26,610 research outputs found
Suppression of Shot-Noise in Quantum Cavities: Chaos vs. Disorder
We investigate the behavior of the shot-noise power through quantum
mechanical cavities in the semiclassical limit of small electronic wavelength.
In the absence of impurity scattering, the Fano factor , giving the noise to
current ratio, was previously found to disappear as more and more classical,
hence deterministic and noiseless transmission channels open up. We investigate
the behavior of as diffractive impurities are added inside the cavity. We
find that recovers its universal value provided (i) impurities cover the
full cavity so that only a set of zero measure of classical trajectories may
avoid them, and (ii) the impurity scattering rate exceeds the inverse dwell
time through the cavity. If condition (i) is not satisfied, saturates below
its universal value, even in the limit of strong scattering. Our results
corroborate the validity of the two-phase fluid model according to which the
electronic flow splits into two well separated components, a classical
deterministic fluid and a stochastic quantum-mechanical fluid. Only the latter
carries shot-noise.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the fourth
conference on ``Unsolved Problems of Noise and Fluctuations in Physics,
Biology and High Technology'
Creating An Information Technology Security Program for Educators
Information Technology (IT) Security education has become a critical component to college curriculum within the past few years. Along with developing security courses and degrees, there is a need to train college educators and disseminate the security curriculum and best-practices to other colleges. St. Petersburg College implemented a project entitled Information Technology Security and Education for Educators (ITSCEE) designed to address Priority III of the “National Strategy to Secure Cyberspace”, establishment of a “national cyberspace training program.” The project was designed to produce three nationally relevant IT Security degree and certificate programs at the associate, advanced technical certificate, and baccalaureate levels. Also, the project was designed to provide training and an opportunity for the Florida Community College Faculty to obtain certification in the IT Security arena to assist their institutions in deploying relevant IT Security degree programs. This paper will describe the evolution of this project, the success in meeting goals, lessons learned and techniques and best practices other colleges may use to enhance their programs
Modulation of near-field heat transfer between two gratings
We present a theoretical study of near-field heat transfer between two
uniaxial anisotropic planar structures. We investigate how the distance and
relative orientation (with respect to their optical axes) between the objects
affect the heat flux. In particular, we show that by changing the angle between
the optical axes it is possible in certain cases to modulate the net heat flux
up to 90% at room temperature, and discuss possible applications of such a
strong effect
Weak-lensing -modes as a probe of the isotropy of the universe
We compute the angular power spectrum of the -modes of the weak-lensing
shear in a spatially anisotropic spacetime. We find that there must also exist
off-diagonal correlations between the -modes, -modes, and convergence
that allow one to reconstruct the eigendirections of expansion. Focusing on
future surveys such as Euclid and SKA, we show that observations can constrain
the geometrical shear in units of the Hubble rate at the percent level, or even
better, offering a new and powerful method to probe our cosmological model.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. This version matches the published on
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