686 research outputs found
Volume-checking tool
Tool, consisting of a graduated storage vessel and a control panel, can determine the amount of gas entrained by fluid in a closed system, the amount of fluid remaining in a dried system of known volume, or the volume of a container of unknown size
Behavior of solutions of a third-order dynamic equation on time scales
In this paper, we will establish some sufficient conditions which guarantee that every solution of the third-order nonlinear dynamic equatio
Nanomechanical resonators operating as charge detectors in the nonlinear regime
We present measurements on nanomechanical resonators machined from
Silicon-on-Insulator substrates. The resonators are designed as freely
suspended Au/Si beams of lengths on the order of 1 - 4 um and a thickness of
200 nm. The beams are driven into nonlinear response by an applied modulation
at radio frequencies and a magnetic field in plane. The strong hysteresis of
the magnetomotive response allows sensitive charge detection by varying the
electrostatic potential of a gate electrode.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Different types of integrability and their relation to decoherence in central spin models
We investigate the relation between integrability and decoherence in central
spin models with more than one central spin. We show that there is a transition
between integrability ensured by the Bethe ansatz and integrability ensured by
complete sets of commuting operators. This has a significant impact on the
decoherence properties of the system, suggesting that it is not necessarily
integrability or nonintegrability which is related to decoherence, but rather
its type or a change from integrability to nonintegrability.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Electromechanics of charge shuttling in dissipative nanostructures
We investigate the current-voltage (IV) characteristics of a model
single-electron transistor where mechanical motion, subject to strong
dissipation, of a small metallic grain is possible. The system is studied both
by using Monte Carlo simulations and by using an analytical approach. We show
that electromechanical coupling results in a highly nonlinear IV-curve. For
voltages above the Coulomb blockade threshold, two distinct regimes of charge
transfer occur: At low voltages the system behave as a static asymmetric double
junction and tunneling is the dominating charge transfer mechanism. At higher
voltages an abrupt transition to a new shuttle regime appears, where the grain
performs an oscillatory motion back and forth between the leads. In this regime
the current is mainly mediated by charges that are carried on the grain as it
moves from one lead to the other.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, final version to be published in PR
A nanomechanical resonator shuttling single electrons at radio frequencies
We observe transport of electrons through a metallic island on the tip of a
nanomechanical pendulum. The resulting tunneling current shows distinct
features corresponding to the discrete mechanical eigenfrequencies of the
pendulum. We report on measurements covering the temperature range from 300 K
down to 4.2 K. We explain the I-V curve, which differs from previous
theoretical predictions, with model calculations based on a Master equation
approach.Comment: 5 pages, 4 jpeg-figure
Influence of nano-mechanical properties on single electron tunneling: A vibrating Single-Electron Transistor
We describe single electron tunneling through molecular structures under the
influence of nano-mechanical excitations. We develop a full quantum mechanical
model, which includes charging effects and dissipation, and apply it to the
vibrating C single electron transistor experiment by Park {\em et al.}
{[Nature {\bf 407}, 57 (2000)].} We find good agreement and argue vibrations to
be essential to molecular electronic systems. We propose a mechanism to realize
negative differential conductance using local bosonic excitations.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Mechanical Cooper pair transportation as a source of long distance superconducting phase coherence
Transportation of Cooper-pairs by a movable single Cooper-pair-box placed
between two remote superconductors is shown to establish coherent coupling
between them. This coupling is due to entanglement of the movable box with the
leads and is manifested in the supression of quantum fluctuations of the
relative phase of the order parameters of the leads. It can be probed by
attaching a high resistance Josephson junction between the leads and measuring
the current through this junction. The current is suppressed with increasing
temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, RevTeX; Updated version, typos correcte
Emergent states in dense systems of active rods: from swarming to turbulence
Dense suspensions of self-propelled rod-like particles exhibit a fascinating
variety of non-equilibrium phenomena. By means of computer simulations of a
minimal model for rigid self-propelled colloidal rods with variable shape we
explore the generic diagram of emerging states over a large range of rod
densities and aspect ratios. The dynamics is studied using a simple numerical
scheme for the overdamped noiseless frictional dynamics of a many-body system
in which steric forces are dominant over hydrodynamic ones. The different
emergent states are identified by various characteristic correlation functions
and suitable order parameter fields. At low density and aspect ratio, a
disordered phase with no coherent motion precedes a highly-cooperative swarming
state at large aspect ratio. Conversely, at high densities weakly anisometric
particles show a distinct jamming transition whereas slender particles form
dynamic laning patterns. In between there is a large window corresponding to
strongly vortical, turbulent flow. The different dynamical states should be
verifiable in systems of swimming bacteria and artificial rod-like
micro-swimmers.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figure
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