6,017 research outputs found
Performance Testing of Distributed Component Architectures
Performance characteristics, such as response time, throughput andscalability, are key quality attributes of distributed applications. Current practice,however, rarely applies systematic techniques to evaluate performance characteristics.We argue that evaluation of performance is particularly crucial in early developmentstages, when important architectural choices are made. At first glance, thiscontradicts the use of testing techniques, which are usually applied towards the endof a project. In this chapter, we assume that many distributed systems are builtwith middleware technologies, such as the Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) or theCommon Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA). These provide servicesand facilities whose implementations are available when architectures are defined.We also note that it is the middleware functionality, such as transaction and persistenceservices, remote communication primitives and threading policy primitives,that dominates distributed system performance. Drawing on these observations, thischapter presents a novel approach to performance testing of distributed applications.We propose to derive application-specific test cases from architecture designs so thatthe performance of a distributed application can be tested based on the middlewaresoftware at early stages of a development process. We report empirical results thatsupport the viability of the approach
Electrical plasmon injection in double-layer graphene heterostructures
It is by now well established that high-quality graphene enables a
gate-tunable low-loss plasmonic platform for the efficient confinement,
enhancement, and manipulation of optical fields spanning a broad range of
frequencies, from the mid infrared to the Terahertz domain. While
all-electrical detection of graphene plasmons has been demonstrated, electrical
plasmon injection (EPI), which is crucial to operate nanoplasmonic devices
without the encumbrance of a far-field optical apparatus, remains elusive. In
this work, we present a theory of EPI in double-layer graphene, where a
vertical tunnel current excites acoustic and optical plasmon modes. We first
calculate the power delivered by the applied inter-layer voltage bias into
these collective modes. We then show that this system works also as a
spectrally-resolved molecular sensor.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Compressibility of bilayer graphene
Bilayer graphene is a recently isolated and intriguing class of many-body
systems with massive chiral quasiparticles. We present theoretical results for
the electronic compressibility of bilayer graphene that are based on a
four-band continuum band structure model combined with a random phase
approximation treatment of electronic correlations. We find that the
compressibility is strongly suppressed by electron-electron interactions at low
carrier densities. Correlations do not lead to any qualitative new features,
but are crucially important for a quantitative understanding of this
fundamental thermodynamic property of graphene bilayers.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Photoemission spectra of massless Dirac fermions on the verge of exciton condensation
Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) is a powerful probe of
electron correlations in two-dimensional layered materials. In this Letter we
demonstrate that ARPES can be used to probe the onset of exciton condensation
in spatially-separated systems of electrons and holes created by gating
techniques in either double-layer graphene or topological-insulator thin films.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Magnetic hallmarks of viscous electron flow in graphene
We propose a protocol to identify spatial hallmarks of viscous electron flow
in graphene and other two-dimensional viscous electron fluids. We predict that
the profile of the magnetic field generated by hydrodynamic electron currents
flowing in confined geometries displays unambiguous features linked to
whirlpools and backflow near current injectors. We also show that the same
profile sheds light on the nature of the boundary conditions describing
friction exerted on the electron fluid by the edges of the sample. Our
predictions are within reach of vector magnetometry based on nitrogen-vacancy
centers embedded in a diamond slab mounted onto a graphene layer.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Acoustic plasmons and "soundarons" in graphene on a metal gate
We demonstrate that single-layer graphene in the presence of a metal gate
displays a gapless collective (plasmon) mode that has a linear dispersion at
long wavelengths. We calculate exactly the acoustic-plasmon group velocity at
the level of the random phase approximation and carry out microscopic
calculations of the one-body spectral function of such system. Despite
screening exerted by the metal, we find that graphene's quasiparticle spectrum
displays a very rich structure characterized by composite hole-acoustic plasmon
satellite bands (that we term for brevity "soundarons"), which can be observed
by e.g. angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
Electron density distribution and screening in rippled graphene sheets
Single-layer graphene sheets are typically characterized by long-wavelength
corrugations (ripples) which can be shown to be at the origin of rather strong
potentials with both scalar and vector components. We present an extensive
microscopic study, based on a self-consistent Kohn-Sham-Dirac
density-functional method, of the carrier density distribution in the presence
of these ripple-induced external fields. We find that spatial density
fluctuations are essentially controlled by the scalar component, especially in
nearly-neutral graphene sheets, and that in-plane atomic displacements are as
important as out-of-plane ones. The latter fact is at the origin of a
complicated spatial distribution of electron-hole puddles which has no evident
correlation with the out-of-plane topographic corrugations. In the range of
parameters we have explored, exchange and correlation contributions to the
Kohn-Sham potential seem to play a minor role.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures, submitted. High-quality figures can be
  requested to the author
Pseudospin Magnetism in Graphene
We predict that neutral graphene bilayers are pseudospin magnets in which the
charge density-contribution from each valley and spin spontaneously shifts to
one of the two layers. The band structure of this system is characterized by a
momentum-space vortex which is responsible for unusual competition between band
and kinetic energies leading to symmetry breaking in the vortex core. We
discuss the possibility of realizing a pseudospin version of ferromagnetic
metal spintronics in graphene bilayers based on hysteresis associated with this
broken symmetry.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; added figure 1, modified introduction and
  discussion; updated reference
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