10,665 research outputs found
Spin-orbit effects on the Larmor dispersion relation in GaAs quantum wells
We have studied the relevance of spin-orbit coupling to the dispersion 00009
relation of the Larmor resonance observed in inelastic light scattering and
electron-spin resonance experiments on GaAs quantum wells. We show that the
spin-orbit interaction, here described by a sum of Dresselhaus and
Bychkov-Rashba terms, couples Zeeman and spin-density excitations. We have
evaluated its contribution to the spin splitting as a function of the magnetic
field , and have found that in the small limit, the spin-orbit
interaction does not contribute to the spin splitting, whereas at high magnetic
fields it yields a independent contribution to the spin splitting given by
, with being the intensity of the
Bychkov-Rashba and Dresselhaus spin-orbit terms.Comment: To be published in Physical Review
Power loss and electromagnetic energy density in a dispersive metamaterial medium
The power loss and electromagnetic energy density of a metamaterial
consisting of arrays of wires and split-ring resonators (SRRs) are
investigated. We show that a field energy density formula can be derived
consistently from both the electrodynamic (ED) approach and the equivalent
circuit (EC) approach. The derivations are based on the knowledge of the
dynamical equations of the electric and magnetic dipoles in the medium and the
correct form of the power loss. We discuss the role of power loss in
determining the form of energy density and explain why the power loss should be
identified first in the ED derivation. When the power loss is negligible and
the field is harmonic, our energy density formula reduces to the result of
Landau's classical formula. For the general case with finite power loss, our
investigation resolves the apparent contradiction between the previous results
derived by the EC and ED approaches.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Spatiotemporal Sparse Bayesian Learning with Applications to Compressed Sensing of Multichannel Physiological Signals
Energy consumption is an important issue in continuous wireless
telemonitoring of physiological signals. Compressed sensing (CS) is a promising
framework to address it, due to its energy-efficient data compression
procedure. However, most CS algorithms have difficulty in data recovery due to
non-sparsity characteristic of many physiological signals. Block sparse
Bayesian learning (BSBL) is an effective approach to recover such signals with
satisfactory recovery quality. However, it is time-consuming in recovering
multichannel signals, since its computational load almost linearly increases
with the number of channels.
This work proposes a spatiotemporal sparse Bayesian learning algorithm to
recover multichannel signals simultaneously. It not only exploits temporal
correlation within each channel signal, but also exploits inter-channel
correlation among different channel signals. Furthermore, its computational
load is not significantly affected by the number of channels. The proposed
algorithm was applied to brain computer interface (BCI) and EEG-based driver's
drowsiness estimation. Results showed that the algorithm had both better
recovery performance and much higher speed than BSBL. Particularly, the
proposed algorithm ensured that the BCI classification and the drowsiness
estimation had little degradation even when data were compressed by 80%, making
it very suitable for continuous wireless telemonitoring of multichannel
signals.Comment: Codes are available at:
https://sites.google.com/site/researchbyzhang/stsb
Nucleation in dilute 3He-4He liquid mixtures at low temperatures
We present a study of phase separation from supersaturated 3He-4He liquid
mixtures at low temperatures addressing both the degree of critical
supersaturation Dx and the thermal-to-quantum crossover temperature T* for the
nucleation process. Two different nucleation seeds are investigated, namely 3He
droplets and 4He vortex lines with cores filled with 3He. We have found that
the experimental T* is reproduced when we consider that nucleation proceeds
from 3He droplets, whereas Dx is reproduced when we consider 4He vortex lines
filled with 3He. However, neither nucleation configuration is able to
simultaneously reproduce the current experimental information on Dx and T*.Comment: To appear in J. of Low Temp. Physic
K-Rb Fermi-Bose mixtures: vortical states and sag
We study a confined mixture of bosons and fermions in the quantal degeneracy
regime with attractive boson-fermion interaction. We discuss the effect that
the presence of vortical states and the displacement of the trapping potentials
may have on mixtures near collapse, and investigate the phase stability diagram
of the K-Rb mixture in the mean field approximation supposing in one case that
the trapping potentials felt by bosons and fermions are shifted from each
other, as it happens in the presence of a gravitational sag, and in another
case, assuming that the Bose condensate sustains a vortex state. In both cases,
we have obtained an analytical expression for the fermion effective potential
when the Bose condensate is in the Thomas-Fermi regime, that can be used to
determine the maxima of the fermionic density. We have numerically checked that
the values one obtains for the location of these maxima using the analytical
formulas remain valid up to the critical boson and fermion numbers, above which
the mixture collapses.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. A (on May 2004), 15 pages with 3 figure
Magnetic field dependence of hole levels in self-assembled InAs quantum dots
Recent magneto-transport experiments of holes in InGaAs quantum dots [D.
Reuter, P. Kailuweit, A.D. Wieck, U. Zeitler, O. Wibbelhoff, C. Meier, A.
Lorke, and J.C. Maan, Phys. Rev. Lett. 94, 026808 (2005)] are interpreted by
employing a multi-band kp Hamiltonian, which considers the interaction between
heavy hole and light hole subbands explicitely. No need of invoking an
incomplete energy shell filling is required within this model. The crucial role
we ascribe to the heavy hole-light hole interaction is further supported by
one-band local-spin-density functional calculations, which show that Coulomb
interactions do not induce any incomplete hole shell filling and therefore
cannot account for the experimental magnetic field dispersion.Comment: 5 pages with 3 figures and one table. The paper has been submitted to
Phys.Rev.
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