2,804 research outputs found
Design and development of a fast scan infrared detection and measurement instrument
Infrared microscope instrument measures and plots the infrared profile of semiconductor chips, transistors and integrated circuits. Infrared analyses yields information on electrical and physical properties, enabling manufacturing improvements in semiconductor performance and reliability. Operational performance and main sections of the instrument are given
Efficient bounds on quantum communication rates via their reduced variants
We investigate one-way communication scenarios where Bob manipulating on his
parts can transfer some sub-system to the environment. We define reduced
versions of quantum communication rates and further, prove new upper bounds on
one-way quantum secret key, distillable entanglement and quantum channel
capacity by means of their reduced versions. It is shown that in some cases
they drastically improve their estimation.Comment: 6 pages, RevTe
Reducible Correlations in Dicke States
We apply a simple observation to show that the generalized Dicke states can
be determined from their reduced subsystems. In this framework, it is
sufficient to calculate the expression for only the diagonal elements of the
reudced density matrices in terms of the state coefficients. We prove that the
correlation in generalized Dicke states can be reduced to
-partite level. Application to the Quantum Marginal Problem is also
discussed.Comment: 12 pages, single column; accepted in J. Phys. A as FT
DEEP: a provenance-aware executable document system
The concept of executable documents is attracting growing interest from both academics and publishers since it is a promising technology for the dissemination of scientific results. Provenance is a kind of metadata that provides a rich description of the derivation history of data products starting from their original sources. It has been used in many different e-Science domains and has shown great potential in enabling reproducibility of scientific results. However, while both executable documents and provenance are aimed at enhancing the dissemination of scientific results, little has been done to explore the integration of both techniques. In this paper, we introduce the design and development of DEEP, an executable document environment that generates scientific results dynamically and interactively, and also records the provenance for these results in the document. In this system, provenance is exposed to users via an interface that provides them with an alternative way of navigating the executable document. In addition, we make use of the provenance to offer a document rollback facility to users and help to manage the system's dynamic resources
No classical limit of quantum decay for broad states
Though the classical treatment of spontaneous decay leads to an exponential
decay law, it is well known that this is an approximation of the quantum
mechanical result which is a non-exponential at very small and large times for
narrow states. The non exponential nature at large times is however hard to
establish from experiments. A method to recover the time evolution of unstable
states from a parametrization of the amplitude fitted to data is presented. We
apply the method to a realistic example of a very broad state, the sigma meson
and reveal that an exponential decay is not a valid approximation at any time
for this state. This example derived from experiment, shows the unique nature
of broad resonances
Measurements of Nanoscale Domain Wall Flexing in a Ferromagnetic Thin Film
We use the high spatial sensitivity of the anomalous Hall effect in the
ferromagnetic semiconductor Ga1-xMnxAs, combined with the magneto-optical Kerr
effect, to probe the nanoscale elastic flexing behavior of a single magnetic
domain wall in a ferromagnetic thin film. Our technique allows position
sensitive characterization of the pinning site density, which we estimate to be
around 10^14 cm^{-3}. Analysis of single site depinning events and their
temperature dependence yields estimates of pinning site forces (10 pN range) as
well as the thermal deactivation energy. Finally, our data hints at a much
higher intrinsic domain wall mobility for flexing than previously observed in
optically-probed micron scale measurements
Shape invariance through Crum transformation
We show in a rigorous way that Crum's result on equal eigenvalue spectrum of
Sturm-Liouville problems can be obtained iteratively by successive Darboux
transformations. It can be shown that all neighbouring Darboux-transformed
potentials of higher order, u_{k} and u_{k+1}, satisfy the condition of shape
invariance provided the original potential u does. We use this result to proof
that under the condition of shape invariance the n-th iteration of the original
Sturm-Liouville problem defined through shape invariance is equal to the n-th
Crum transformationComment: 26 pp, one more reference, J.-M. Sparenberg and D. Baye, J. Phys. A
28, 5079 (1995), has been added as Ref. 18 in the published version, which
has 47 ref
The t->WZb decay in the Standard Model: A Critical Reanalysis
We compute the t->WZb decay rate, in the Standard Model, at the leading order
in perturbation theory, with special attention to the effects of the finite
widths of the W and Z bosons. These effects are extremely important, since the
t->WZb decay occurs near its kinematical threshold. They increase the value of
the decay rate by orders of magnitude near threshold or allow it below the
nominal threshold. We discuss a procedure to take into account the finite-width
effects and compare the results with previous studies of this decay. Within the
Standard Model, for a top quark mass in the range between 170 and 180 GeV, we
find BR(t->WZb) ~ 2 x 10^{-6}, which makes the observation at the LHC very
difficult if at all possible.Comment: 10 pages, 4 eps figures, LaTeX. Few references added and minor
changes in the text. Results unchanged. Final version to appear on PL
On Gauge Invariance of Breit-Wigner Propagators
We present an approach to bosonic () as well as fermionic
(top-quark) Breit-Wigner propagators which is consistent with gauge invariance
arguments. In particular, for the -boson propagator we extend previous
analyses and show that the part proportional to must be
modified near the resonance. We derive a mass shift which agrees with results
obtained elsewhere by different methods. The modified form of a resonant heavy
fermion propagator is also given.Comment: 16 p., TeX, (final version
Measurement of the electric dipole moment using longitudinal polarization of beams
Certain CP-odd momentum correlations in the production and subsequent decay
of pairs in collisions are enhanced significantly when the
and beams are longitudinally polarized. These may be used to probe
the real and imaginary parts of , the electric dipole moment of
the . Closed-form expressions for these ``vector correlations'' and the
standard deviation of the operators defining them due to standard model
interactions are presented for the two-body final states of decays. If
42\% average polarization of each beam is achieved, as proposed for the
tau-charm factories, with equal integrated luminosities for each sign of
polarization and a total yield of pairs, it is
possible to attain sensitivities for of , , cm respectively and for of , , cm respectively at the three operating center-of-mass energies of
3.67, 4.25 and 10.58 GeV. These bounds emerge when the effects of a posible
weak dipole form factor are negligible as is the case when it is of
the same order of magnitude as . Furthermore, in such a
polarization experiment where different polarizations are possible, a
model-independent disentangling of their individual effects is possible, and a
technique to achieve this is described. A strong longitudinal polarization
physics programme at the tau-charm factory appears warranted.Comment: 30 pages, latex, no figure
- …
