7,326 research outputs found
Weakly Lefschetz symplectic manifolds
The harmonic cohomology of a Donaldson symplectic submanifold and of an
Auroux symplectic submanifold are compared with that of its ambient space. We
also study symplectic manifolds satisfying a weakly Lefschetz property, that
is, the -Lefschetz propery. In particular, we consider the symplectic
blow-ups of the complex projective space along weakly Lefschetz symplectic
submanifolds. As an application we construct, for each even integer ,
compact symplectic manifolds which are -Lefschetz but not -Lefschetz.Comment: 22 pages; many improvements from previous versio
Symplectic resolutions, Lefschetz property and formality
We introduce a method to resolve a symplectic orbifold into a smooth
symplectic manifold. Then we study how the formality and the Lefschetz property
of the symplectic resolution are compared with that of the symplectic orbifold.
We also study the formality of the symplectic blow-up of a symplectic orbifold
along symplectic submanifolds disjoint from the orbifold singularities. This
allows us to construct the first example of a simply connected compact
symplectic manifold of dimension 8 which satisfies the Lefschetz property but
is not formal, therefore giving a counter-example to a conjecture of Babenko
and Taimanov.Comment: 21 pages, no figure
Performance limits of graphene-ribbon-based field effect transistors
The performance of field effect transistors based on an single graphene
ribbon with a constriction and a single back gate are studied with the help of
atomistic models. It is shown how this scheme, unlike that of traditional
carbon-nanotube-based transistors, reduces the importance of the specifics of
the chemical bonding to the metallic electrodes in favor of the carbon-based
part of device. The ultimate performance limits are here studied for various
constriction and metal-ribbon contact models. In particular we show that, even
for poorly contacting metals, properly taylored constrictions can give
promising values for both the on-conductance and the subthreshold swing.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
A Proposal of a Renormalization Group Transformation for Lattice Field Theories
We propose a new Real Space Renormalization Group transformation useful for
Monte Carlo calculations in theories with global or local symmetries. From
relaxation arguments we define the block-spin transformation with two tunable
free parameters, adapted to the system's action. Varying them it is possible to
place the fixed point very close to the simulation point. We show how the
method works in a simple model with global symmetry: the three dimensional XY
model.Comment: 26 pages, uuencoded compressed postscript single file, 8 figures
include
The Coulomb-Higgs transition of the three-parameter U(1)-Higgs model
We find a first order Coulomb--Higgs phase transition at moderately large
values of the coupling , and no evidence for a change of order at any
finite value of it.Comment: 3 pages, uuencoded compressed ps file. Contribution to Lattice '9
Coherent Detection of High-Rate Optical PPM Signals
A method of coherent detection of high-rate pulse-position modulation (PPM) on a received laser beam has been conceived as a means of reducing the deleterious effects of noise and atmospheric turbulence in free-space optical communication using focal-plane detector array technologies. In comparison with a receiver based on direct detection of the intensity modulation of a PPM signal, a receiver based on the present method of coherent detection performs well at much higher background levels. In principle, the coherent-detection receiver can exhibit quantum-limited performance despite atmospheric turbulence. The key components of such a receiver include standard receiver optics, a laser that serves as a local oscillator, a focal-plane array of photodetectors, and a signal-processing and data-acquisition assembly needed to sample the focal-plane fields and reconstruct the pulsed signal prior to detection. The received PPM-modulated laser beam and the local-oscillator beam are focused onto the photodetector array, where they are mixed in the detection process. The two lasers are of the same or nearly the same frequency. If the two lasers are of different frequencies, then the coherent detection process is characterized as heterodyne and, using traditional heterodyne-detection terminology, the difference between the two laser frequencies is denoted the intermediate frequency (IF). If the two laser beams are of the same frequency and remain aligned in phase, then the coherent detection process is characterized as homodyne (essentially, heterodyne detection at zero IF). As a result of the inherent squaring operation of each photodetector, the output current includes an IF component that contains the signal modulation. The amplitude of the IF component is proportional to the product of the local-oscillator signal amplitude and the PPM signal amplitude. Hence, by using a sufficiently strong local-oscillator signal, one can make the PPM-modulated IF signal strong enough to overcome thermal noise in the receiver circuits: this is what makes it possible to achieve near-quantum-limited detection in the presence of strong background. Following quantum-limited coherent detection, the outputs of the individual photodetectors are automatically aligned in phase by use of one or more adaptive array compensation algorithms [e.g., the least-mean-square (LMS) algorithm]. Then the outputs are combined and the resulting signal is processed to extract the high-rate information, as though the PPM signal were received by a single photodetector. In a continuing series of experiments to test this method (see Fig. 1), the local oscillator has a wavelength of 1,064 nm, and another laser is used as a signal transmitter at a slightly different wavelength to establish an IF of about 6 MHz. There are 16 photodetectors in a 4 4 focal-plane array; the detector outputs are digitized at a sampling rate of 25 MHz, and the signals in digital form are combined by use of the LMS algorithm. Convergence of the adaptive combining algorithm in the presence of simulated atmospheric turbulence for optical PPM signals has already been demonstrated in the laboratory; the combined output is shown in Fig. 2(a), and Fig. 2(b) shows the behavior of the phase of the combining weights as a function of time (or samples). We observe that the phase of the weights has a sawtooth shape due to the continuously changing phase in the down-converted output, which is not exactly at zero frequency. Detailed performance analysis of this coherent free-space optical communication system in the presence of simulated atmospheric turbulence is currently under way
Effect of Dilution on First Order Transitions: The Three Dimensional Three States Potts Model
We have studied numerically the effect of quenched site dilution on a first
order phase transition in three dimensions. We have simulated the site diluted
three states Potts model studying in detail the second order region of its
phase diagram. We have found that the exponent is compatible with the one
of the three dimensional diluted Ising model whereas the exponent is
definitely different.Comment: RevTex. 6 pages and 6 postscript figure
Immune System in the Brain: A Modulatory Role on Dendritic Spine Morphophysiology?
The central nervous system is closely linked to the immune system at several levels. The brain parenchyma is separated from the periphery by the blood brain barrier, which under normal conditions prevents the entry of mediators such as activated leukocytes, antibodies, complement factors, and cytokines. The myeloid cell lineage plays a crucial role in the development of immune responses at the central level, and it comprises two main subtypes: (1) resident microglia, distributed throughout the brain parenchyma; (2) perivascular macrophages located in the brain capillaries of the basal lamina and the choroid plexus. In addition, astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, endothelial cells, and, to a lesser extent, neurons are implicated in the immune response in the central nervous system. By modulating synaptogenesis, microglia are most specifically involved in restoring neuronal connectivity following injury. These cells release immune mediators, such as cytokines, that modulate synaptic transmission and that alter the morphology of dendritic spines during the inflammatory process following injury. Thus, the expression and release of immune mediators in the brain parenchyma are closely linked to plastic morphophysiological changes in neuronal dendritic spines. Based on these observations, it has been proposed that these immune mediators are also implicated in learning and memory processes
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