281,675 research outputs found
Comment on "Quantum Confinement and Optical Gaps in Si Nanocrystals"
We show that the method used by Ogut, Chelikowsky and Louie (Phys. Rev. Lett.
79, 1770 (1997)) to calculate the optical gap of Si nanocrystals omits an
electron-hole polarization energy. When this contribution is taken into
account, the corrected optical gap is in excellent agreement with
semi-empirical pseudopotential calculations.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figur
Single photon events from neutral current interactions at MiniBooNE
The MiniBooNE experiment has reported results from the analysis of
and appearance searches, which show an excess of signal-like
events at low reconstructed neutrino energies, with respect to the expected
background. A significant component of this background comes from photon
emission induced by (anti)neutrino neutral current interactions with nucleons
and nuclei. With an improved microscopic model for these reactions, we predict
the number and distributions of photon events at the MiniBooNE detector. Our
results are compared to the MiniBooNE in situ estimate and to other theoretical
approaches. We find that, according to our model, neutral current photon
emission from single-nucleon currents is insufficient to explain the events
excess observed by MiniBooNE in both neutrino and antineutrino modes.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures; error analysis improved; accepted in PL
Valley Dependent Optoelectronics from Inversion Symmetry Breaking
Inversion symmetry breaking allows contrasted circular dichroism in different
k-space regions, which takes the extreme form of optical selection rules for
interband transitions at high symmetry points. In materials where band-edges
occur at noncentral valleys, this enables valley dependent interplay of
electrons with light of different circular polarizations, in analogy to spin
dependent optical activities in semiconductors. This discovery is in perfect
harmony with the previous finding of valley contrasted Bloch band features of
orbital magnetic moment and Berry curvatures from inversion symmetry breaking
[Phys. Rev. Lett. 99, 236809 (2007)]. A universal connection is revealed
between the k-resolved optical oscillator strength of interband transitions,
the orbital magnetic moment and the Berry curvatures, which also provides a
principle for optical measurement of orbital magnetization and intrinsic
anomalous Hall conductivity in ferromagnetic systems. The general physics is
demonstrated in graphene where inversion symmetry breaking leads to valley
contrasted optical selection rule for interband transitions. We discuss
graphene based valley optoelectronics applications where light polarization
information can be interconverted with electronic information.Comment: Expanded version, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Multivariable Repetitive-predictive Controllers using Frequency Decomposition
Repetitive control is a methodology for the tracking of a periodic reference signal. This paper develops a new approach to repetitive control systems design using receding horizon control with frequency decomposition of the reference signal. Moreover, design and implementation issues for this form of repetitive predictive control are investigated from the perspectives of controller complexity and the effects of measurement noise. The analysis is supported by a simulation study on a multi-input multi-output robot arm where the model has been constructed from measured frequency response data, and experimental results from application to an industrial AC motor
Dual-mode mechanical resonance of individual ZnO nanobelts
©2003 American Institute of Physics. The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online at: http://link.aip.org/link/?APPLAB/82/4806/1DOI:10.1063/1.1587878The mechanical resonance of a single ZnO nanobelt, induced by an alternative electric field, was studied by in situ transmission electron microscopy. Due to the rectangular cross section of the nanobelt, two fundamental resonance modes have been observed corresponding to two orthogonal transverse vibration directions, showing the versatile applications of nanobelts as nanocantilevers and nanoresonators. The bending modulus of the ZnO nanobelts was measured to be ~52 GPa and the damping time constant of the resonance in a vacuum of 5×10–8 Torr was ~1.2 ms and quality factor Q = 500
Application of NASTRAN for stress analysis of left ventricle of the heart
Knowing the stress and strain distributions in the left ventricular wall of the heart is a prerequisite for the determination of the muscle elasticity and contractility in the process of assessing the functional status of the heart. NASTRAN was applied for the calculation of these stresses and strains and to help in verifying the results obtained by the computer program FEAMPS which was specifically designed for the plane-strain finite-element analysis of the left ventricular cross sections. Adopted for the analysis are the true shape and dimensions of the cross sections reconstructed from multiplanar X-ray views of a left ventricle which was surgically isolated from a dog's heart but metabolically supported to sustain its beating. A preprocessor was prepared to accommodate both FEAMPS and NASTRAN, and it has also facilitated the application of both the triangular element and isoparameteric quadrilateral element versions of NASTRAN. The stresses in several crucial regions of the left ventricular wall calculated by these two independently developed computer programs are found to be in good agreement. Such confirmation of the results is essential in the development of a method which assesses the heart performance
A Kinetic Model for the Enzymatic Action of Cellulase
We develop a mechanochemical model for the dynamics of cellulase, a two-domain enzyme connected by a peptide linker, as it extracts and hydrolyzes a cellulose polymer from a crystalline substrate. We consider two random walkers, representing the catalytic domain (CD) and the carbohydrate binding module (CBM), whose rates for stepping are biased by the coupling through the linker and the energy required to lift the cellulose polymer from the crystalline surface. Our results show that the linker length and stiffness play a critical role in the cooperative action of the CD and CBM domains and that, for a given linker length, the steady-state hydrolysis shows a maximum at some intermediate linker stiffness. The maximum hydrolysis rate corresponds to a transition of the linker from a compressed to an extended conformation, where the system exhibits maximum fluctuation, as measured by the variance of the separation distance between the two domains and the dispersion around the mean hydrolysis speed. In the range of experimentally known values of the parameters of our model, improving the intrinsic hydrolytic activity of the CD leads to a proportional increase in the overall hydrolysis rate
Non-Volatile Magnonic Logic Circuits Engineering
We propose a concept of magnetic logic circuits engineering, which takes an
advantage of magnetization as a computational state variable and exploits spin
waves for information transmission. The circuits consist of magneto-electric
cells connected via spin wave buses. We present the result of numerical
modeling showing the magneto-electric cell switching as a function of the
amplitude as well as the phase of the spin wave. The phase-dependent switching
makes it possible to engineer logic gates by exploiting spin wave buses as
passive logic elements providing a certain phase-shift to the propagating spin
waves. We present a library of logic gates consisting of magneto-electric cells
and spin wave buses providing 0 or p phase shifts. The utilization of phases in
addition to amplitudes is a powerful tool which let us construct logic circuits
with a fewer number of elements than required for CMOS technology. As an
example, we present the design of the magnonic Full Adder Circuit comprising
only 5 magneto-electric cells. The proposed concept may provide a route to more
functional wave-based logic circuitry with capabilities far beyond the limits
of the traditional transistor-based approach
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