22,185 research outputs found
Evaluate ERTS Imagery for Mapping and Detection of Changes of Snowcover on Land and on Glaciers
ERTS-1 imagery for mapping and detecting changes in snow cover on land and glacier
Signatures of dynamically polarized nuclear spins in all-electrical lateral spin transport devices
The effect of nuclear spins in Fe/GaAs all-electrical spin-injection devices
is investigated. At temperatures below 50 K, strong modifications of the
non-local spin signal are found that are characteristic for hyperfine coupling
between conduction electrons and dynamically polarized nuclear spins. The
perpendicular component of the nuclear Overhauser field depolarizes electron
spins near zero in-plane external magnetic field, and can suppress such
dephasing when antialigned with the external field, leading to satellite peaks
in a Hanle measurement. The features observed agree well with a Monte Carlo
simulation of the spin diffusion equation including hyperfine interaction, and
are used to study the nuclear spin dynamics and relate it to the spin
polarization of injected electrons.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Graph algebras and orbit equivalence
We introduce the notion of orbit equivalence of directed graphs, following
Matsumoto's notion of continuous orbit equivalence for topological Markov
shifts. We show that two graphs in which every cycle has an exit are orbit
equivalent if and only if there is a diagonal-preserving isomorphism between
their -algebras. We show that it is necessary to assume that every cycle
has an exit for the forward implication, but that the reverse implication holds
for arbitrary graphs. As part of our analysis of arbitrary graphs we
construct a groupoid from the graph
algebra and its diagonal subalgebra which generalises
Renault's Weyl groupoid construction applied to . We
show that recovers the graph groupoid
without the assumption that every cycle in has an exit,
which is required to apply Renault's results to . We
finish with applications of our results to out-splittings of graphs and to
amplified graphs.Comment: 27 page
Spin dynamics and coherent tunnelling in the molecular magnetic rings Fe_6 and Fe_8
We present detailed calculations of low-energy spin dynamics in the ``ferric
wheel'' systems Na:Fe_6 and Cs:Fe_8 in a magnetic field. We compute by exact
diagonalisation the low-energy spectra and matrix elements for total-spin and
N'eel-vector components, and thus the time-dependent correlation functions of
these operators. Comparison of our results with the semiclassical theory of
coherent quantum tunnelling of the N'eel vector demonstrates the validity of a
two-state description for the low-energy dynamics of ferric wheels. We discuss
the implications of our results for mesoscopic quantum coherent phenomena, and
for the experimental techniques to observe them, in molecular magnetic rings.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures; considerably expanded discussion; to appear in
Eur. Phys. J.
Constructing a Social Problem: The Press and the Environment
The U. S. daily press might seem to be in a strategic position to function as a claims-maker in the early construction of a social problem. But in the case of the manufacture of environmentalism as a social reality in the 1960\u27s and 70\u27s, the press was fairly slow to adopt a holistic environmental lexicon. Its reporting of environmental news even now only partially reflects concepts promoted by positive environmental claims-makers, such as planet-wide interdependence, and the threats to it by destructive technologies. The movement of environmental claims seems to have started with interest-group entrepreneurship using interpersonal communication and independent publication, gone on to attention in government, then finally--and incompletely--been put on the agenda of the daily press. Once on the press agenda, coverage of environmental issues may have improved. But there are some constraints, possibly inherent in the press as an institution, that limit its role in the incipient construction of some social problems
Two-qubit Quantum Logic Gate in Molecular Magnets
We proposed a scheme to realize a controlled-NOT quantum logic gate in a
dimer of exchange coupled single-molecule magnets, . We
chosen the ground state and the three low-lying excited states of a dimer in a
finite longitudinal magnetic field as the quantum computing bases and
introduced a pulsed transverse magnetic field with a special frequency. The
pulsed transverse magnetic field induces the transitions between the quantum
computing bases so as to realize a controlled-NOT quantum logic gate. The
transition rates between the quantum computing bases and between the quantum
computing bases and other excited states are evaluated and analyzed.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Dynamics of Quantum Dot Nuclear Spin Polarization Controlled by a Single Electron
We present an experimental study of the dynamics underlying the buildup and
decay of dynamical nuclear spin polarization in a single semiconductor quantum
dot. Our experiment shows that the nuclei can be polarized on a time scale of a
few milliseconds, while their decay dynamics depends drastically on external
parameters. We show that a single electron can very efficiently depolarize the
nuclear spins and discuss two processes that can cause this depolarization.
Conversely, in the absence of a quantum dot electron, the lifetime of nuclear
spin polarization is on the time scale of a second, most likely limited by the
non-secular terms of the nuclear dipole-dipole interaction. We can further
suppress this depolarization rate by 1-2 orders of magnitude by applying an
external magnetic field exceeding 1 mT.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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