2,571 research outputs found
InAs nanowire transistors with multiple, independent wrap-gate segments
We report a method for making horizontal wrap-gate nanowire transistors with
up to four independently controllable wrap-gated segments. While the step up to
two independent wrap-gates requires a major change in fabrication methodology,
a key advantage to this new approach, and the horizontal orientation more
generally, is that achieving more than two wrap-gate segments then requires no
extra fabrication steps. This is in contrast to the vertical orientation, where
a significant subset of the fabrication steps needs to be repeated for each
additional gate. We show that cross-talk between adjacent wrap-gate segments is
negligible despite separations less than 200 nm. We also demonstrate the
ability to make multiple wrap-gate transistors on a single nanowire using the
exact same process. The excellent scalability potential of horizontal wrap-gate
nanowire transistors makes them highly favourable for the development of
advanced nanowire devices and possible integration with vertical wrap-gate
nanowire transistors in 3D nanowire network architectures.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, In press for Nano Letters (DOI below
Absolute Determination of the 22Na(p,g) Reaction Rate in Novae
Gamma-ray telescopes in orbit around the Earth are searching for evidence of
the elusive radionuclide 22Na produced in novae. Previously published
uncertainties in the dominant destructive reaction, 22Na(p,g)23Mg, indicated
new measurements in the proton energy range of 150 to 300 keV were needed to
constrain predictions. We have measured the resonance strengths, energies, and
branches directly and absolutely by using protons from the University of
Washington accelerator with a specially designed beamline, which included beam
rastering and cold vacuum protection of the 22Na implanted targets. The
targets, fabricated at TRIUMF-ISAC, displayed minimal degradation over a ~ 20 C
bombardment as a result of protective layers. We avoided the need to know the
stopping power, and hence the target composition, by extracting resonance
strengths from excitation functions integrated over proton energy. Our
measurements revealed that resonance strengths for E_p = 213, 288, 454, and 610
keV are stronger by factors of 2.4 to 3.2 than previously reported. Upper
limits have been placed on proposed resonances at 198-, 209-, and 232-keV. We
have re-evaluated the 22Na(p,g) reaction rate, and our measurements indicate
the resonance at 213 keV makes the most significant contribution to 22Na
destruction in novae. Hydrodynamic simulations including our rate indicate that
the expected abundance of 22Na ejecta from a classical nova is reduced by
factors between 1.5 and 2, depending on the mass of the white-dwarf star
hosting the nova explosion.Comment: 20 pages, 18 figures; shortened paper, accepted in Phys. Rev.
Cepheid variables in the LMC cluster NGC 1866. I. New BVRI CCD photometry
We report BV(RI)c CCD photometric data for a group of seven Cepheid variables
in the young, rich cluster NGC 1866 in the Large Magellanic Cloud. The
photometry was obtained as part of a program to determine accurate distances to
these Cepheids by means of the infrared surface brightness technique, and to
improve the LMC Cepheid database for constructing Cepheid PL and PLC relations.
Using the new data together with data from the literature, we have determined
improved periods for all variables. For five fundamental mode pulsators, the
light curves are now of excellent quality and will lead to accurate distance
and radius determinations once complete infrared light curves and radial
velocity curves for these variables become available.Comment: To appear in ApJ Supp., AASTeX, 24 pages, 8 tables, 8 figure
Testing telepathy in the medium/proxy-sitter dyad: a protocol focusing on the source-of-psi problem
Numerous mediumship studies (e.g., Beischel & Schwartz 2007, Kelly & Arcangel 2011, Rock, Beischel, Boccuzzi, & Biuso 2014) have reported statistically significant results, thus suggesting that various contemporary mediums are able to demonstrate anomalous information reception (AIR) under laboratory conditions. Importantly, however, such studies are unable to address the source of mediums’ AIR. Indeed, the source-of-psi problem (survival-psi and living agent psi [LAP] being the most likely contenders) cannot be resolved using current methodologies (Beischel 2012). However, innovative mediumship-testing techniques may produce results that indicate a convergence whereby sets of outcomes may evidentially favor one hypothesis over another (e.g., see Jamieson & Rock 2014 for a neurophenomenological approach). We present an innovative methodology focused on investigating whether mediums and well-rehearsed proxy-sitters, working under well-beyond double-blind conditions, create telepathic links that we refer to as dyad-telepathy, thereby producing response sets that indicate the psi source is more likely to be dyad-telepathy than a discarnate entity.Adam J. Rock, Lance Stor
A multi-wavelength analysis for interferometric (sub-)mm observations of protoplanetary disks: radial constraints on the dust properties and the disk structure
Theoretical models of grain growth predict dust properties to change as a
function of protoplanetary disk radius, mass, age and other physical
conditions. We lay down the methodology for a multi-wavelength analysis of
(sub-)mm and cm continuum interferometric observations to constrain
self-consistently the disk structure and the radial variation of the dust
properties. The computational architecture is massively parallel and highly
modular. The analysis is based on the simultaneous fit in the uv-plane of
observations at several wavelengths with a model for the disk thermal emission
and for the dust opacity. The observed flux density at the different
wavelengths is fitted by posing constraints on the disk structure and on the
radial variation of the grain size distribution. We apply the analysis to
observations of three protoplanetary disks (AS 209, FT Tau, DR Tau) for which a
combination of spatially resolved observations in the range ~0.88mm to ~10mm is
available (from SMA, CARMA, and VLA), finding evidence of a decreasing maximum
dust grain size (a_max) with radius. We derive large a_max values up to 1 cm in
the inner disk between 15 and 30 AU and smaller grains with a_max~1 mm in the
outer disk (R > 80AU). In this paper we develop a multi-wavelength analysis
that will allow this missing quantity to be constrained for statistically
relevant samples of disks and to investigate possible correlations with disk or
stellar parameters.Comment: 19 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in A&
CARMA Large Area Star Formation Survey: Observational Analysis of Filaments in the Serpens South Molecular Cloud
We present the N2H+(J=1-0) map of the Serpens South molecular cloud obtained
as part of the CARMA Large Area Star Formation Survey (CLASSy). The
observations cover 250 square arcminutes and fully sample structures from 3000
AU to 3 pc with a velocity resolution of 0.16 km/s, and they can be used to
constrain the origin and evolution of molecular cloud filaments. The spatial
distribution of the N2H+ emission is characterized by long filaments that
resemble those observed in the dust continuum emission by Herschel. However,
the gas filaments are typically narrower such that, in some cases, two or three
quasi-parallel N2H+ filaments comprise a single observed dust continuum
filament. The difference between the dust and gas filament widths casts doubt
on Herschel ability to resolve the Serpens South filaments. Some molecular
filaments show velocity gradients along their major axis, and two are
characterized by a steep velocity gradient in the direction perpendicular to
the filament axis. The observed velocity gradient along one of these filaments
was previously postulated as evidence for mass infall toward the central
cluster, but these kind of gradients can be interpreted as projection of
large-scale turbulence.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, published in ApJL (July 2014
Relative distances of Omega Centauri and 47 Tucanae
We present precise optical and near-infrared ground-based photometry of two
Globular Clusters (GCs): Omega Cen and 47 Tuc. These photometric catalogs are
unbiased in the Red Giant Branch (RGB) region close to the tip. We provide new
estimates of the RGB tip (TRGB) magnitudes--m_I(TRGB)=9.84+/-0.05, Omega Cen;
m_I(TRGB)=9.46+/-0.06, 47 Tuc--and use these to determine the relative
distances of the two GCs. We find that distance ratios based on different
calibrations of the TRGB, the RR Lyrae stars and kinematic distances agree with
each other within one sigma. Absolute TRGB and RR Lyrae distance moduli agree
within 0.10--0.15 mag, while absolute kinematic distance moduli are 0.2--0.3
mag smaller. Absolute distances to 47 Tuc based on the
Zero-Age-Horizontal-Branch and on the white dwarf fitting agree within 0.1 mag,
but they are 0.1--0.3 mag smaller than TRGB and RR Lyrae distances.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication by ApJ
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