719 research outputs found
Functional changes in the major United States Great Lakes ports since the opening of the new St. Lawrence Seaway
Call number: LD2668 .R4 1967 S51
Liquid-Drop Model and Quantum Resistance Against Noncompact Nuclear Geometries
The importance of quantum effects for exotic nuclear shapes is demonstrated.
Based on the example of a sheet of nuclear matter of infinite lateral
dimensions but finite thickness, it is shown that the quantization of states in
momentum space, resulting from the confinement of the nucleonic motion in the
conjugate geometrical space, generates a strong resistance against such a
confinement and generates restoring forces driving the system towards compact
geometries. In the liquid-drop model, these quantum effects are implicitly
included in the surface energy term, via a choice of interaction parameters, an
approximation that has been found valid for compact shapes, but has not yet
been scrutinized for exotic shapes.Comment: 9 pages with 3 figure
The asymptotic quasi-stationary states of the two-dimensional magnetically confined plasma and of the planetary atmosphere
We derive the differential equation governing the asymptotic quasi-stationary
states of the two dimensional plasma immersed in a strong confining magnetic
field and of the planetary atmosphere. These two systems are related by the
property that there is an intrinsic constant length: the Larmor radius and
respectively the Rossby radius and a condensate of the vorticity field in the
unperturbed state related to the cyclotronic gyration and respectively to the
Coriolis frequency. Although the closest physical model is the
Charney-Hasegawa-Mima (CHM) equation, our model is more general and is related
to the system consisting of a discrete set of point-like vortices interacting
in plane by a short range potential. A field-theoretical formalism is developed
for describing the continuous version of this system. The action functional can
be written in the Bogomolnyi form (emphasizing the role of Self-Duality of the
asymptotic states) but the minimum energy is no more topological and the
asymptotic structures appear to be non-stationary, which is a major difference
with respect to traditional topological vortex solutions. Versions of this
field theory are discussed and we find arguments in favor of a particular form
of the equation. We comment upon the significant difference between the CHM
fluid/plasma and the Euler fluid and respectively the Abelian-Higgs vortex
models.Comment: Latex 126 pages, 7 eps figures included. Discussion on various forms
of the equatio
Can the magnetic moment contribution explain the A_y puzzle?
We evaluate the full one-photon-exchange Born amplitude for scattering.
We include the contributions due to the magnetic moment of the proton or
neutron, and the magnetic moment and quadrupole moment of the deuteron. It is
found that the inclusion of the magnetic-moment interaction in the theoretical
description of the scattering observables cannot resolve the long-standing
puzzle.Comment: 7 pages, 2 Postscript figures; to appear in Phys.Rev.
Electrical Control of 2D Magnetism in Bilayer CrI3
The challenge of controlling magnetism using electric fields raises
fundamental questions and addresses technological needs such as low-dissipation
magnetic memory. The recently reported two-dimensional (2D) magnets provide a
new system for studying this problem owing to their unique magnetic properties.
For instance, bilayer chromium triiodide (CrI3) behaves as a layered
antiferromagnet with a magnetic field-driven metamagnetic transition. Here, we
demonstrate electrostatic gate control of magnetism in CrI3 bilayers, probed by
magneto-optical Kerr effect (MOKE) microscopy. At fixed magnetic fields near
the metamagnetic transition, we realize voltage-controlled switching between
antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic states. At zero magnetic field, we
demonstrate a time-reversal pair of layered antiferromagnetic states which
exhibit spin-layer locking, leading to a remarkable linear dependence of their
MOKE signals on gate voltage with opposite slopes. Our results pave the way for
exploring new magnetoelectric phenomena and van der Waals spintronics based on
2D materials.Comment: To appear in Nature Nanotechnolog
C720
F. Robert Henderson et al., Increasing Eastern Bluebirds in Kansas, Kansas State University, November 1990
Control of Dephasing and Phonon Emission in Coupled Quantum Dots
We predict that phonon subband quantization can be detected in the non-linear
electron current through double quantum dot qubits embedded into nano-size
semiconductor slabs, acting as phonon cavities. For particular values of the
dot level splitting , piezo-electric or deformation potential
scattering is either drastically reduced as compared to the bulk case, or
strongly enhanced due to phonon van Hove singularities. By tuning via
gate voltages, one can either control dephasing, or strongly increase emission
into phonon modes with characteristic angular distributions.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication as Rapid Comm. in Phys.
Rev.
Transport and Boundary Scattering in Confined Geometries: Analytical Results
We utilize a geometric argument to determine the effects of boundary
scattering on the carrier mean-free path in samples of various cross sections.
Analytic expressions for samples with rectangular and circular cross sections
are obtained. We also outline a method for incorporating these results into
calculations of the thermal conductivity.Comment: 35 pages, Late
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