26,609 research outputs found
X-ray Raman compression via two-stream instability in dense plasmas
A Raman compression scheme suitable for x-rays, where the Langmuir wave is
created by an intense beam rather than the pondermotive potential between the
seed and pump pulses, is proposed.
The required intensity of the seed and pump pulses enabling the compression
could be mitigated by more than a factor of 100, compared to conventionally
available other Raman compression schemes. The relevant wavelength of x-rays
ranges from 1 to 10 nm
Coexistence of bulk and surface states probed by Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations in BiSe with high charge-carrier density
Topological insulators are ideally represented as having an insulating bulk
with topologically protected, spin-textured surface states. However, it is
increasingly becoming clear that these surface transport channels can be
accompanied by a finite conducting bulk, as well as additional topologically
trivial surface states. To investigate these parallel conduction transport
channels, we studied Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations in BiSe thin films,
in high magnetic fields up to 30 T so as to access channels with a lower
mobility. We identify a clear Zeeman-split bulk contribution to the
oscillations from a comparison between the charge-carrier densities extracted
from the magnetoresistance and the oscillations. Furthermore, our analyses
indicate the presence of a two-dimensional state and signatures of additional
states the origin of which cannot be conclusively determined. Our findings
underpin the necessity of theoretical studies on the origin of and the
interplay between these parallel conduction channels for a careful analysis of
the material's performance.Comment: Manuscript including supplemental materia
Theory of Microwave Parametric Down Conversion and Squeezing Using Circuit QED
We study theoretically the parametric down conversion and squeezing of
microwaves using cavity quantum electrodynamics of a superconducting Cooper
pair box (CPB) qubit located inside a transmission line resonator. The
non-linear susceptibility \chi_2 describing three-wave mixing can be tuned by
dc gate voltage applied to the CPB and vanishes by symmetry at the charge
degeneracy point. We show that the coherent coupling of different cavity modes
through the qubit can generate a squeezed state. Based on parameters realized
in recent successful circuit QED experiments, squeezing of 95% ~ 13dB below the
vacuum noise level should be readily achievable.Comment: 4 pages, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Maximal induced matchings in triangle-free graphs
An induced matching in a graph is a set of edges whose endpoints induce a
-regular subgraph. It is known that any -vertex graph has at most
maximal induced matchings, and this bound is best
possible. We prove that any -vertex triangle-free graph has at most maximal induced matchings, and this bound is attained by any
disjoint union of copies of the complete bipartite graph . Our result
implies that all maximal induced matchings in an -vertex triangle-free graph
can be listed in time , yielding the fastest known algorithm for
finding a maximum induced matching in a triangle-free graph.Comment: 17 page
Thermodynamic Phase Diagram of the Quantum Hall Skyrmion System
We numerically study the interacting quantum Hall skyrmion system based on
the Chern-Simons action. By noticing that the action is invariant under global
spin rotations in the spin space with respect to the magnetic field direction,
we obtain the low-energy effective action for a many skyrmion system.
Performing extensive molecular dynamics simulations, we establish the
thermodynamic phase diagram for a many skyrmion system.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex, 2 postscript figure
Comparison of T1 mapping techniques for ECV quantification. histological validation and reproducibility of ShMOLLI versus multibreath-hold T1 quantification equilibrium contrast CMR
BACKGROUND: Myocardial extracellular volume (ECV) is elevated in fibrosis or infiltration and can be quantified by measuring the haematocrit with pre and post contrast T1 at sufficient contrast equilibrium. Equilibrium CMR (EQ-CMR), using a bolus-infusion protocol, has been shown to provide robust measurements of ECV using a multibreath-hold T1 pulse sequence. Newer, faster sequences for T1 mapping promise whole heart coverage and improved clinical utility, but have not been validated.
METHODS: Multibreathhold T1 quantification with heart rate correction and single breath-hold T1 mapping using Shortened Modified Look-Locker Inversion recovery (ShMOLLI) were used in equilibrium contrast CMR to generate ECV values and compared in 3 ways.Firstly, both techniques were compared in a spectrum of disease with variable ECV expansion (n=100, 50 healthy volunteers, 12 patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, 18 with severe aortic stenosis, 20 with amyloid). Secondly, both techniques were correlated to human histological collagen volume fraction (CVF%, n=18, severe aortic stenosis biopsies). Thirdly, an assessment of test:retest reproducibility of the 2 CMR techniques was performed 1 week apart in individuals with widely different ECVs (n=10 healthy volunteers, n=7 amyloid patients).
RESULTS: More patients were able to perform ShMOLLI than the multibreath-hold technique (6% unable to breath-hold). ECV calculated by multibreath-hold T1 and ShMOLLI showed strong correlation (r(2)=0.892), little bias (bias -2.2%, 95%CI -8.9% to 4.6%) and good agreement (ICC 0.922, range 0.802 to 0.961, p<0.0001). ECV correlated with histological CVF% by multibreath-hold ECV (r(2)= 0.589) but better by ShMOLLI ECV (r(2)= 0.685). Inter-study reproducibility demonstrated that ShMOLLI ECV trended towards greater reproducibility than the multibreath-hold ECV, although this did not reach statistical significance (95%CI -4.9% to 5.4% versus 95%CI -6.4% to 7.3% respectively, p=0.21).
CONCLUSIONS: ECV quantification by single breath-hold ShMOLLI T1 mapping can measure ECV by EQ-CMR across the spectrum of interstitial expansion. It is procedurally better tolerated, slightly more reproducible and better correlates with histology compared to the older multibreath-hold FLASH techniques
Reentrant Melting of Soliton Lattice Phase in Bilayer Quantum Hall System
At large parallel magnetic field , the ground state of bilayer
quantum Hall system forms uniform soliton lattice phase. The soliton lattice
will melt due to the proliferation of unbound dislocations at certain finite
temperature leading to the Kosterlitz-Thouless (KT) melting. We calculate the
KT phase boundary by numerically solving the newly developed set of Bethe
ansatz equations, which fully take into account the thermal fluctuations of
soliton walls. We predict that within certain ranges of , the
soliton lattice will melt at . Interestingly enough, as temperature
decreases, it melts at certain temperature lower than exhibiting
the reentrant behaviour of the soliton liquid phase.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
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