15,491 research outputs found
Localized reversible nanoscale phase separation in Pr_0.63Ca_0.37MnO_3 single crystal using a scanning tunneling microscope tip
We report the destabilization of the charge ordered insulating (COI) state in
a localized region of Pr_0.63Ca_0.37MnO_3 single crystal by current injection
using a scanning tunneling microscope tip. This leads to controlled phase
separation and formation of localized metallic nanoislands in the COI matrix
which have been detected by local tunneling conductance mapping. The metallic
regions thus created persist even after reducing the injected current to lower
values. The original conductance state can be restored by injecting a current
of similar magnitude but of opposite polarity. We thus achieve reversible
nanoscale phase separation that gives rise to the possibility to "write, read,
and erase" nanosized conducting regions in an insulating matrix with high
spatial resolution.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, Appl. Phys. Lett (accepted for publication
An Improved Variable Structure Adaptive Filter Design and Analysis for Acoustic Echo Cancellation
In this research an advance variable structure adaptive Multiple Sub-Filters (MSF) based algorithm for single channel Acoustic Echo Cancellation (AEC) is proposed and analyzed. This work suggests a new and improved direction to find the optimum tap-length of adaptive filter employed for AEC. The structure adaptation, supported by a tap-length based weight update approach helps the designed echo canceller to maintain a trade-off between the Mean Square Error (MSE) and time taken to attain the steady state MSE. The work done in this paper focuses on replacing the fixed length sub-filters in existing MSF based AEC algorithms which brings refinements in terms of convergence, steady state error and tracking over the single long filter, different error and common error algorithms. A dynamic structure selective coefficient update approach to reduce the structural and computational cost of adaptive design is discussed in context with the proposed algorithm. Simulated results reveal a comparative performance analysis over proposed variable structure multiple sub-filters designs and existing fixed tap-length sub-filters based acoustic echo cancellers
An Algorithm to Generate Classical Solutions for String Effective Action
It is shown explicitly, that a number of solutions for the background field
equations of the string effective action in space-time dimension D can be
generated from any known lower dimensional solution, when background fields
have only time dependence. An application of the result to the two dimensional
charged black hole is presented. The case of background with more general
coordinate dependence is also discussed.Comment: 12 page
Study of supersolidity in the two-dimensional Hubbard-Holstein model
We derive an effective Hamiltonian for the two-dimensional Hubbard-Holstein
model in the regimes of strong electron-electron and strong electron-phonon
interactions by using a nonperturbative approach. In the parameter region where
the system manifests the existence of a correlated singlet phase, the effective
Hamiltonian transforms to a Hamiltonian for hard-core-bosons
on a checkerboard lattice. We employ quantum Monte Carlo simulations, involving
stochastic-series-expansion technique, to obtain the ground state phase
diagram. At filling , as the strength of off-site repulsion increases, the
system undergoes a first-order transition from a superfluid to a diagonal
striped solid with ordering wavevector or
. Unlike the one-dimensional situation, our results in the
two-dimensional case reveal a supersolid phase (corresponding to the diagonal
striped solid) around filling and at large off-site repulsions.
Furthermore, for small off-site repulsions, we witness a valence bond solid at
one-fourth filling and tiny phase-separated regions at slightly higher
fillings.Comment: Accepted in EPJ
Wormholes in spacetime with torsion
Analytical wormhole solutions in theory are presented. It is discussed
whether the extremely short range repulsive forces, related to the spin angular
momentum of matter, could be the ``carrier'' of the exoticity that threads the
wormhole throat.Comment: 10 pages revte
The Generalised Raychaudhuri Equations : Examples
Specific examples of the generalized Raychaudhuri Equations for the evolution
of deformations along families of dimensional surfaces embedded in a
background dimensional spacetime are discussed. These include string
worldsheets embedded in four dimensional spacetimes and two dimensional
timelike hypersurfaces in a three dimensional curved background. The issue of
focussing of families of surfaces is introduced and analysed in some detail.Comment: 8 pages (Revtex, Twocolumn format). Corrected(see section on string
worldsheets), reorganised and shortened slightl
A Structured Systems Approach for Optimal Actuator-Sensor Placement in Linear Time-Invariant Systems
In this paper we address the actuator/sensor allocation problem for linear
time invariant (LTI) systems. Given the structure of an autonomous linear
dynamical system, the goal is to design the structure of the input matrix
(commonly denoted by ) such that the system is structurally controllable
with the restriction that each input be dedicated, i.e., it can only control
directly a single state variable. We provide a methodology that addresses this
design question: specifically, we determine the minimum number of dedicated
inputs required to ensure such structural controllability, and characterize,
and characterizes all (when not unique) possible configurations of the
\emph{minimal} input matrix . Furthermore, we show that the proposed
solution methodology incurs \emph{polynomial complexity} in the number of state
variables. By duality, the solution methodology may be readily extended to the
structural design of the corresponding minimal output matrix (commonly denoted
by ) that ensures structural observability.Comment: 8 pages, submitted for publicatio
On the Complexity of the Constrained Input Selection Problem for Structural Linear Systems
This paper studies the problem of, given the structure of a linear-time
invariant system and a set of possible inputs, finding the smallest subset of
input vectors that ensures system's structural controllability. We refer to
this problem as the minimum constrained input selection (minCIS) problem, since
the selection has to be performed on an initial given set of possible inputs.
We prove that the minCIS problem is NP-hard, which addresses a recent open
question of whether there exist polynomial algorithms (in the size of the
system plant matrices) that solve the minCIS problem. To this end, we show that
the associated decision problem, to be referred to as the CIS, of determining
whether a subset (of a given collection of inputs) with a prescribed
cardinality exists that ensures structural controllability, is NP-complete.
Further, we explore in detail practically important subclasses of the minCIS
obtained by introducing more specific assumptions either on the system dynamics
or the input set instances for which systematic solution methods are provided
by constructing explicit reductions to well known computational problems. The
analytical findings are illustrated through examples in multi-agent
leader-follower type control problems
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