2,535 research outputs found
Multi-year Water Allocation: A Policy Analysis for Groundwater Management and Conservation for Irrigated Agriculture
Heavy withdrawals from the most dependable source of groundwater in the Texas Panhandle, the Ogallala Aquifer, create an impending need for implementing water conservation policies. This study evaluates the policy option of multi-year water allocation coupled with water use restriction in four water deficit counties of Castro, Deafsmith, Parmer and Swisher over a sixty year planning horizon. Results indicate that the water use in the study area declines with progressive restriction rates accompanied by a substantial decrease in the net present value of net returns over sixty years and therefore it is important to analyze the socio-economic effects of implementing such a policy alternative.Multi-year allocation, Ogallala Aquifer, Texas Panhandle, Water conservation, Environmental Economics and Policy, Farm Management, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Topological invariants for spin-orbit coupled superconductor nanowires
We show that a spin-orbit coupled semiconductor nanowire with Zeeman
splitting and s-wave superconductivity is in symmetry class BDI (not D as is
commonly thought) of the topological classification of band Hamiltonians. The
class BDI allows for an integer Z topological invariant equal to the number of
Majorana fermion (MF) modes at each end of the quantum wire protected by the
chirality symmetry (reality of the Hamiltonian). Thus it is possible for this
system (and all other d=1 models related to it by symmetry) to have an
arbitrary integer number, not just 0 or 1 as is commonly assumed, of MFs
localized at each end of the wire. The integer counting the number of MFs at
each end reduces to 0 or 1, and the class BDI reduces to D, in the presence of
terms in the Hamiltonian that break the chirality symmetry.Comment: 4+ pages, no figure
Diamagnetic susceptibility obtained from the six-vertex model and its implications for the high-temperature diamagnetic state of cuprate superconductors
We study the diamagnetism of the 6-vertex model with the arrows as directed
bond currents. To our knowledge, this is the first study of the diamagnetism of
this model. A special version of this model, called F model, describes the
thermal disordering transition of an orbital antiferromagnet, known as
d-density wave (DDW), a proposed state for the pseudogap phase of the high-Tc
cuprates. We find that the F model is strongly diamagnetic and the
susceptibility may diverge in the high temperature critical phase with power
law arrow correlations. These results may explain the surprising recent
observation of a diverging low-field diamagnetic susceptibility seen in some
optimally doped cuprates within the DDW model of the pseudogap phase.Comment: 4.5 pages, 2 figures, revised version accepted in Phys. Rev. Let
Structural, optical and nanomechanical properties of (1 1 1) oriented nanocrystalline ZnTe thin films
Structural, optical and nanomechanical properties of nanocrystalline Zinc Telluride (ZnTe) films
of thickness upto 10 microns deposited at room temperature on borosilicate glass substrates are reported.
X-ray diffraction patterns reveal that the films were preferentially oriented along the (1 1 1) direction.
The maximum refractive index of the films was 2.74 at a wavelength of 2000 nm. The optical band gap
showed strong thickness dependence. The average film hardness and Young’s modulus obtained from loaddisplacement
curves and analyzed by Oliver-Pharr method were 4 and 70 GPa respectively. Hardness of
(1 1 1) oriented ZnTe thin films exhibited almost 5 times higher value than bulk. The studies show clearly
that the hardness increases with decreasing indentation size, for indents between 30 and 300 nm in depth
indicating the existence of indentation size effect. The coefficient of friction for these films as obtained from
the nanoscratch test was ∼0.4.Financial support
in the form of fellowships to MSRNK and SK from the
ACRHEM project of DRDO is acknowledged
Simulation results for an interacting pair of resistively shunted Josephson junctions
Using a new cluster Monte Carlo algorithm, we study the phase diagram and
critical properties of an interacting pair of resistively shunted Josephson
junctions. This system models tunneling between two electrodes through a small
superconducting grain, and is described by a double sine-Gordon model. In
accordance with theoretical predictions, we observe three different phases and
crossover effects arising from an intermediate coupling fixed point. On the
superconductor-to-metal phase boundary, the observed critical behavior is
within error-bars the same as in a single junction, with identical values of
the critical resistance and a correlation function exponent which depends only
on the strength of the Josephson coupling. We explain these critical properties
on the basis of a renormalization group (RG) calculation. In addition, we
propose an alternative new mean-field theory for this transition, which
correctly predicts the location of the phase boundary at intermediate Josephson
coupling strength.Comment: 21 pages, some figures best viewed in colo
Theory of four-photon resonant vacuum-ultraviolet generation with reabsorption via resonant two-photon process
Motivated by the recent experiments of Vallee et al. [IEEE J. Quantum Electron. QE-19, 1331 (1983)], we formulate the theory of the four-photon resonant VUV generation in a media that is positively dispersive. Dispersion characteristics of the medium change as the refractive index becomes intensity dependent. The phase-matching conditions for the third-harmonic generation through a five-photon process are derived. The blue shifts as observed by Vallee et al. are explained as due to the interaction of generated VUV via a two-photon process. Finally the renormalization of the fifth-order polarization due to the generated fields is also considered
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