1,146 research outputs found
Small-Angle X-ray and neutron scattering from diamond single crystals
Results of Small-Angle Scattering study of diamonds with various types of
point and extended defects and different degrees of annealing are presented. It
is shown that thermal annealing and/or mechanical deformation cause formation
of nanosized planar and threedimensional defects giving rise to Small-Angle
Scattering. The defects are often facetted by crystallographic planes 111, 100,
110, 311, 211 common for diamond. The scattering defects likely consist of
clusters of intrinsic and impurity-related defects; boundaries of mechanical
twins also contribute to the SAS signal. There is no clear correlation between
concentration of nitrogen impurity and intensity of the scattering.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures; presented at SANS-YuMO User Meeting 2011, Dubna,
Russi
Universally-composable privacy amplification from causality constraints
We consider schemes for secret key distribution which use as a resource
correlations that violate Bell inequalities. We provide the first security
proof for such schemes, according to the strongest notion of security, the so
called universally-composable security. Our security proof does not rely on the
validity of quantum mechanics, it solely relies on the impossibility of
arbitrarily-fast signaling between separate physical systems. This allows for
secret communication in situations where the participants distrust their
quantum devices.Comment: 4 page
A New Look at Pricing of the Russian Option
The “Russian option” was introduced and calculated with the help of the solution of the optimal stopping problem for a two-dimensional Markov process in [10]. This paper proposes a new derivation of the general results [10]. The key idea is to introduce the dual martingale measure which permits one to reduce the “two-dimensional” optimal stopping problem to a “one-dimensional” one. This approach simplifies the discussion and explain the simplicity of the answer found in [10]
Modification of Nanodiamonds by Xenon Implantation: A Molecular Dynamics Study
Xenon implantation into nanodiamonds is studied using molecular dynamics. The
nanodiamonds range in size from 2-10 nm and the primary knock-on (PKA) energy
extends up to 40 keV. For small nanodiamonds an energy-window effect occurs in
which PKA energies of around 6 keV destroy the nanodiamond, while in larger
nanodiamonds the radiation cascade is increasingly similar to those in bulk
material. Destruction of the small nanodiamonds occurs due to thermal annealing
associated with the small size of the particles and the absence of a heat-loss
path. Simulations are also performed for a range of impact parameters, and for
a series of double-nanodiamond systems in which a heat-loss path is present.
The latter show that the thermal shock caused by the impact occurs on the
timescale of a few picoseconds. These findings are relevant to ion-beam
modification of nanoparticles by noble gases as well as meteoritic studies
where implantation is proposed as the mechanism for xenon incorporation in
pre-solar nanodiamonds
Optimal detection of homogeneous segment of observations in stochastic sequence
A Markov process is registered. At random moment the distribution of
observed sequence changes. Using probability maximizing approach the optimal
stopping rule for detecting the change is identified. Some explicit solution is
obtained.Comment: 13 page
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