6,470 research outputs found
Phenomenological Implications of the Topflavor Model
We explore phenomenologies of the topflavour model for the LEP experiment at
scale and the atomic parity violation (APV) experiment in the
atoms at low energies. Implications of the model on the peak data are
studied in terms of the precision variables 's. We find that the
LEP data give more stringent constraints on the model parameters than the APV
data.Comment: 23 pages (including 5 .eps figs), ReVTeX, the 1st revised version, to
appear in Phys. Lett.
Heating-compensated constant-temperature tunneling measurements on stacks of BiSrCaCuO intrinsic junctions
In highly anisotropic layered cuprates such as BiSrCaCuO
tunneling measurements on a stack of intrinsic junctions in a high-bias range
are often susceptible to self-heating. In this study we monitored the
temperature variation of a stack ("sample stack") of intrinsic junctions by
measuring the resistance change of a nearby stack ("thermometer stack") of
intrinsic junctions, which was strongly thermal-coupled to the sample stack
through a common Au electrode. We then adopted a
proportional-integral-derivative scheme incorporated with a substrate-holder
heater to compensate the temperature variation. This in-situ temperature
monitoring and controlling technique allows one to get rid of spurious
tunneling effects arising from the self-heating in a high bias range.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
Collective Josephson vortex dynamics in a finite number of intrinsic Josephson junctions
We report the experimental confirmation of the collective transverse plasma
modes excited by the Josephson vortex lattice in stacks of intrinsic Josephson
junctions in BiSrCaCuO single crystals. The
excitation was confirmed by analyzing the temperature () and magnetic field
() dependencies of the multiple sub-branches in the Josephson-vortex-flow
region of the current-voltage characteristics of the system. In the near-static
Josephson vortex state for a low tunneling bias current, pronounced
magnetoresistance oscillations were observed, which represented a
triangular-lattice vortex configuration along the c axis. In the dynamic vortex
state in a sufficiently high magnetic field and for a high bias current,
splitting of a single Josephson vortex-flow branch into multiple sub-branches
was observed. Detailed examination of the sub-branches for varying field
reveals that sub-branches represent the different modes of the Josephson-vortex
lattice along the c axis, with varied configuration from a triangular to a
rectangular lattices. These multiple sub-branches merge to a single curve at a
characteristic temperature, above which no dynamical structural transitions of
the Josephson vortex lattice is expected
Analysis on Effects of Fault Elements in Memristive Neuromorphic Systems
Nowadays, neuromorphic systems based on Spiking Neural Networks (SNNs)
attract attentions of many researchers. There are many studies to improve
performances of neuromorphic systems. These studies have been showing
satisfactory results. To magnify performances of neuromorphic systems,
developing actual neuromorphic systems is essential. For developing them,
memristors play key role due to their useful characteristics. Although
memristors are essential for actual neuromorphic systems, they are vulnerable
to faults. However, there are few studies analyzing effects of fault elements
in neuromorphic systems using memristors. To solve this problem, we analyze
performance of a memristive neuromorphic system with fault elements changing
fault ratios, types, and positions. We choose neurons and synapses to inject
faults. We inject two types of faults to synapses: SA0 and SA1 faults. The
fault synapses appear in random and important positions. Through our analysis,
we discover the following four interesting points. First, memristive
characteristics increase vulnerability of neuromorphic systems to fault
elements. Second, fault neuron ratios reducing performance sharply exist.
Third, performance degradation by fault synapses depends on fault types.
Finally, SA1 fault synapses improve performance when they appear in important
positions.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, 5 tables, IJCAI 2023 GLOW
workshop(https://sites.google.com/view/glow-ijcai-23/home
k-Space Deep Learning for Reference-free EPI Ghost Correction
Nyquist ghost artifacts in EPI are originated from phase mismatch between the
even and odd echoes. However, conventional correction methods using reference
scans often produce erroneous results especially in high-field MRI due to the
non-linear and time-varying local magnetic field changes. Recently, it was
shown that the problem of ghost correction can be reformulated as k-space
interpolation problem that can be solved using structured low-rank Hankel
matrix approaches. Another recent work showed that data driven Hankel matrix
decomposition can be reformulated to exhibit similar structures as deep
convolutional neural network. By synergistically combining these findings, we
propose a k-space deep learning approach that immediately corrects the phase
mismatch without a reference scan in both accelerated and non-accelerated EPI
acquisitions. To take advantage of the even and odd-phase directional
redundancy, the k-space data is divided into two channels configured with even
and odd phase encodings. The redundancies between coils are also exploited by
stacking the multi-coil k-space data into additional input channels. Then, our
k-space ghost correction network is trained to learn the interpolation kernel
to estimate the missing virtual k-space data. For the accelerated EPI data, the
same neural network is trained to directly estimate the interpolation kernels
for missing k-space data from both ghost and subsampling. Reconstruction
results using 3T and 7T in-vivo data showed that the proposed method
outperformed the image quality compared to the existing methods, and the
computing time is much faster.The proposed k-space deep learning for EPI ghost
correction is highly robust and fast, and can be combined with acceleration, so
that it can be used as a promising correction tool for high-field MRI without
changing the current acquisition protocol.Comment: To appear in Magnetic Resonance in Medicin
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