by analyzing the
temporal, excitation power and temperature dependence of the inter-layer
emission peak. The observed complex photoluminescence dynamics suggests the
presence of quasi-degenerate momentum-direct and momentum-indirect bandgaps. We
show that circularly polarized optical pumping results in long lived valley
polarization of inter-layer exciton. Intriguingly, the inter-layer exciton
photoluminescence has helicity opposite to the excitation. Our results show
that through a careful choice of the TMDs forming the van der Waals
heterostructure it is possible to control the circular polarization of the
inter-layer exciton emission.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures. Just accepted for publication in Nano Letters
(http://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b03184
Luminosity Functions of Lyman-Break Galaxies at z~4 and 5 in the Subaru Deep Field
We investigate the luminosity functions of Lyman-break galaxies (LBG) at z~4
and 5 based on the optical imaging data obtained in the Subaru Deep Field
Project. Three samples of LBGs in a contiguous 875 arcmin^2 area are
constructed. One consists of 3,808 LBGs at z~4 down to i'=26.85 selected with
the B-R vs R-i' diagram. The other two consist of 539 and 240 LBGs at z~5 down
to z'=26.05 selected with two kinds of two-color diagrams: V-i' vs i'-z' and
R-i' vs i'-z'. The adopted selection criteria are proved to be fairly reliable
by spectroscopic observation. We derive the luminosity functions of the LBGs at
rest-frame ultraviolet wavelengths down to M_{UV}=-19.2 at z~4 and M_{UV}=-20.3
at z~5. We find clear evolution of the luminosity function over the redshift
range of 0<z<6, which is accounted for by a sole change in the characteristic
magnitude, M^*. The cosmic star formation rate (SFR) density at z~4 and z~5 is
measured from the luminosity functions. We examine the evolution of the cosmic
SFR density and its luminosity dependence over 0<z<6. The SFR density
contributed from brighter galaxies is found to change more drastically with
cosmic time. The contribution from brighter galaxies has a sharp peak around
z=3-4, while that from fainter galaxies evolves relatively mildly with a broad
peak at earlier epoch. Combining the observed SFR density with the standard
Cold Dark Matter model, we compute the cosmic SFR per unit baryon mass in dark
haloes, i.e., the specific SFR. The specific SFR is found to scale with
redshift as (1+z)^3 up to z~4, implying that the efficiency of star formation
is on average higher at higher redshift in proportion to the cooling rate
within dark haloes, while this is not simply the case at z>4.Comment: 28 pages, 25 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, a high
resolution version of Figs.7,8,9 is available at
http://hikari.astron.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~yoshida/sdflbglf
Direct Photon Scattering by Plasmons in BiTeI
We use polarization resolved Raman spectroscopy to show that for 3D giant
Rashba system the bulk plasmon collective mode directly couples to the Raman
response even in the long wavelength limit although
the standard theory predicts that the plasmon spectral weight should scale as
the square of its quasi-momentum and hence be negligibly weak in the Raman
spectra. Such plasmon coupling to the Raman response at arises for a polar system with spin-orbit coupling when the incoming photon
excitation is turned to a resonance with Rashba-split intermediates states
involved in the resonant Raman process. As an example, we identify special
features of BiTeI's chiral band structure that enable the appearance of plasmon
mode in the Raman spectrum
Extracting inter-dot tunnel couplings between few donor quantum dots in silicon
The long term scaling prospects for solid-state quantum computing architectures relies heavily on the
ability to simply and reliably measure and control the coherent electron interaction strength, known
as the tunnel coupling, tc. Here, we describe a method to extract the tc between two quantum dots
(QDs) utilising their different tunnel rates to a reservoir. We demonstrate the technique on a few
donor triple QD tunnel coupled to a nearby single-electron transistor(SET)in silicon. The device was
patterned using scanning tunneling microscopy-hydrogen lithography allowing for a direct
measurement of the tunnel coupling for a given inter-dot distance. We extract tc = ± 5.5 1.8 GHz
and tc = ± 2.2 1.3 GHz between each of the nearest-neighbour QDs which are separated by 14.5 nm
and 14.0 nm, respectively. The technique allows for an accurate measurement of tc for nanoscale
devices even when it is smaller than the electron temperature and is an ideal characterisation tool for
multi-dot systems with a charge senso
Energy Conditions in Modified Gravity with Non-minimal Coupling to Matter
In this paper we study a model of modified gravity with non-minimal coupling
between a general function of the Gauss-Bonnet invariant, , and matter
Lagrangian from the point of view of the energy conditions. Such model has been
introduced in Ref. [21] for description of early inflation and late-time cosmic
acceleration. We present the suitable energy conditions for the above mentioned
model and then, we use the estimated values of the Hubble, deceleration and
jerk parameters to apply the obtained energy conditions to the specific class
of modified Gauss-Bonnet models.Comment: 12 pages, no figur, Accepted for publication in Astrophysics and
Space Scienc
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