70,386 research outputs found
A single-board preprocessor and pulse generator
The Aeronomy Lab. of NOAA has designed and built a single board, programmable radar controller for use with VHF ST (stratosphere troposphere) radars. The controller consists of a coherent integrator preprocessor and a radar pulse generator, both of which are described, as well as interfaces to an antenna beam switch and a receiver bandwidth switch. The controller occupies a single slot in a Data General Nova of Eclipse computer. The integrator and pulse generator take advantage of high density, dual port FIFO chips such as the 512 x 9 Mostek MK 4501. These FIFOs have separate input and output ports and independent read and write cycles with cycle times of less than 200 ns, making them very fast and easy to interface. A simple block diagram of the coherent integrator is shown. The integrator is designed to handle inputs from one receiver (2 channels) with 1 sec sample spacing. The pulse generator is based on controllers designed by R. F. Woodman for the Arecibo and SOUSY radars us a recirculating memory scheme
Electronic transport in quantum cascade structures
The transport in complex multiple quantum well heterostructures is
theoretically described. The model is focused on quantum cascade detectors,
which represent an exciting challenge due to the complexity of the structure
containing 7 or 8 quantum wells of different widths. Electronic transport can
be fully described without any adjustable parameter. Diffusion from one subband
to another is calculated with a standard electron-optical phonon hamiltonian,
and the electronic transport results from a parallel flow of electrons using
all the possible paths through the different subbands. Finally, the resistance
of such a complex device is given by a simple expression, with an excellent
agreement with experimental results. This relation involves the sum of
transitions rates between subbands, from one period of the device to the next
one. This relation appears as an Einstein relation adapted to the case of
complex multiple quantum structures.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
A Comparison of Phycocyanins from Three Different Species of Cyanobacteria Employing Resonance-Enhanced Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman Spectroscopy
Resonance-enhanced coherent anti-Stokes Raman spectra are recorded for monomers and trimers of phycocyanin from three different cyanobacteria: Westiellopsis prolifica, Mastigocladus laminosus and Spirulina platensis. It is shown that upon aggregation from monomer to trimer the electronic structures of both the α84 and β84 chromophores are changed. The spectra of the trimers originating from S. platensis and M. laminosus are very similar to each other, but distinctly different from the spectrum of W. prolifica
Low-energy local density of states of the 1D Hubbard model
We examine the local density of states (DOS) at low energies numerically and
analytically for the Hubbard model in one dimension. The eigenstates represent
separate spin and charge excitations with a remarkably rich structure of the
local DOS in space and energy. The results predict signatures of strongly
correlated excitations in the tunneling probability along finite quantum wires,
such as carbon nanotubes, atomic chains or semiconductor wires in scanning
tunneling spectroscopy (STS) experiments. However, the detailed signatures can
only be partly explained by standard Luttinger liquid theory. In particular, we
find that the effective boundary exponent can be negative in finite wires,
which leads to an increase of the local DOS near the edges in contrast to the
established behavior in the thermodynamic limit.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, more information can be found at
http://www.physik.uni-kl.de/eggert/papers/index.htm
Structural and magneto-transport characterization of Co_2Cr_xFe_(1-x)Al Heusler alloy films
We investigate the structure and magneto-transport properties of thin films
of the Co_2Cr_xFe_(1-x)Al full-Heusler compound, which is predicted to be a
half-metal by first-principles theoretical calculations. Thin films are
deposited by magnetron sputtering at room temperature on various substrates in
order to tune the growth from polycrystalline on thermally oxidized Si
substrates to highly textured and even epitaxial on MgO(001) substrates,
respectively. Our Heusler films are magnetically very soft and ferromagnetic
with Curie temperatures up to 630 K. The total magnetic moment is reduced
compared to the theoretical bulk value, but still comparable to values reported
for films grown at elevated temperature. Polycrystalline Heusler films combined
with MgO barriers are incorporated into magnetic tunnel junctions and yield 37%
magnetoresistance at room temperature
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