3,550 research outputs found
Influence of trigonal warping on interference effects in bilayer graphene
Bilayer graphene (two coupled graphitic monolayers arranged according to Bernal stacking) is a two-dimensional gapless semiconductor with a peculiar electronic spectrum different from the Dirac spectrum in the monolayer material. In particular, the electronic Fermi line in each of its valleys has a strong p -> -p asymmetry due to trigonal warping, which suppresses the weak localization effect. We show that weak localization in bilayer graphene may be present only in devices with pronounced intervalley scattering, and we evaluate the corresponding magnetoresistance
The Effect of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 on the Location of Assets in Financial Services Firms
This paper examines the effects of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 on the international location decisions of U.S. financial services firms. The Act included rule changes that made it substantially more difficult for U.S. firms to defer U.S. taxes on overseas financial services income held in low-tax jurisdictions. These same rule changes were not applied to other forms of income; in particular, income generated from active manufacturing operations was still eligible for deferral after the Act. We use information from the tax returns of U.S. corporations to examine how local taxes affect the allocation of assets held abroad. We find that, before the Act, the location of assets in financial subsidiaries was responsive to differences in host country tax rates across jurisdictions. However, after the Act, differences in host country tax rates no longer explain the distribution of assets held in financial services subsidiaries abroad. In contrast, we find that assets held in manufacturing subsidiaries have become more sensitive to variations in tax rates. Our results suggest that the tightening of the anti-deferral provisions applicable to financial services companies has been successful in neutralizing the effect of host country income taxes on investment location decisions.
Physical mechanism for a kinetic energy driven zero-bias anomaly in the Anderson-Hubbard model
The combined effects of strong disorder, strong correlations and hopping in
the Anderson-Hubbard model have been shown to produce a zero bias anomaly which
has an energy scale proportional to the hopping and minimal dependence on
interaction strength, disorder strength and doping. Disorder-induced
suppression of the density of states for a purely local interaction is
inconsistent with both the Efros-Shklovskii Coulomb gap and the
Altshuler-Aronov anomaly, and moreover the energy scale of this anomaly is
inconsistent with the standard energy scales of both weak and strong coupling
pictures. We demonstrate that a density of states anomaly with similar features
arises in an ensemble of two-site systems, and we argue that the energy scale t
emerges in strongly correlated systems with disorder due to the mixing of lower
and upper Hubbard orbitals on neighboring sites.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; new version includes minor changes to figures and
text to increase clarit
Nonequilibrium mesoscopic conductance fluctuations
We investigate the amplitude of mesoscopic fluctuations of the differential
conductance of a metallic wire at arbitrary bias voltage V. For non-interacting
electrons, the variance increases with V. The asymptotic large-V
behavior is \sim V/V_c (where eV_c=D/L^2 is the Thouless energy),
in agreement with the earlier prediction by Larkin and Khmelnitskii. We find,
however, that this asymptotics has a very small numerical prefactor and sets in
at very large V/V_c only, which strongly complicates its experimental
observation. This high-voltage behavior is preceded by a crossover regime,
V/V_c \lesssim 30, where the conductance variance increases by a factor \sim 3
as compared to its value in the regime of universal conductance fluctuations
(i.e., at V->0). We further analyze the effect of dephasing due to the
electron-electron scattering on at high voltages. With the Coulomb
interaction taken into account, the amplitude of conductance fluctuations
becomes a non-monotonic function of V. Specifically, drops as 1/V
for voltages V >> gV_c, where g is the dimensionless conductance. In this
regime, the conductance fluctuations are dominated by quantum-coherent regions
of the wire adjacent to the reservoirs.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures. Fig.2 and one more appendix added, accepted for
publication in PR
Nonequilibrium electrons in tunnel structures under high-voltage injection
We investigate electronic distributions in nonequilibrium tunnel junctions
subject to a high voltage bias under competing electron-electron and
electron-phonon relaxation processes. We derive conditions for reaching
quasi-equilibrium and show that, though the distribution can still be thermal
for low energies where the rate of the electron-electron relaxation exceeds
significantly the electron-phonon relaxation rate, it develops a power-law tail
at energies of order of . In a general case of comparable electron-electron
and electron-phonon relaxation rates, this tail leads to emission of
high-energy phonons which carry away most of the energy pumped in by the
injected current.Comment: Revised versio
Take-off mechanics in hummingbirds (Trochilidae)
Initiating flight is challenging, and considerable effort has focused on understanding the energetics and aerodynamics of take-off for both machines and animals. For animal flight, the available evidence suggests that birds maximize their initial flight velocity using leg thrust rather than wing flapping. The smallest birds, hummingbirds (Order Apodiformes), are unique in their ability to perform sustained hovering but have proportionally small hindlimbs that could hinder generation of high leg thrust. Understanding the take-off flight of hummingbirds can provide novel insight into the take-off mechanics that will be required for micro-air vehicles. During take-off by hummingbirds, we measured hindlimb forces on a perch mounted with strain gauges and filmed wingbeat kinematics with high-speed video. Whereas other birds obtain 80–90% of their initial flight velocity using leg thrust, the leg contribution in hummingbirds was 59% during autonomous take-off. Unlike other species, hummingbirds beat their wings several times as they thrust using their hindlimbs. In a phylogenetic context, our results show that reduced body and hindlimb size in hummingbirds limits their peak acceleration during leg thrust and, ultimately, their take-off velocity. Previously, the influence of motivational state on take-off flight performance has not been investigated for any one organism. We studied the full range of motivational states by testing performance as the birds took off: (1) to initiate flight autonomously, (2) to escape a startling stimulus or (3) to aggressively chase a conspecific away from a feeder. Motivation affected performance. Escape and aggressive take-off featured decreased hindlimb contribution (46% and 47%, respectively) and increased flight velocity. When escaping, hummingbirds foreshortened their body movement prior to onset of leg thrust and began beating their wings earlier and at higher frequency. Thus, hummingbirds are capable of modulating their leg and wingbeat kinetics to increase take-off velocity
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