1,891 research outputs found

    Engineering physiology

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    Ergonomic Models of Anthropometry, Human Biomechanics and Operator-Equipment Interfaces

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    The Committee on Human Factors was established in October 1980 by the Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education of the National Research Council. The committee is sponsored by the Office of Naval Research, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and the National Science Foundation. The workshop discussed the following: anthropometric models; biomechanical models; human-machine interface models; and research recommendations. A 17-page bibliography is included

    InAs-AlSb quantum wells in tilted magnetic fields

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    InAs-AlSb quantum wells are investigated by transport experiments in magnetic fields tilted with respect to the sample normal. Using the coincidence method we find for magnetic fields up to 28 T that the spin splitting can be as large as 5 times the Landau splitting. We find a value of the g-factor of about 13. For small even-integer filling factors the corresponding minima in the Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations cannot be tuned into maxima for arbitrary tilt angles. This indicates the anti-crossing of neighboring Landau and spin levels. Furthermore we find for particular tilt angles a crossover from even-integer dominated Shubnikov-de Haas minima to odd-integer minima as a function of magnetic field

    Andreev magnetotransport in low-dimensional proximity structures: Spin-dependent conductance enhancement

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    We study the excess conductance due to the superconducting proximity effect in a ballistic two-dimensional electron system subject to an in-plane magnetic field. We show that under certain conditions the interplay of the Zeeman spin splitting and the effect of a screening supercurrent gives rise to a spin-selective Andreev enhancement of the conductance and anomalies in its voltage, temperature and magnetic field characteristics. The magnetic-field influence on Andreev reflection is discussed in the context of using superconducting hybrid junctions for spin detection.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure

    Stationary states and phase diagram for a model of the Gunn effect under realistic boundary conditions

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    A general formulation of boundary conditions for semiconductor-metal contacts follows from a phenomenological procedure sketched here. The resulting boundary conditions, which incorporate only physically well-defined parameters, are used to study the classical unipolar drift-diffusion model for the Gunn effect. The analysis of its stationary solutions reveals the presence of bistability and hysteresis for a certain range of contact parameters. Several types of Gunn effect are predicted to occur in the model, when no stable stationary solution exists, depending on the value of the parameters of the injecting contact appearing in the boundary condition. In this way, the critical role played by contacts in the Gunn effect is clearly stablished.Comment: 10 pages, 6 Post-Script figure

    Newton's law for Bloch electrons, Klein factors and deviations from canonical commutation relations

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    The acceleration theorem for Bloch electrons in a homogenous external field is usually presented using quasiclassical arguments. In quantum mechanical versions the Heisenberg equations of motion for an operator k⃗^(t)\hat {\vec k}(t) are presented mostly without properly defining this operator. This leads to the surprising fact that the generally accepted version of the theorem is incorrect for the most natural definition of k⃗^\hat {\vec k}. This operator is shown not to obey canonical commutation relations with the position operator. A similar result is shown for the phase operators defined via the Klein factors which take care of the change of particle number in the bosonization of the field operator in the description of interacting fermions in one dimension. The phase operators are also shown not to obey canonical commutation relations with the corresponding particle number operators. Implications of this fact are discussed for Tomonaga-Luttinger type models.Comment: 9 pages,1 figur

    Terahertz superlattice parametric oscillator

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    We report a GaAs/AlAs superlattice parametric oscillator. It was pumped by a microwave field (power few mW) and produced 3rd harmonic radiation (frequency near 300 GHz). The nonlinearity of the active superlattice was due to Bragg reflections of conduction electrons at the superlattice planes. A theory of the nonlinearity indicates that parametric oscillation should be possible up to frequencies above 10 THz. The active superlattice may be the object of further studies of predicted extraordinary nonlinearities for THz fields.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure

    Absorption and wavepackets in optically excited semiconductor superlattices driven by dc-ac fields

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    Within the one-dimensional tight-binding minibands and on-site Coloumbic interaction approximation, the absorption spectrum and coherent wavepacket time evolution in an optically excited semiconductor superlattice driven by dc-ac electric fields are investigated using the semiconductor Bloch equations. The dominating roles of the ratios of dc-Stark to external ac frequency, as well as ac-Stark to external ac frequency, is emphasized. If the former is an integer N{\cal N}, then also N{\cal N} harmonics are present within one Stark frequency, while the fractional case leads to the formation of excitonic fractional ladders. The later ratio determines the size and profile of the wavepacket. In the absence of excitonic interaction it controls the maximum size wavepackets reach within one cycle, while the interaction produces a strong anisotropy and tends to palliate the dynamic wavepacket localization.Comment: 14 pages, 7 postscript figure
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