8,000 research outputs found
Fundamental study of transpiration cooling
Isothermal and non-isothermal pressure drop data and heat transfer data generated on porous 304L stainless steel wire forms, sintered spherical stainless steel powder, and sintered spherical OFHC copper powder are reported and correlated. Pressure drop data was collected over a temperature range from 500 R to 2000 R and heat transfer data collected over a heat flux range from 5 to 15 BTU/in2/sec. It was found that flow data could be correlated independently of transpirant temperature and type (i.e., H2, N2). It was also found that no simple relation between heat transfer coefficient and specimen porosity was obtainable
Electronic states and optical properties of PbSe nanorods and nanowires
A theory of the electronic structure and excitonic absorption spectra of PbS
and PbSe nanowires and nanorods in the framework of a four-band effective mass
model is presented. Calculations conducted for PbSe show that dielectric
contrast dramatically strengthens the exciton binding in narrow nanowires and
nanorods. However, the self-interaction energies of the electron and hole
nearly cancel the Coulomb binding, and as a result the optical absorption
spectra are practically unaffected by the strong dielectric contrast between
PbSe and the surrounding medium. Measurements of the size-dependent absorption
spectra of colloidal PbSe nanorods are also presented. Using room-temperature
energy-band parameters extracted from the optical spectra of spherical PbSe
nanocrystals, the theory provides good quantitative agreement with the measured
spectra.Comment: 35 pages, 12 figure
Electronic Structure of Electron-doped Sm1.86Ce0.14CuO4: Strong `Pseudo-Gap' Effects, Nodeless Gap and Signatures of Short Range Order
Angle resolved photoemission (ARPES) data from the electron doped cuprate
superconductor SmCeCuO shows a much stronger pseudo-gap
or "hot-spot" effect than that observed in other optimally doped -type
cuprates. Importantly, these effects are strong enough to drive the
zone-diagonal states below the chemical potential, implying that d-wave
superconductivity in this compound would be of a novel "nodeless" gap variety.
The gross features of the Fermi surface topology and low energy electronic
structure are found to be well described by reconstruction of bands by a
order. Comparison of the ARPES and optical data from
the sample shows that the pseudo-gap energy observed in optical data is
consistent with the inter-band transition energy of the model, allowing us to
have a unified picture of pseudo-gap effects. However, the high energy
electronic structure is found to be inconsistent with such a scenario. We show
that a number of these model inconsistencies can be resolved by considering a
short range ordering or inhomogeneous state.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Statistical Basis for Predicting Technological Progress
Forecasting technological progress is of great interest to engineers, policy
makers, and private investors. Several models have been proposed for predicting
technological improvement, but how well do these models perform? An early
hypothesis made by Theodore Wright in 1936 is that cost decreases as a power
law of cumulative production. An alternative hypothesis is Moore's law, which
can be generalized to say that technologies improve exponentially with time.
Other alternatives were proposed by Goddard, Sinclair et al., and Nordhaus.
These hypotheses have not previously been rigorously tested. Using a new
database on the cost and production of 62 different technologies, which is the
most expansive of its kind, we test the ability of six different postulated
laws to predict future costs. Our approach involves hindcasting and developing
a statistical model to rank the performance of the postulated laws. Wright's
law produces the best forecasts, but Moore's law is not far behind. We discover
a previously unobserved regularity that production tends to increase
exponentially. A combination of an exponential decrease in cost and an
exponential increase in production would make Moore's law and Wright's law
indistinguishable, as originally pointed out by Sahal. We show for the first
time that these regularities are observed in data to such a degree that the
performance of these two laws is nearly tied. Our results show that
technological progress is forecastable, with the square root of the logarithmic
error growing linearly with the forecasting horizon at a typical rate of 2.5%
per year. These results have implications for theories of technological change,
and assessments of candidate technologies and policies for climate change
mitigation
Tunable spin-selective loading of a silicon spin qubit
The remarkable properties of silicon have made it the central material for
the fabrication of current microelectronic devices. Silicon's fundamental
properties also make it an attractive option for the development of devices for
spintronics and quantum information processing. The ability to manipulate and
measure spins of single electrons is crucial for these applications. Here we
report the manipulation and measurement of a single spin in a quantum dot
fabricated in a silicon/silicon-germanium heterostructure. We demonstrate that
the rate of loading of electrons into the device can be tuned over an order of
magnitude using a gate voltage, that the spin state of the loaded electron
depends systematically on the loading voltage level, and that this tunability
arises because electron spins can be loaded through excited orbital states of
the quantum dot. The longitudinal spin relaxation time T1 is measured using
single-shot pulsed techniques and found to be ~3 seconds at a field of 1.85
Tesla. The demonstration of single spin measurement as well as a long spin
relaxation time and tunability of the loading are all favorable properties for
spintronics and quantum information processing applications.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Supplemental Informatio
Quantum control and process tomography of a semiconductor quantum dot hybrid qubit
The similarities between gated quantum dots and the transistors in modern
microelectronics - in fabrication methods, physical structure, and voltage
scales for manipulation - have led to great interest in the development of
quantum bits (qubits) in semiconductor quantum dots. While quantum dot spin
qubits have demonstrated long coherence times, their manipulation is often
slower than desired for important future applications, such as factoring.
Further, scalability and manufacturability are enhanced when qubits are as
simple as possible. Previous work has increased the speed of spin qubit
rotations by making use of integrated micromagnets, dynamic pumping of nuclear
spins, or the addition of a third quantum dot. Here we demonstrate a new qubit
that offers both simplicity - it requires no special preparation and lives in a
double quantum dot with no added complexity - and is very fast: we demonstrate
full control on the Bloch sphere with -rotation times less than 100 ps in
two orthogonal directions. We report full process tomography, extracting high
fidelities equal to or greater than 85% for X-rotations and 94% for
Z-rotations. We discuss a path forward to fidelities better than the threshold
for quantum error correction.Comment: 6 pages, excluding Appendi
Cosmological perturbations in a healthy extension of Horava gravity
In Horava's theory of gravity, Lorentz symmetry is broken in exchange for
renormalizability, but the original theory has been argued to be plagued with
problems associated with a new scalar mode stemming from the very breaking of
Lorentz symmetry. Recently, Blas, Pujolas, and Sibiryakov have proposed a
healthy extension of Horava gravity, in which the behavior of the scalar mode
is improved. In this paper, we study scalar modes of cosmological perturbations
in extended Horava gravity. The evolution of metric and density perturbations
is addressed analytically and numerically. It is shown that for vanishing
non-adiabatic pressure of matter the large scale evolution of cosmological
perturbations converges to that described by a single constant, , which
is an analog of a curvature perturbation on the uniform-density slicing
commonly used in usual gravitational theories. The subsequent evolution is thus
determined completely by the value of .Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures; v2: published versio
Essential requirements for setting up a stem cell processing laboratory
The Graft Processing subcommittee of the Worldwide Network for Blood and Marrow Transplantation wrote this guideline to assist physicians and laboratory technologists with the setting up of a cell processing laboratory (CPL) to support a hematopoietic stem cell transplant program, thereby facilitating the start-up of a transplant program in a new location and improving patient access to transplantation worldwide. This guideline describes the minimal essential features of designing such a laboratory and provides a list of equipment and supply needs and staffing recommendations. It describes the typical scope of services that a CPL is expected to perform, including product testing services, and discusses the basic principles behind the most frequent procedures. Quality management (QM) principles specific to a CPL are also discussed. References to additional guidance documents that are available worldwide to assist with QM and regulatory compliance are also provided. © 2014 Macmillan Publishers Limited All rights reserved
- …