4,343 research outputs found
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Modification of magnetocrystalline anisotropy via ion-implantation
The ability to systematically modify the magnetic properties of epitaxial La0.7Sr0.3MnO3 thin films is demonstrated through the use of Ar+ ion implantation. With increasing implant dose, a uniaxial expansion of the c-axis of the unit cell leads to a transition from in-plane toward perpendicular magnetic anisotropy. Above a critical dose of 3 × 1013 Ar+/cm2, significant crystalline disorder exists leading to a decrease in the average Mn valence state and near complete suppression of magnetization. Combined with lithographic techniques, ion implantation enables the fabrication of magnetic spin textures consisting of adjacent regions with tunable magnetic anisotropy in complex oxide thin films
Verification and Validation of Semantic Annotations
In this paper, we propose a framework to perform verification and validation
of semantically annotated data. The annotations, extracted from websites, are
verified against the schema.org vocabulary and Domain Specifications to ensure
the syntactic correctness and completeness of the annotations. The Domain
Specifications allow checking the compliance of annotations against
corresponding domain-specific constraints. The validation mechanism will detect
errors and inconsistencies between the content of the analyzed schema.org
annotations and the content of the web pages where the annotations were found.Comment: Accepted for the A.P. Ershov Informatics Conference 2019(the PSI
Conference Series, 12th edition) proceedin
NNLO phase space master integrals for two-to-one inclusive cross sections in dimensional regularization
We evaluate all phase space master integrals which are required for the total
cross section of generic 2 -> 1 processes at NNLO as a series expansion in the
dimensional regulator epsilon. Away from the limit of threshold production, our
expansion includes one order higher than what has been available in the
literature. At threshold, we provide expressions which are valid to all orders
in terms of Gamma functions and hypergeometric functions. These results are a
necessary ingredient for the renormalization and mass factorization of
singularities in 2 -> 1 inclusive cross sections at NNNLO in QCD.Comment: 37 pages, plus 3 ancillary files containing analytic expressions in
Maple forma
In-Vitro Screening Of Malaysian Honey From Different Floral Sources For Antibacterial Activity On Human Pathogenic Bacteria
Background: Different researches on therapeutic effects of honey have been conducted in different regions; however the study on the potential antibacterial activity of Malaysian honey is still limited. In this study, antibacterial activities of different monofloral honey samples were tested against several common human pathogenic bacteria.Materials and Methods: The well-diffusion method, minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) and minimum bactericidal concentration (MBC) techniques were employed to investigate the putative antibacterial activity of Malaysian monofloral honey from Koompassia excelsa (Becc.) Taub X(Tualang), Melaleuca cajuputi Powell (Gelam) and Durio zibethinus Murr. (Durian). Honey samples were tested against Staphylococcus aureus ATCC6518 and ATCC25923, Staphylococcus epidermidis ATCC12228, Enterococcus faecium LMG16192, Enterococcus faecalis LMG16216 and ATCC29212, Escherichia coli ATCC25922, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium ATCC14028 and Klebsiella pneumoniae ATCC13883.Results: Marked variations were observed in the antibacterial activity of these honey samples. Durian honey failed to produce substantial antibacterial activity, whereas Tualang and Gelam honey showed a spectrum of antibacterial activity with their growth inhibitory effects against all of the tested bacterial species including vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE).Conclusion: Present findings suggested Gelam honey possesses highest antibacterial effect among the tested Malaysian honey samples.Keywords: Honey; monofloral; antibacterial; well-diffusion method; VREIntroductio
Testing supersymmetry at the LHC through gluon-fusion production of a slepton pair
Renormalizable quartic couplings among new particles are typical of
supersymmetric models. Their detection could provide a test for supersymmetry,
discriminating it from other extensions of the Standard Model. Quartic
couplings among squarks and sleptons, together with the SU(3) gauge couplings
for squarks, allow a new realization of the gluon-fusion mechanism for
pair-production of sleptons at the one-loop level. The corresponding production
cross section, however, is at most of fb for slepton and squark
masses of GeV. We then extend our investigation to the
gluon-fusion production of sleptons through the exchange of Higgs bosons. The
cross section is even smaller, of fb, if the exchanged Higgs
boson is considerably below the slepton-pair threshold, but it is enhanced when
it is resonant. It can reach fb for the production of sleptons
of same-chirality, exceeding these values for 's of
opposite-chirality, even when chirality-mixing terms in the squark sector are
vanishing. The cross section can be further enhanced if these mixing terms are
nonnegligible, providing a potentially interesting probe of the Higgs sector,
in particular of parameters such as , , and .Comment: 28 pages, 11 figure
Light MSSM Higgs boson mass to three-loop accuracy
The light CP even Higgs boson mass, Mh, is calculated to three-loop accuracy
within the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM). The result is
expressed in terms of DRbar parameters and implemented in the computer program
H3m. The calculation is based on the proper approximations and their
combination in various regions of the parameter space. The three-loop effects
to Mh are typically of the order of a few hundred MeV and opposite in sign to
the two-loop corrections. The remaining theory uncertainty due to higher order
perturbative corrections is estimated to be less than 1 GeV.Comment: 39 pages, 13 figures. v2: minor changes, typos fixe
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Athermal colorless C-band optical transmitter system for passive optical networks
This paper reports an uncooled transmitter system using a digital super-mode (DS) distributed Bragg reflector (DBR) tunable laser, which is able to act as an athermal, wavelength agnostic transmitter suitable for wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) passive optical network (PON) applications. An open-loop laser current control algorithm is designed to compensate autonomously for wavelength drift, thus allowing constant operating wavelength to be achieved regardless of ambient temperature. An improved wavelength accuracy of ±3 GHz is achieved when using low bandwidth feedback from the central office using information from a centralized shared wavelength locker. The entire laser start-up, channel selection and subsequent wavelength control is autonomous and has been implemented on micro-controllers and field programmable gate arrays. We demonstrate a three channel WDM-PON system comprising an uncooled packaged DS-DBR laser in the presence of two neighboring interfering channels. Error free transmission over 40 km single mode fiber of 10 Gb/s externally modulated NRZ data, is achieved for each of 48 C-band channels on the 100 GHz ITU grid. Successful athermal operation is demonstrated by sweeping the ambient temperature of the laser from 15 to 70 °C with a maximum wavelength deviation for any channel of no more than 0.1 nm.This work has been supported by the Technology Strategy Board, UK and by the German ministry for education and research, through the EU ERA-NET+ projects PIANO+ IMPACT (BMBF grant: 13N11434) and TUCAN (BMBF grant: 13N11573). We also acknowledge the support of the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council via the INTERNET project.This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from IEEE via http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/JLT.2014.235405
Vertical Field Effect Transistor based on Graphene-WS2 Heterostructures for flexible and transparent electronics
The celebrated electronic properties of graphene have opened way for
materials just one-atom-thick to be used in the post-silicon electronic era. An
important milestone was the creation of heterostructures based on graphene and
other two-dimensional (2D) crystals, which can be assembled in 3D stacks with
atomic layer precision. These layered structures have already led to a range of
fascinating physical phenomena, and also have been used in demonstrating a
prototype field effect tunnelling transistor - a candidate for post-CMOS
technology. The range of possible materials which could be incorporated into
such stacks is very large. Indeed, there are many other materials where layers
are linked by weak van der Waals forces, which can be exfoliated and combined
together to create novel highly-tailored heterostructures. Here we describe a
new generation of field effect vertical tunnelling transistors where 2D
tungsten disulphide serves as an atomically thin barrier between two layers of
either mechanically exfoliated or CVD-grown graphene. Our devices have
unprecedented current modulation exceeding one million at room temperature and
can also operate on transparent and flexible substrates
Properties of 125 GeV Higgs boson in non-decoupling MSSM scenarios
Tantalizing hints of the Higgs boson of mass around 125 GeV have been
reported at the LHC. We explore the MSSM parameter space in which the 125 GeV
state is identified as the heavier of the CP even Higgs bosons, and study two
scenarios where the two photon production rate can be significantly larger than
the standard model (SM). In one scenario, is
enhanced by a light stau contribution, while the () rate
stays around the SM rate. In the other scenario, is
suppressed and not only the but also the
() rates should be enhanced. The rate can be
significantly larger or smaller than the SM rate in both scenarios. Other
common features of the scenarios include top quark decays into charged Higgs
boson, single and pair production of all Higgs bosons in collisions at
GeV.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, accepted version for publication in JHE
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