37,653 research outputs found
Shot-noise anomalies in nondegenerate elastic diffusive conductors
We present a theoretical investigation of shot-noise properties in
nondegenerate elastic diffusive conductors. Both Monte Carlo simulations and
analytical approaches are used. Two new phenomena are found: (i) the display of
enhanced shot noise for given energy dependences of the scattering time, and
(ii) the recovery of full shot noise for asymptotic high applied bias. The
first phenomenon is associated with the onset of negative differential
conductivity in energy space that drives the system towards a dynamical
electrical instability in excellent agreement with analytical predictions. The
enhancement is found to be strongly amplified when the dimensionality in
momentum space is lowered from 3 to 2 dimensions. The second phenomenon is due
to the suppression of the effects of long range Coulomb correlations that takes
place when the transit time becomes the shortest time scale in the system, and
is common to both elastic and inelastic nondegenerate diffusive conductors.
These phenomena shed new light in the understanding of the anomalous behavior
of shot noise in mesoscopic conductors, which is a signature of correlations
among different current pulses.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures. Final version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Parsing as Reduction
We reduce phrase-representation parsing to dependency parsing. Our reduction
is grounded on a new intermediate representation, "head-ordered dependency
trees", shown to be isomorphic to constituent trees. By encoding order
information in the dependency labels, we show that any off-the-shelf, trainable
dependency parser can be used to produce constituents. When this parser is
non-projective, we can perform discontinuous parsing in a very natural manner.
Despite the simplicity of our approach, experiments show that the resulting
parsers are on par with strong baselines, such as the Berkeley parser for
English and the best single system in the SPMRL-2014 shared task. Results are
particularly striking for discontinuous parsing of German, where we surpass the
current state of the art by a wide margin
Analyzing Capture Zone Distributions (CZD) in Growth: Theory and Applications
We have argued that the capture-zone distribution (CZD) in submonolayer
growth can be well described by the generalized Wigner distribution (GWD)
, where is the CZ area divided by its average
value. This approach offers arguably the best method to find the critical
nucleus size , since . Various analytical and numerical
investigations, which we discuss, show that the simple GWD expression is
inadequate in the tails of the distribution, it does account well for the
central regime , where the data is sufficiently large to be
reliably accessible experimentally. We summarize and catalog the many
experiments in which this method has been applied.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, conference paper for 17th International
Conference on Crystal Growth and Epitaxy (ICCGE-17), Warsaw, Poland, Aug.
11-16, 2013, submitted for publication in different forma
Lubrication of DLC Coatings with Two Tris(pentafluoroethyl)trifluorophosphate Anion-Based Ionic Liquids
The lubrication of a Cr-DLC coating with ethyl-dimethyl-2-methoxyethylammonium tris(pentafluoroethyl)trifluoropho-sphate [(NEMM)MOE][FAP] and 1-butyl-1-methylpyrro-lidinium tris(pentafluoroethyl)trifluorophosphate [BMP] [FAP] ionic liquids (ILs) as 1 wt% additives to a polyalphaolefin (PAO 6) was studied. Zinc dialkyldithiophosphate (ZDDP) was also used as reference in order to evaluate the effectiveness of the ILs. Reciprocating ball-on-plate tribological tests at loads of 20 and 40 N were performed. The results showed that both ILs exhibited a friction reduction, especially at the lowest load tested. Antiwear properties were also improved; the PAO 6 + 1% [BMP][FAP] mixture was slightly better, close to the values for PAO 6 + 1% ZDDP. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) images and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analysis indicated that the additiveâsurface interaction was responsible for the tribological improvement
Parity violation in quasielastic electron-nucleus scattering within the relativistic impulse approximation
We study parity violation in quasielastic (QE) electron-nucleus scattering
using the relativistic impulse approximation. Different fully relativistic
approaches have been considered to estimate the effects associated with the
final-state interactions. We have computed the parity-violating quasielastic
(PVQE) asymmetry and have analyzed its sensitivity to the different ingredients
that enter in the description of the reaction mechanism: final-state
interactions, nucleon off-shellness effects, current gauge ambiguities.
Particular attention has been paid to the description of the weak neutral
current form factors. The PVQE asymmetry is proven to be an excellent
observable when the goal is to get precise information on the axial-vector
sector of the weak neutral current. Specifically, from measurements of the
asymmetry at backward scattering angles good knowledge of the radiative
corrections entering in the isovector axial-vector sector can be gained.
Finally, scaling properties shown by the interference nuclear
responses are also analyzed.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figure
Parity violation and dynamical relativistic effects in reactions
It is well known that coincidence quasielastic reactions are
not appropriate to analyze effects linked to parity violation due the presence
of the fifth electromagnetic (EM) response . Nevertheless, in this
work we develop a fully relativistic approach to be applied to parity-violating
(PV) quasielastic processes. This is of importance as a
preliminary step in the subsequent study of inclusive quasielastic PV
reactions. Moreover, our present analysis allows us to
disentangle effects associated with the off-shell character of nucleons in
nuclei, gauge ambiguities and the role played by the lower components in the
nucleon wave functions, i.e., dynamical relativistic effects. This study can
help in getting clear information on PV effects. Particular attention is paid
to the relativistic plane-wave impulse approximation where the explicit
expressions for the PV single-nucleon responses are shown for the first time.Comment: 39 pages, 9 figure
Do classical configurations produce Confinement?
We show that certain classical SU(2) pure gauge configurations give rise to a
non-zero string tension. We then investigate cooled configurations generated by
Monte Carlo simulations on the lattice and find similar properties. We infer
evidence in favour of a classical model of Confinement.Comment: Uuencoded, Z-compressed and tarred file of the TeX file submit.tex
and PostScript files Stnt.eps and Stst.eps. 11 pages of text and two figure
Global analysis of parity-violating asymmetry data for elastic electron scattering
We perform a statistical analysis of the full set of parity-violating
asymmetry data for elastic electron scattering including the most recent high
precision measurement from -weak. Given the basis of the present analysis,
our estimates appear to favor non-zero vector strangeness, specifically,
positive (negative) values for the electric (magnetic) strange form factors. We
also provide an accurate estimate of the axial-vector nucleon form factor at
zero momentum transfer, . Our study shows to be
importantly reduced with respect to the currently accepted value. We also find
our analysis of data to be compatible with the Standard Model values for the
weak charges of the proton and neutron.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in PR
Creating collective many-body states with highly excited atoms
We study the collective excitation of a gas of highly excited atoms confined
to a large spacing ring lattice, where the ground and the excited states are
coupled resonantly via a laser field. Our attention is focused on the regime
where the interaction between the highly excited atoms is very weak in
comparison to the Rabi frequency of the laser. We demonstrate that in this case
the many-body excitations of the system can be expressed in terms of free
spinless fermions. The complex many-particle states arising in this regime are
characterized and their properties, e.g. their correlation functions, are
studied. In addition we investigate how one can actually experimentally access
some of these many-particle states by a temporal variation of the laser
parameters.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
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