2,611 research outputs found
Optimization of InP APDs for high-speed lightwave systems
Calculations based on a rigorous analytical model are carried out to optimize the width of the indium phosphide avalanche region in high-speed direct-detection avalanche photodiode-based optical receivers. The model includes the effects of intersymbol interference (ISI), tunneling current, avalanche noise, and its correlation with the stochastic avalanche duration, as well as dead space. A minimum receiver sensitivity of -28 dBm is predicted at an optimal width of 0.18 mu m and an optimal gain of approximately 13, for a 10 Gb/s communication system, assuming a Johnson noise level of 629 noise electrons per bit. The interplay among the factors controlling the optimum sensitivity is confirmed. Results show that for a given transmission speed, as the device width decreases below an optimum value, increased tunneling current outweighs avalanche noise reduction due to dead space, resulting in an increase in receiver sensitivity. As the device width increases above its optimum value, the receiver sensitivity increases as device bandwidth decreases, causing ISI to dominate avalanche noise and tunneling current shot noise
Climate warming, euxinia and carbon isotope perturbations during the Carnian (Triassic) Crisis in South China
The Carnian Humid Episode (CHE), also known as the Carnian Pluvial Event, and associated biotic changes are major enigmas of the Mesozoic record in western Tethys. We show that the CHE also occurred in eastern Tethys (South China), suggestive of a much more widespread and probably global climate perturbation. Oxygen isotope records from conodont apatite indicate a double-pulse warming event. The CHE coincided with an initial warming of 4 °C. This was followed by a transient cooling period and then a prolonged ~7 °C warming in the later Carnian (Tuvalian 2). Carbon isotope perturbations associated with the CHE of western Tethys occurred contemporaneously in South China, and mark the start of a prolonged period of carbon cycle instability that persisted until the late Carnian. The dry-wet transition during the CHE coincides with the negative carbon isotope excursion and the temperature rise, pointing to an intensification of hydrologic cycle activities due to climatic warming. While carbonate platform shutdown in western Tethys is associated with an influx of siliciclastic sediment, the eastern Tethyan carbonate platforms are overlain by deep-water anoxic facies. The transition from oxygenated to euxinic facies was via a condensed, manganiferous carbonate (MnO content up to 15.1 wt%), that records an intense Mn shuttle operating in the basin. Significant siliciclastic influx in South China only occurred after the CHE climatic changes and was probably due to foreland basin development at the onset of the Indosinian Orogeny. The mid-Carnian biotic crisis thus coincided with several phenomena associated with major extinction events: a carbonate production crisis, climate warming, δ 13 C oscillations, marine anoxia, biotic turnover and flood basalt eruptions (of the Wrangellia Large Igneous Province)
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Advanced fluid modeling and PIC/MCC simulations of low-pressure ccrf discharges
Comparative studies of capacitively coupled radio-frequency discharges in helium and argon at pressures between 10 and 80 Pa are presented applying two different fluid modeling approaches as well as two independently developed particle-in-cell/Monte Carlo collision (PIC/MCC) codes. The focus is on the analysis of the range of applicability of a recently proposed fluid model including an improved drift-diffusion approximation for the electron component as well as its comparison with fluid modeling results using the classical drift-diffusion approximation and benchmark results obtained by PIC/MCC simulations. Main features of this time- and space-dependent fluid model are given. It is found that the novel approach shows generally quite good agreement with the macroscopic properties derived by the kinetic simulations and is largely able to characterize qualitatively and quantitatively the discharge behavior even at conditions when the classical fluid modeling approach fails. Furthermore, the excellent agreement between the two PIC/MCC simulation codes using the velocity Verlet method for the integration of the equations of motion verifies their accuracy and applicability
Adaptive online deployment for resource constrained mobile smart clients
Nowadays mobile devices are more and more used as a platform for applications. Contrary to prior generation handheld devices configured with a predefined set of applications, today leading edge devices provide a platform for flexible and customized application deployment. However, these applications have to deal with the limitations (e.g. CPU speed, memory) of these mobile devices and thus cannot handle complex tasks. In order to cope with the handheld limitations and the ever changing device context (e.g. network connections, remaining battery time, etc.) we present a middleware solution that dynamically offloads parts of the software to the most appropriate server. Without a priori knowledge of the application, the optimal deployment is calculated, that lowers the cpu usage at the mobile client, whilst keeping the used bandwidth minimal. The information needed to calculate this optimum is gathered on the fly from runtime information. Experimental results show that the proposed solution enables effective execution of complex applications in a constrained environment. Moreover, we demonstrate that the overhead from the middleware components is below 2%
Tribo-corrosion mechanisms of stainless steel in soft drinks
Tribo-corrosion mechanisms of 316L Stainless Steel in slurries containing common household soft drinks have been studied through investigating the micro-abrasion-corrosion performance using a ball and disk apparatus which has been modified to measure the in-situ corrosion current during the abrasion process. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of pH and solution viscosity on the micro-abrasion-corrosion performance of the material. 316L Stainless Steel was selected because it is commonly used as a dental replacement material. This is an important area of work as the use of steel retainers as well as other stainless steel dental replacements is still widespread and the effectiveness of these devices will be determined by their tribological and tribo-corrosion performance. Additionally, an attempt has been made to investigate the importance of the pH and viscosity variables on the tribo-corrosive synergism, wastage and mechanism maps
AlH3 between 65-110 GPa: implications of electronic band and phonon structures
A first-principles density-functional-theory method has been used to
reinvestigate the mechanical and dynamical stability of the metallic phase of
AlH3 between 65-110 GPa. The electronic properties and phonon dynamics as a
function of pressure are also explored. We find electron-phonon
superconductivity in the cubic Pm-3n structure with critical temperature Tc =
37 K at 70 GPa which decreases rapidly with the increase of pressure. Further
unlike a previously calculated Tc value of 24 K at 110 GPa, we do not find any
superconductivity of significance at this pressure which is consistent with
experimental observation.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures Keywords: AlH3, Electronic structure, Phonon
dynamics, Superconductivity PACS number(s): 62.50.-p, 63.20.kd, 74.10.+v,
74.20.P
Nonequilibrium excitations in Ferromagnetic Nanoparticles
In recent measurements of tunneling transport through individual
ferromagnetic Co nanograins, Deshmukh, Gu\'eron, Ralph et al.
\cite{mandar,gueron} (DGR) observed a tunneling spectrum with discrete
resonances, whose spacing was much smaller than what one would expect from
naive independent-electron estimates. In a previous publication,
\cite{prl_kleff} we had suggested that this was a consequence of nonequilibrium
excitations, and had proposed a ``minimal model'' for ferromagnetism in
nanograins with a discrete excitation spectrum as a framework for analyzing the
experimental data. In the present paper, we provide a detailed analysis of the
properties of this model: We delineate which many-body electron states must be
considered when constructing the tunneling spectrum, discuss various
nonequilibrium scenarios and compare their results with the experimental data
of Refs. \cite{mandar,gueron}. We show that a combination of nonequilibrium
spin- and single-particle excitations can account for most of the observed
features, in particular the abundance of resonances, the resonance spacing and
the absence of Zeeman splitting.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figure
How to optimize nonlinear force-free coronal magnetic field extrapolations from SDO/HMI vector magnetograms?
The SDO/HMI instruments provide photospheric vector magnetograms with a high
spatial and temporal resolution. Our intention is to model the coronal magnetic
field above active regions with the help of a nonlinear force-free
extrapolation code. Our code is based on an optimization principle and has been
tested extensively with semi-analytic and numeric equilibria and been applied
before to vector magnetograms from Hinode and ground based observations.
Recently we implemented a new version which takes measurement errors in
photospheric vector magnetograms into account. Photospheric field measurements
are often due to measurement errors and finite nonmagnetic forces inconsistent
as a boundary for a force-free field in the corona. In order to deal with these
uncertainties, we developed two improvements: 1.) Preprocessing of the surface
measurements in order to make them compatible with a force-free field 2.) The
new code keeps a balance between the force-free constraint and deviation from
the photospheric field measurements. Both methods contain free parameters,
which have to be optimized for use with data from SDO/HMI. Within this work we
describe the corresponding analysis method and evaluate the force-free
equilibria by means of how well force-freeness and solenoidal conditions are
fulfilled, the angle between magnetic field and electric current and by
comparing projections of magnetic field lines with coronal images from SDO/AIA.
We also compute the available free magnetic energy and discuss the potential
influence of control parameters.Comment: 17 Pages, 6 Figures, Sol. Phys., accepte
Coulomb Correlations and Magnetic Anisotropy in ordered CoPt and FePt alloys
We present results of the magneto-crystalline anisotropy energy (MAE)
calculations for chemically ordered CoPt and FePt alloys taking into
account the effects of strong electronic correlations and spin-orbit coupling.
The local spin density + Hubbard U approximation (LSDA+U) is shown to provide a
consistent picture of the magnetic ground state properties when intra-atomic
Coulomb correlations are included for both 3 and 5 elements. Our results
demonstrate significant and complex contribution of correlation effects to
large MAE of these material.Comment: revised version; 4 pages, 2 figure
A framework for digital sunken relief generation based on 3D geometric models
Sunken relief is a special art form of sculpture whereby the depicted shapes are sunk into a given surface. This is traditionally created by laboriously carving materials such as stone. Sunken reliefs often utilize the engraved lines or strokes to strengthen the impressions of a 3D presence and to highlight the features which otherwise are unrevealed. In other types of reliefs, smooth surfaces and their shadows convey such information in a coherent manner. Existing methods for relief generation are focused on forming a smooth surface with a shallow depth which provides the presence of 3D figures. Such methods unfortunately do not help the art form of sunken reliefs as they omit the presence of feature lines. We propose a framework to produce sunken reliefs from a known 3D geometry, which transforms the 3D objects into three layers of input to incorporate the contour lines seamlessly with the smooth surfaces. The three input layers take the advantages of the geometric information and the visual cues to assist the relief generation. This framework alters existing techniques in line drawings and relief generation, and then combines them organically for this particular purpose
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