265 research outputs found
A Report on Six Seminars About the UK Supreme Court
During the first half of 2008, a series of six seminars was held in the School of Law at Queen Mary University of London on the United Kingdom Supreme Court. Participants included Law Lords and other senior members of the judiciary, practitioners, and academics. This report records the fascinating exchange of views that took place at those unprecedented meetings. Among the themes explored were: the selection of cases; relations of the UK Supreme Court with lower courts and tribunals; procedures and costs; communication methods; the UK Supreme Court's jurisdiction over Scottish matters; and the constitutional framework within which the new court will work
Designing Redress: A Study About Grievances Against Public Bodies
How grievances against public bodies are resolved is important not only for the individuals concerned and the decision-makers complained about but also to the whole system of government. People need to have confidence that when things go wrong, they will be put right. There is a general public interest in that being done in accordance with constitutional principles and in ways that are effective and efficient. Over many years, a great variety of different ?mechanisms? for dealing with grievances have been created, ranging from internal complaints processes through to the work of external bodies (including ombudsmen, tribunals and courts). This project has focused on how mechanisms are designed. The study explores how different mechanisms can be thought of as relating to each other. It also looks at the various reasons why mechanisms have to be designed. Drawing on interviews with people involved in the design process and analysis of public information, a map of where the activity of designing redress has been created. Evaluating the ?administrative justice landscape?, two particular deficiencies emerge: there is no strong political or official leadership in relation to how mechanisms ought to be designed and the system is fragmented, with many different people, in various organisations all contributing to design activities. Might a toolkit of guiding principles for designing redress be one way of achieving a better design process and outcomes? A number of principles are proposed in this report, and the authors hope to engage stakeholders in a debate about how this might best be taken forward
Parliamentary Accountability and the Judicial System
Tensions between political and legal accountability are a backdrop to many debates about the character and future direction of the British constitution. This essay explores a juncture of these two modes of accountability by examining how the UK Parliament exercises accountability in relation to the judicial system of England and Wales. Part A defines 'the judicial system' and what may be meant by parliamentary accountability and judicial independence in this context. Part B takes an institutional and procedural approach to examining the opportunities Parliament has for engaging in accountability activities in relation to the judicial system, focusing in particular on the evolving role of Select Committees. Part C uses an inductive approach to map current accountability practices in Parliament in relation to particular aspects of the judicial system by drawing on examples from the parliamentary record to develop an explanation of what is and ought to be the reach of MPs? and peers? accountability functions relating to judges and courts
Tuning Energy Relaxation along Quantum Hall Channels
The chiral edge channels in the quantum Hall regime are considered ideal
ballistic quantum channels, and have quantum information processing
potentialities. Here, we demonstrate experimentally, at filling factor 2, the
efficient tuning of the energy relaxation that limits quantum coherence and
permits the return toward equilibrium. Energy relaxation along an edge channel
is controllably enhanced by increasing its transmission toward a floating ohmic
contact, in quantitative agreement with predictions. Moreover, by forming a
closed inner edge channel loop, we freeze energy exchanges in the outer
channel. This result also elucidates the inelastic mechanisms at work at
filling factor 2, informing us in particular that those within the outer edge
channel are negligible.Comment: 8 pages including supplementary materia
Energy Relaxation in the Integer Quantum Hall Regime
We investigate the energy exchanges along an electronic quantum channel
realized in the integer quantum Hall regime at filling factor . One of
the two edge channels is driven out-of-equilibrium and the resulting electronic
energy distribution is measured in the outer channel, after several propagation
lengths mm. Whereas there are no discernable energy
transfers toward thermalized states, we find efficient energy redistribution
between the two channels without particle exchanges. At long distances
m, the measured energy distribution is a hot Fermi function whose
temperature is lower than expected for two interacting channels, which suggests
the contribution of extra degrees of freedom. The observed short energy
relaxation length challenges the usual description of quantum Hall excitations
as quasiparticles localized in one edge channel.Comment: To be published in PRL, 10 pages including supplementary materia
Strong back-action of a linear circuit on a single electronic quantum channel
What are the quantum laws of electricity in mesoscopic circuits? This very
fundamental question has also direct implications for the quantum engineering
of nanoelectronic devices. Indeed, when a quantum coherent conductor is
inserted into a circuit, its transport properties are modified. In particular,
its conductance is reduced because of the circuit back-action. This phenomenon,
called environmental Coulomb blockade, results from the granularity of charge
transfers across the coherent conductor. Although extensively studied for a
tunnel junction in a linear circuit, it is only fully understood for arbitrary
short coherent conductors in the limit of small circuit impedances and small
conductance reduction. Here, we investigate experimentally the strong
back-action regime, with a conductance reduction of up to 90%. This is achieved
by embedding a single quantum channel of tunable transmission in an adjustable
on-chip circuit of impedance comparable to the resistance quantum
at microwave frequencies. The experiment reveals important deviations from
calculations performed in the weak back-action framework, and matches with
recent theoretical results. From these measurements, we propose a generalized
expression for the conductance of an arbitrary quantum channel embedded in a
linear circuit.Comment: 11 pages including supplementary information, to be published in
Nature Physic
Lumped element kinetic inductance detectors maturity for space-borne instruments in the range between 80 and 180 GHz
This work intends to give the state-of-the-art of our knowledge of the
performance of LEKIDs at millimetre wavelengths (from 80 to 180~GHz). We
evaluate their optical sensitivity under typical background conditions and
their interaction with ionising particles. Two LEKID arrays, originally
designed for ground-based applications and composed of a few hundred pixels
each, operate at a central frequency of 100, and 150~GHz (
about 0.3). Their sensitivities have been characterised in the laboratory using
a dedicated closed-circle 100~mK dilution cryostat and a sky simulator,
allowing for the reproduction of realistic, space-like observation conditions.
The impact of cosmic rays has been evaluated by exposing the LEKID arrays to
alpha particles (Am) and X sources (Cd) with a readout sampling
frequency similar to the ones used for Planck HFI (about 200~Hz), and also with
a high resolution sampling level (up to 2~MHz) in order to better characterise
and interpret the observed glitches. In parallel, we have developed an
analytical model to rescale the results to what would be observed by such a
LEKID array at the second Lagrangian point.Comment: 7 pages, 2 tables, 13 figure
Niobium Silicon alloys for Kinetic Inductance Detectors
We are studying the properties of Niobium Silicon amorphous alloys as a
candidate material for the fabrication of highly sensitive Kinetic Inductance
Detectors (KID), optimized for very low optical loads. As in the case of other
composite materials, the NbSi properties can be changed by varying the relative
amounts of its components. Using a NbSi film with T_c around 1 K we have been
able to obtain the first NbSi resonators, observe an optical response and
acquire a spectrum in the band 50 to 300 GHz. The data taken show that this
material has very high kinetic inductance and normal state surface resistivity.
These properties are ideal for the development of KID. More measurements are
planned to further characterize the NbSi alloy and fully investigate its
potential.Comment: Accepted for publication on Journal of Low Temperature Physics.
Proceedings of the LTD15 conference (Caltech 2013
Quantum coherence engineering in the integer quantum Hall regime
We present an experiment where the quantum coherence in the edge states of
the integer quantum Hall regime is tuned with a decoupling gate. The coherence
length is determined by measuring the visibility of quantum interferences in a
Mach-Zehnder interferometer as a function of temperature, in the quantum Hall
regime at filling factor two. The temperature dependence of the coherence
length can be varied by a factor of two. The strengthening of the phase
coherence at finite temperature is shown to arise from a reduction of the
coupling between co-propagating edge states. This opens the way for a strong
improvement of the phase coherence of Quantum Hall systems. The decoupling gate
also allows us to investigate how inter-edge state coupling influence the
quantum interferences' dependence on the injection bias. We find that the
finite bias visibility can be decomposed into two contributions: a Gaussian
envelop which is surprisingly insensitive to the coupling, and a beating
component which, on the contrary, is strongly affected by the coupling.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Antibunched photons emitted by a dc-biased Josephson junction
We show experimentally that a dc biased Josephson junction in series with a high-enough-impedance microwave resonator emits antibunched photons. Our resonator is made of a simple microfabricated spiral coil that resonates at 4.4 GHz and reaches a 1.97kΩ characteristic impedance. The second order correlation function of the power leaking out of the resonator drops down to 0.3 at zero delay, which demonstrates the antibunching of the photons emitted by the circuit at a rate of 6×10^7 photons per second. Results are found in quantitative agreement with our theoretical predictions. This simple scheme could offer an efficient and bright single-photon source in the microwave domain
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