906 research outputs found

    Ballistic spin field-effect transistors: Multichannel effects

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    We study a ballistic spin field-effect transistor (SFET) with special attention to the issue of multi-channel effects. The conductance modulation of the SFET as a function of the Rashba spin-orbit coupling strength is numerically examined for the number of channels ranging from a few to close to 100. Even with the ideal spin injector and collector, the conductance modulation ratio, defined as the ratio between the maximum and minimum conductances, decays rapidly and approaches one with the increase of the channel number. It turns out that the decay is considerably faster when the Rashba spin-orbit coupling is larger. Effects of the electronic coherence are also examined in the multi-channel regime and it is found that the coherent Fabry-Perot-like interference in the multi-channel regime gives rise to a nested peak structure. For a nonideal spin injector/collector structure, which consists of a conventional metallic ferromagnet-thin insulator-2DEG heterostructure, the Rashba-coupling-induced conductance modulation is strongly affected by large resonance peaks that arise from the electron confinement effect of the insulators. Finally scattering effects are briefly addressed and it is found that in the weakly diffusive regime, the positions of the resonance peaks fluctuate, making the conductance modulation signal sample-dependent.Comment: 18 pages, 15 figure

    Assessing the Spatial and Temporal Variation of Output-Input Elasticities of Agricultural Production in Turkey

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    Turkey, Agricultural Reform and Implementation Project, geographically weighted regression, Agricultural and Food Policy, Research Methods/ Statistical Methods, Q18, C3,

    Thermal and Structural Properties of Biologically Derived Monodisperse Hairy-Rod Polymers

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    Monodisperse derivatives of poly(γ-4-(hexadecyloxy)benzyl α,l-glutamate) (PHBG-X, X = 3 or 4) with backbone sequence GluAsp(Glu_(17)Asp)_xGluGlu were prepared by reaction of 4-(hexadecyloxy)phenyldiazomethane with the corresponding monodisperse poly(α,l-glutamate) (PLGA) derivatives (PLGA-X, X = 3 or 4). PHBG-3 and -4 exhibited strong endotherms near 45 °C and weak endotherms near 86 °C when analyzed by differential scanning calorimetry. X-ray diffraction suggested that these polymers aggregate to form layerlike solid structures at room temperature, with extended alkyl side chains forming paraffinlike crystallites. Most of the side chain order disappears at the first melting transition; however, the layerlike structure remains. Both polymers are isotropic above the second melting transition; no ordered melts were observed at higher temperatures, possibly due to the small aspect ratios of PHBG-3 and -4. In contrast, polydisperse poly(γ-4-(hexadecyloxy)benzyl α,l-glutamate) (PDI = 1.2, DP = 98) (PHBG-P1), prepared from commercial PLGA, formed liquid crystalline (LC) phases between 97 and 105 °C

    Mutation Testing as a Safety Net for Test Code Refactoring

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    Refactoring is an activity that improves the internal structure of the code without altering its external behavior. When performed on the production code, the tests can be used to verify that the external behavior of the production code is preserved. However, when the refactoring is performed on test code, there is no safety net that assures that the external behavior of the test code is preserved. In this paper, we propose to adopt mutation testing as a means to verify if the behavior of the test code is preserved after refactoring. Moreover, we also show how this approach can be used to identify the part of the test code which is improperly refactored

    Dirac fermions on a disclinated flexible surface

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    A self-consisting gauge-theory approach to describe Dirac fermions on flexible surfaces with a disclination is formulated. The elastic surfaces are considered as embeddings into R^3 and a disclination is incorporated through a topologically nontrivial gauge field of the local SO(3) group which generates the metric with conical singularity. A smoothing of the conical singularity on flexible surfaces is naturally accounted for by regarding the upper half of two-sheet hyperboloid as an elasticity-induced embedding. The availability of the zero-mode solution to the Dirac equation is analyzed.Comment: 6 page

    Unpolarized fragmentation function for the pion and kaon via the nonlocal chiral-quark model

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    In this talk we present our recent studies for the unpolarized fragmentation functions for the pion and kaon, employing the nonlocal chiral quark model, which manifests the nonlocal interaction between the quarks and pseudoscalar mesons, in the light-cone frame. It turns out that the nonlocal interaction produces considerable differences in comparison to typical local-interaction models.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Talk given at the international conference The Fifth Asia-Pacific Conference on Few-Body Systems in Physics 2011 (APFB2011), Seoul, Republic of Korea, 22-26 August 201

    Learning to Detect and Track Visible and Occluded Body Joints in a Virtual World

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    Multi-People Tracking in an open-world setting requires a special effort in precise detection. Moreover, temporal continuity in the detection phase gains more importance when scene cluttering introduces the challenging problems of occluded targets. For the purpose, we propose a deep network architecture that jointly extracts people body parts and associates them across short temporal spans. Our model explicitly deals with occluded body parts, by hallucinating plausible solutions of not visible joints. We propose a new end-to-end architecture composed by four branches (visible heatmaps, occluded heatmaps, part affinity fields and temporal affinity fields) fed by a time linker feature extractor. To overcome the lack of surveillance data with tracking, body part and occlusion annotations we created the vastest Computer Graphics dataset for people tracking in urban scenarios by exploiting a photorealistic videogame. It is up to now the vastest dataset (about 500.000 frames, almost 10 million body poses) of human body parts for people tracking in urban scenarios. Our architecture trained on virtual data exhibits good generalization capabilities also on public real tracking benchmarks, when image resolution and sharpness are high enough, producing reliable tracklets useful for further batch data association or re-id modules

    Exploiting the Lability of Metal Halide Perovskites for Doping Semiconductor Nanocomposites

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    Cesium lead halides have intrinsically unstable crystal lattices and easily transform within perovskite and nonperovskite structures. In this work, we explore the conversion of the perovskite CsPbBr3 into Cs4PbBr6 in the presence of PbS at 450 °C to produce doped nanocrystal-based composites with embedded Cs4PbBr6 nanoprecipitates. We show that PbBr2 is extracted from CsPbBr3 and diffuses into the PbS lattice with a consequent increase in the concentration of free charge carriers. This new doping strategy enables the adjustment of the density of charge carriers between 1019 and 1020 cm-3, and it may serve as a general strategy for doping other nanocrystal-based semiconductors.M.C. has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Grant Agreement No. 665385. ICN2 acknowledges funding from Generalitat de Catalunya 2017 SGR 327. ICN2 is supported by the Severo Ochoa program from Spanish MINECO (Grant No. SEV-2017-0706) and is funded by the CERCA Programme/Generalitat de Catalunya. This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 823717 – ESTEEM3. M.V.K. acknowledges the support by the European Research Council under the Horizon 2020 Framework Program (ERC Consolidator Grant SCALE-HALO Grant Agreement No. 819740) and by FET-OPEN project no. 862656 (DROP-IT)

    Electronic Structure of Disclinated Graphene in an Uniform Magnetic Field

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    The electronic structure in the vicinity of the 1-heptagonal and 1-pentagonal defects in the carbon graphene plane is investigated. Using a continuum gauge field-theory model the local density of states around the Fermi energy is calculated for both cases. In this model, the disclination is represented by an SO(2) gauge vortex and corresponding metric follows from the elasticity properties of the graphene membrane. To enhance the interval of energies, a self-consistent perturbation scheme is used. The Landau states are investigated and compared with the predicted values.Comment: keywords: graphene, heptagonal defect, elasticity, carbon nanohorns, 13 page
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