223 research outputs found
Composition law of -entropy for statistically independent systems
The intriguing and still open question concerning the composition law of
-entropy  with  and  is here
reconsidered and solved. It is shown that, for a statistical system described
by the probability distribution , made up of two statistically
independent subsystems, described through the probability distributions  and , respectively, with , the joint entropy
 can be obtained starting from the  and
 entropies, and additionally from the entropic functionals
 and ,  being
the -Napier number. The composition law of the -entropy is
given in closed form, and emerges as a one-parameter generalization of the
ordinary additivity law of Boltzmann-Shannon entropy recovered in the  limit.Comment: 14 page
Thermal Conductivity of Isotopically Enriched 28Si Revisited
The thermal conductivity of isotopically enriched 28Si (enrichment better
than 99.9%) was redetermined independently in three laboratories by high
precision experiments on a total of 4 samples of different shape and degree of
isotope enrichment in the range from 5 to 300 K with particular emphasis on the
range near room temperature. The results obtained in the different laboratories
are in good agreement with each other. They indicate that at room temperature
the thermal conductivity of isotopically enriched 28Si exceeds the thermal
conductivity of Si with a natural, unmodified isotope mixture by 102 %.
This finding is in disagreement with an earlier report by Ruf et al. At
26 K the thermal conductivity of 28Si reaches a maximum. The maximum
value depends on sample shape and the degree of isotope enrichment and exceeds
the thermal conductivity of natural Si by a factor of 8 for a 99.982%
28Si enriched sample. The thermal conductivity of Si with natural isotope
composition is consistently found to be 3% lower than the values
recommended in the literature
Yarn diameter characterization using two orthogonal directions
We have used a coherent optical signal processing technique based on Fourier optics to characterize yarn diameter using a single projection.Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) - BD/19028/200
Electric-field control of spin waves at room temperature in multiferroic BiFeO3
To face the challenges lying beyond current CMOS-based technology, new
paradigms for information processing are required. Magnonics proposes to use
spin waves to carry and process information, in analogy with photonics that
relies on light waves, with several advantageous features such as potential
operation in the THz range and excellent coupling to spintronics. Several
magnonic analog and digital logic devices have been proposed, and some
demonstrated. Just as for spintronics, a key issue for magnonics is the large
power required to control/write information (conventionally achieved through
magnetic fields applied by strip lines, or by spin transfer from large
spin-polarized currents). Here we show that in BiFeO3, a room-temperature
magnetoelectric material, the spin wave frequency (>600 GHz) can be tuned
electrically by over 30%, in a non-volatile way and with virtually no power
dissipation. Theoretical calculations indicate that this effect originates from
a linear magnetoelectric effect related to spin-orbit coupling induced by the
applied electric field. We argue that these properties make BiFeO3 a promising
medium for spin wave generation, conversion and control in future magnonics
architectures.Comment: 3 figure
The structure of the distortion free-energy density in nematics: second-order elasticity and surface terms
High- sensitivity capacitance method for measuring thermal diffusivity and thermal expansion: results on aluminum and copper
Thermal diffusivity of amorphous plastic materials
The paper presents  thermal diffusivity data on amorphous plastic materials, obtained by means of a method previously developed by the authors.  This methods ensures high sensitivity (<1%) and good reproducibility (<3%
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