1,636 research outputs found
Measurements of a Quantum Dot with an Impedance-Matching On-Chip LC Resonator at GHz Frequencies
We report the realization of a bonded-bridge on-chip superconducting coil and
its use in impedance-matching a highly ohmic quantum dot (QD) to a
measurement setup. The coil, modeled as a lumped-element resonator, is
more compact and has a wider bandwidth than resonators based on coplanar
transmission lines (e.g. impedance transformers and stub tuners) at
potentially better signal-to-noise ratios. In particular for measurements of
radiation emitted by the device, such as shot noise, the 50 larger
bandwidth reduces the time to acquire the spectral density. The resonance
frequency, close to 3.25 GHz, is three times higher than that of the one
previously reported wire-bonded coil. As a proof of principle, we fabricated an
circuit that achieves impedance-matching to a load
and validate it with a load defined by a carbon nanotube QD of which we measure
the shot noise in the Coulomb blockade regime.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Shot noise of a quantum dot measured with GHz stub impedance matching
The demand for a fast high-frequency read-out of high impedance devices, such
as quantum dots, necessitates impedance matching. Here we use a resonant
impedance matching circuit (a stub tuner) realized by on-chip superconducting
transmission lines to measure the electronic shot noise of a carbon nanotube
quantum dot at a frequency close to 3 GHz in an efficient way. As compared to
wide-band detection without impedance matching, the signal to noise ratio can
be enhanced by as much as a factor of 800 for a device with an impedance of 100
k. The advantage of the stub resonator concept is the ease with which
the response of the circuit can be predicted, designed and fabricated. We
further demonstrate that all relevant matching circuit parameters can reliably
be deduced from power reflectance measurements and then used to predict the
power transmission function from the device through the circuit. The shot noise
of the carbon nanotube quantum dot in the Coulomb blockade regime shows an
oscillating suppression below the Schottky value of , as well an
enhancement in specific regions.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, supplementar
Uniqueness of the ground state in the Feshbach renormalization analysis
In the operator theoretic renormalization analysis introduced by Bach,
Froehlich, and Sigal we prove uniqueness of the ground state.Comment: 10 page
Electrolyte gate dependent high-frequency measurement of graphene field-effect transistor for sensing applications
We performed radiofrequency (RF) reflectometry measurements at 2.4 GHz on
electrolyte-gated graphene field-effect transistors (GFETs) utilizing a tunable
stub-matching circuit for impedance matching. We demonstrate that the gate
voltage dependent RF resistivity of graphene can be deduced even in the
presence of the electrolyte which is in direct contact with the graphene layer.
The RF resistivity is found to be consistent with its DC counterpart in the
full gate voltage range. Furthermore, in order to access the potential of
high-frequency sensing for applications, we demonstrate time-dependent gating
in solution with nanosecond time resolution.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Non-operatively managed small to medium-sized subscapularis tendon tears: MRI evaluation with a minimum of 5 years follow-up
Background
Isolated or combined subscapularis (SSC) tendon tears are frequently found in patients with shoulder pain. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the structural changes associated with SSC tear in a consecutive series of patients with nonoperatively treated small size to midsize SSC tendon tears using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
Methods
In this retrospective case series, all patients with an isolated or combined SSC tendon tear treated nonoperatively between 1999 and 2019 were identified from our MRI and clinical databases. Twenty-one patients with a mean age of 52.6 years (range 26.6-64.8, standard deviation 9.3) with a second MRI scan at a minimum of 5 years of follow-up were enrolled. The mean follow-up was 8.6 years (range 5.6-12.6, standard deviation 1.8). Initial and last follow-up MRI scans were used to determine concomitant cuff lesions, size of the SSC tear, fatty infiltration of the SSC muscle, and biceps pathology.
Results
Five patients had an isolated SSC lesion; 7 patients had a concomitant tear of the supraspinatus, and 9 patients had a supraspinatus and anterior infraspinatus tendon tear. At diagnosis, 14 patients had a type 1 SSC lesion as classified by Lafosse et al, 4 patients had type 2, and 3 patients had type 3 lesions. Nineteen patients (90%) were found to have an SSC tear progression of at least one Lafosse grade (P < .001); however, no tear had progressed to an irreparable type lesion (defined as Lafosse type 5). In addition, the size of SSC tendon tears increased significantly from 75 mm2 to 228 mm2 (P < .001). At the final MRI scan, the grading of fatty infiltration increased by 1 grade in 4 cases and by 2 grades in 4 cases (P = .042). At the final follow-up, in eight patients, the condition of the long head of biceps tendon was unchanged from the initial MRI; in nine patients, there was a newly subluxated biceps tendon, and in 6 patients, there was a newly ruptured long head of biceps tendon (P < .001).
Conclusion
After a mean of 8.6 years, almost all nonoperatively treated SSC tendon tears had increased in size, but only one-third showed additional progression of muscle fatty degeneration on MRI scan. None of the SSC lesions became irreparable during the observation period
Ground States in the Spin Boson Model
We prove that the Hamiltonian of the model describing a spin which is
linearly coupled to a field of relativistic and massless bosons, also known as
the spin-boson model, admits a ground state for small values of the coupling
constant lambda. We show that the ground state energy is an analytic function
of lambda and that the corresponding ground state can also be chosen to be an
analytic function of lambda. No infrared regularization is imposed. Our proof
is based on a modified version of the BFS operator theoretic renormalization
analysis. Moreover, using a positivity argument we prove that the ground state
of the spin-boson model is unique. We show that the expansion coefficients of
the ground state and the ground state energy can be calculated using regular
analytic perturbation theory
STAR: Sparse Trained Articulated Human Body Regressor
The SMPL body model is widely used for the estimation, synthesis, and
analysis of 3D human pose and shape. While popular, we show that SMPL has
several limitations and introduce STAR, which is quantitatively and
qualitatively superior to SMPL. First, SMPL has a huge number of parameters
resulting from its use of global blend shapes. These dense pose-corrective
offsets relate every vertex on the mesh to all the joints in the kinematic
tree, capturing spurious long-range correlations. To address this, we define
per-joint pose correctives and learn the subset of mesh vertices that are
influenced by each joint movement. This sparse formulation results in more
realistic deformations and significantly reduces the number of model parameters
to 20% of SMPL. When trained on the same data as SMPL, STAR generalizes better
despite having many fewer parameters. Second, SMPL factors pose-dependent
deformations from body shape while, in reality, people with different shapes
deform differently. Consequently, we learn shape-dependent pose-corrective
blend shapes that depend on both body pose and BMI. Third, we show that the
shape space of SMPL is not rich enough to capture the variation in the human
population. We address this by training STAR with an additional 10,000 scans of
male and female subjects, and show that this results in better model
generalization. STAR is compact, generalizes better to new bodies and is a
drop-in replacement for SMPL. STAR is publicly available for research purposes
at http://star.is.tue.mpg.de.Comment: ECCV 202
Root and shoot growth of spring wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) are differently affected by increasing subsoil biopore density when grown under different subsoil moisture
A column experiment with five different pore densities (0, 1, 2, 3, and 4 pores columnâ1) and two varying moisture regimes (comparatively dry and comparatively moist regime) in the subsoil part of the columns was established. In each pore, Lumbricus terrestris was introduced for 28Â days before sowing wheat plants. After 40Â days of plant growth, watering was stopped to induce progressive topsoil drying. Parameters describing the shoot hydration, mineral uptake, and aboveground biomass were quantified. Root biomass and root length densities (RLD) were measured separately for six soil layers. Under dry subsoil conditions, plants grown under increasing biopore density showed an increase of the RLD and an improved shoot hydration but the aboveground biomass was unaffected. Since RLD but not root biomass was enhanced, it is assumed that roots were able to explore a larger volume of soil with the same amount of root biomass. Thereby, subsoil water likely was used more efficiently leading to an improved hydration. Under moist subsoil conditions, plants grown with increasing biopore density revealed enhanced shoot biomasses and nutrient uptake while the belowground biomass was unaffected. The improved nutrient uptake can be ascribed to, first, the higher subsoil water availability favoring mass flow driven nutrient uptake, and second, to direct and indirect effects of earthworms on the availability of soil nutrients. It is concluded that high biopore abundancies have the potential to improve not only the belowground but also the aboveground biomass. This, however, largely depends on subsoil moisture.Bundesministerium fĂŒr Bildung, Wissenschaft, Forschung und Technologie
http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100010571Humboldt-UniversitÀt zu Berlin (1034)Peer Reviewe
Bifurcations, Chaos, Controlling and Synchronization of Certain Nonlinear Oscillators
In this set of lectures, we review briefly some of the recent developments in
the study of the chaotic dynamics of nonlinear oscillators, particularly of
damped and driven type. By taking a representative set of examples such as the
Duffing, Bonhoeffer-van der Pol and MLC circuit oscillators, we briefly explain
the various bifurcations and chaos phenomena associated with these systems. We
use numerical and analytical as well as analogue simulation methods to study
these systems. Then we point out how controlling of chaotic motions can be
effected by algorithmic procedures requiring minimal perturbations. Finally we
briefly discuss how synchronization of identically evolving chaotic systems can
be achieved and how they can be used in secure communications.Comment: 31 pages (24 figures) LaTeX. To appear Springer Lecture Notes in
Physics Please Lakshmanan for figures (e-mail: [email protected]
- âŠ