2,507 research outputs found
Phosphine Functionalization of GaAs(111)A Surfaces
Phosphorus-functionalized GaAs surfaces have been prepared by exposure of Cl-terminated GaAs(111)A surfaces to triethylphosphine (PEt3) or trichlorophosphine (PCl3), or by the direct functionalization of the native-oxide terminated GaAs(111)A surface with PCl3. The presence of phosphorus on each functionalized surface was confirmed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. High-resolution, soft X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy was used to evaluate the As and Ga 3d regions of such surfaces. On PEt3 treated surfaces, the Ga 3d spectra exhibited a bulk Ga peak as well as peaks that were shifted to 0.35, 0.92 and 1.86 eV higher binding energy. These peaks were assigned to residual Cl-terminated Ga surface sites, surficial Ga2O and surficial Ga2O3, respectively. For PCl3-treated surfaces, the Ga 3d spectra displayed peaks ascribable to bulk Ga(As), Ga2O, and Ga2O3, as well as a peak shifted 0.30 eV to higher binding energy relative to the bulk signal. A peak corresponding to Ga(OH)3, observed on the Cl-terminated surface, was absent from all of the phosphine-functionalized surfaces. After reaction of the Cl-terminated GaAs(111)A surface with PCl3 or PEt3, the As 3d spectral region was free of As oxides and As0. Although native oxide-terminated GaAs surfaces were free of As oxides after reaction with PCl3, such surfaces contained detectable amounts of As0. Photoluminescence measurements indicted that phosphine-functionalized surfaces prepared from Cl-terminated GaAs(111)A surfaces had better electrical properties than the native-oxide capped GaAs(111)A surface, while the native-oxide covered surface treated with PCl3 showed no enhancement in PL intensity
Matchings with externalities and attitudes
Two-sided matchings are an important theoretical tool used to model markets and social interactions. In many real-life problems the utility of an agent is influenced not only by their own choices, but also by the choices that other agents make. Such an influence is called an externality. Whereas fully expressive representations of externalities in matchings require exponential space, in this paper we propose a compact model of externalities, in which the influence of a match on each agent is computed additively. Under this framework, we analyze many-to-many matchings and one-to-one matchings where agents take different attitudes when reasoning about the actions of others. In particular, we study optimistic, neutral and pessimistic attitudes and provide both computational hardness results and polynomial-time algorithms for computing stable outcomes
General method for extracting the quantum efficiency of dispersive qubit readout in circuit QED
We present and demonstrate a general three-step method for extracting the
quantum efficiency of dispersive qubit readout in circuit QED. We use active
depletion of post-measurement photons and optimal integration weight functions
on two quadratures to maximize the signal-to-noise ratio of the
non-steady-state homodyne measurement. We derive analytically and demonstrate
experimentally that the method robustly extracts the quantum efficiency for
arbitrary readout conditions in the linear regime. We use the proven method to
optimally bias a Josephson traveling-wave parametric amplifier and to quantify
different noise contributions in the readout amplification chain.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
A Simulation Study of an ASEAN Monetary Union (Replaces CentER DP 2010-100)
This paper analyzes some pros and cons of a monetary union for the ASEAN1 countries, excluding Myanmar. We estimate a stylized open-economy dynamic general equilibrium model for the ASEAN countries. Using the framework of linear quadratic differential games, we contrast the potential gains or losses for these countries due to economic shocks, in case they maintain their status-quo, they coordinate their monetary and/or fiscal policies, or form a monetary union. Assuming for all players open-loop information, we conclude that there are substantial gains from cooperation of monetary authorities. We also find that whether a monetary union improves upon monetary cooperation depends on the type of shocks and the extent of fiscal policy cooperation. Results are based both on a theoretical study of the structure of the estimated model and a simulation study.ASEAN economic integration;monetary union;linear quadratic differential games;open-loop information structure
Effect of the C-bridge length on the ultraviolet-resistance of oxycarbosilane low-k films
The ultra-violet (UV) and vacuum ultra-violet (VUV) resistance of bridging alkylene groups in organosilica films has been investigated. Similar to the Si-CH3 (methyl) bonds, the Si-CH2-Si (methylene) bonds are not affected by 5.6 eV irradiation. On the other hand, the concentration of the Si-CH2-CH2-Si (ethylene) groups decreases during such UV exposure. More significant difference in alkylene reduction is observed when the films are exposed to VUV (7.2 eV). The ethylene groups are depleted by more than 75% while only about 40% methylene and methyl groups loss is observed. The different sensitivity of bridging groups to VUV light should be taken into account during the development of curing and plasma etch processes of low-k materials based on periodic mesoporous organosilicas and oxycarbosilanes. The experimental results are qualitatively supported by ab-initio quantum-chemical calculations
Atmospheric inverse modeling with known physical bounds: an example from trace gas emissions
Many inverse problems in the atmospheric sciences involve parameters with
known physical constraints. Examples include nonnegativity (e.g., emissions
of some urban air pollutants) or upward limits implied by reaction or
solubility constants. However, probabilistic inverse modeling approaches
based on Gaussian assumptions cannot incorporate such bounds and thus often
produce unrealistic results. The atmospheric literature lacks consensus on
the best means to overcome this problem, and existing atmospheric studies
rely on a limited number of the possible methods with little examination of
the relative merits of each.
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This paper investigates the applicability of several approaches to
bounded inverse problems. A common method of data transformations is found to
unrealistically skew estimates for the examined example
application. The method of Lagrange multipliers and two Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) methods
yield more realistic and accurate results. In general, the examined
MCMC approaches produce the most realistic result but can require
substantial computational time. Lagrange multipliers offer an
appealing option for large, computationally intensive problems
when exact uncertainty bounds are less central to the
analysis. A synthetic data inversion of US anthropogenic methane
emissions illustrates the strengths and weaknesses of each approach
Carbon Deficiency in Externally-Polluted White Dwarfs: Evidence for Accretion of Asteroids
Existing determinations show that n(C)/n(Fe) is more than a factor of 10
below solar in the atmospheres of three white dwarfs that appear to be
externally-polluted. These results are not easily explained if the stars have
accreted interstellar matter, and we re-interpret these measurements as
evidence that these stars have accreted asteroids of a chrondritic composition.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figures, accepted for Ap
Monitoring the Sky with the Prototype All-Sky Imager on the LWA1
We present a description of the Prototype All-Sky Imager (PASI), a backend
correlator and imager of the first station of the Long Wavelength Array (LWA1).
PASI cross-correlates a live stream of 260 dual-polarization dipole antennas of
the LWA1, creates all-sky images, and uploads them to the LWA-TV website in
near real-time. PASI has recorded over 13,000 hours of all-sky images at
frequencies between 10 and 88 MHz creating opportunities for new research and
discoveries. We also report rate density and pulse energy density limits on
transients at 38, 52, and 74 MHz, for pulse widths of 5 s. We limit transients
at those frequencies with pulse energy densities of ,
, and J m Hz to have
rate densities , , and
yr degComment: 27 pages, 10 Figures, 1 Tabl
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