130,325 research outputs found
Combined high vacuum/high frequency fatigue tester
Apparatus permits application of significantly greater number of cycles or equivalent number of cycles in shorter time than conventional fatigue test machines. Environment eliminates problems associated with high temperature oxidation and with sensitivity of refractory alloy behavior to atmospheric contamination
Semiparametric inference in mixture models with predictive recursion marginal likelihood
Predictive recursion is an accurate and computationally efficient algorithm
for nonparametric estimation of mixing densities in mixture models. In
semiparametric mixture models, however, the algorithm fails to account for any
uncertainty in the additional unknown structural parameter. As an alternative
to existing profile likelihood methods, we treat predictive recursion as a
filter approximation to fitting a fully Bayes model, whereby an approximate
marginal likelihood of the structural parameter emerges and can be used for
inference. We call this the predictive recursion marginal likelihood.
Convergence properties of predictive recursion under model mis-specification
also lead to an attractive construction of this new procedure. We show
pointwise convergence of a normalized version of this marginal likelihood
function. Simulations compare the performance of this new marginal likelihood
approach that of existing profile likelihood methods as well as Dirichlet
process mixtures in density estimation. Mixed-effects models and an empirical
Bayes multiple testing application in time series analysis are also considered
Cooper pair splitting in a nanoSQUID geometry at high transparency
We describe a Josephson device composed of two superconductors separated by
two interacting quantum dots in parallel, as a probe for Cooper pair splitting.
In addition to sequential tunneling of electrons through each dot, an
additional transport channel exists in this system: crossed Andreev reflection,
where a Cooper pair from the source is split between the two dots and
recombined in the drain superconductor. Unlike non-equilibrium scenarios for
Cooper pair splitting which involves superconducting/normal metal "forks", our
proposal relies on an Aharonov-Bohm measurement of the DC Josephson current
when a flux is inserted between the two dots. We provide a path integral
approach to treat arbitrary transparencies, and we explore all contributions
for the individual phases ( or ) of the quantum dots. We propose a
definition of the Cooper pair splitting efficiency for arbitrary
transparencies, which allows us to find the phase associations which favor the
crossed Andreev process. Possible applications to experiments using nanowires
as quantum dots are discussed.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figure
Hanbury Brown and Twiss noise correlations in a topological superconductor beam splitter
We study Hanbury-Brown and Twiss current cross-correlations in a
three-terminal junction where a central topological superconductor (TS)
nanowire, bearing Majorana bound states at its ends, is connected to two normal
leads. Relying on a non-perturbative Green function formalism, our calculations
allow us to provide analytical expressions for the currents and their
correlations at subgap voltages, while also giving exact numerical results
valid for arbitrary external bias. We show that when the normal leads are
biased at voltages and smaller than the gap, the sign of the
current cross-correlations is given by -\mbox{sgn}(V_1 \, V_2). In
particular, this leads to positive cross-correlations for opposite voltages, a
behavior in stark contrast with the one of a standard superconductor, which
provides a direct evidence of the presence of the Majorana zero-mode at the
edge of the TS. We further extend our results, varying the length of the TS
(leading to an overlap of the Majorana bound states) as well as its chemical
potential (driving it away from half-filling), generalizing the boundary TS
Green function to those cases. In the case of opposite bias voltages,
\mbox{sgn}(V_1 \, V_2)=-1, driving the TS wire through the topological
transition leads to a sign change of the current cross-correlations, providing
yet another signature of the physics of the Majorana bound state.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figure
Time-resolved Microwave Conductivity. Part 2.-Quantum-sized TiO_2 and the Effect of Adsorbates and Light Intensity on Charge-carrier Dynamics
Charge-carrier recombination dynamics after a pulsed laser excitation are investigated by time-resolved microwave conductivity (TRMC) for quantum-sized (Q-) TiO_2 and P25, a bulk-phase TiO_2. Adsorbed scavengers such as HNO_3, HC, HCIO_4, isopropyl alcohol, trans-decalin, tetranitromethane, and methyl viologen dichloride result in different charge-carrier recombination dynamics for Q-TiO_2 and P25. The differences include a current doubling with isopropyl alcohol for which electron injection into Q-TiO_2 is much slower than into P25 and relaxation of the selection rules of an indirect-bandgap semiconductor due to size quantization. However, the faster interfacial charge transfer predicted for Q-TiO_2 due to a 0. 2 eV gain in redox overpotentials is not observed. The effect of light intensity is also investigated. Above a critical injection level, fast recombination channels are opened, which may be a major factor resulting in the dependence of the steady-state photolysis quantum yields on l^(–1/2). The fast recombination channels are opened at lower injection levels for P25 than for Q-TiO_2, and a model incorporating the heterogeneity of surface-hole traps is presented
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