40,334 research outputs found
The spectrum of the S^5 compactification of the chiral N=2, D=10 supergravity and the unitary supermultiplets of U(2,2/4)
The authors calculate the spectrum of the S^5 compactification of the chiral N=2, D=10 supergravity theory. The modes on S^5 fall into unitary irreducible representations of the D=5, N=8 anti-de Sitter supergroup U(2,2/4). These unitary supermultiplets involve field of spin <or=2 with quantised 'mass' eigenvalues. The massless multiplet contains fifteen vector fields, six self-dual and six anti-self-dual anti-symmetric tensor fields. The fields of the massless multiplet are expected to be those of a gauged N=8 theory in D=5 with a local gauge group SU(4)
Bends In Nanotubes Allow Electric Spin Control and Coupling
We investigate combined effects of spin-orbit coupling and magnetic field in
carbon nanotubes containing one or more bends along their length. We show how
bends can be used to provide electrical control of confined spins, while spins
confined in straight segments remain insensitive to electric fields. Device
geometries that allow general rotation of single spins are presented and
analyzed. In addition, capacitive coupling along bends provides coherent
spin-spin interaction, including between otherwise disconnected nanotubes,
completing a universal set of one- and two-qubit gates.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Tetragonal states from epitaxial strain on metal films
The tetragonal states produced by isotropic pseudomorphic epitaxial strain in
the (001) plane on a tetragonal phase of a crystal are calculated for V, Ti,
Rb, Li, K, Sr from first-principles electronic theory. It is shown that each
metal has two tetragonal phases corresponding to minima of the total energy
with respect to tetragonal deformations, hence are equilibrium phases, and that
the equilibrium phases are separated by a region of inherent instability. The
equilibrium phase for any strained tetragonal state can thus be uniquely
identified. Lattice constants and relative energies of the two phases and the
saddle point between them are tabulated, as well as the tetragonal elastic
constants of each phase.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, appeared in Phys. Rev. B 57, 1971 (1998). Other
related publications can be found at
http://www.rz-berlin.mpg.de/th/paper.htm
Bluetooth low energy for autonomous human-robot interaction
© 2017 Copyright held by the owner/author(s).This demonstration shows how inexpensive, off-the-shelf, and unobtrusive Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) devices can be utilized for enabling robots to recognize touch gestures, to perceive proximity information, and to distinguish between interacting individuals autonomously. The received signal strength (RSS) between the BLE device attached to the robot and BLE devices attached to the interacting individuals is used to achieve this. Almost no software configuration is needed and the setup can be applied to most everyday environments and robot platforms
The role of vibrational–rotational coupling in V–V and V–R,T energy transfer
The effect of neglecting vibrational–rotational coupling in energy transfer calculations is studied for collisions of HF (v=1–7) with HF (v=0). An analog of a "classical path" method is considered in which rigid-rotor trajectories are used to determine a time-dependent forcing term on the vibrational motion of each molecule. The results are compared with our quasiclassical calculations in which no such approximation was used. At higher vibrational states the rigid-rotor forced-oscillator model is found to predict substantially smaller V–R,T rate constants than those found in the exact study
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