775 research outputs found

    Strategic Remanufacturing Decision in a Supply Chain with an External Local Remanufacturer

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    This paper develops a model for remanufacturing decisions in a two-stage supply chain with one manufacturer, one retailer and one external local remanufacturer, who collects used products and then reproduces them into a new one if the manufacturer does not join in remanufacturing process. This paper is different from most of the extant studies about remanufacturing because they consider decisions of firms rather than supply chains. We mainly focus on the remanufacturing strategy of the manufacturer when there is a local remanufacturer. We derive the equilibrium results for all players and do some comparative studies under different cases. We find that product substitutability can invert the effect of manufacturer’s extension decision on the retailer’s profit. We also consider the effect of channel structure by comparing the decentralized channel with the centralized channel. We find that the manufacturer has a higher incentive to extend its product line in the centralized channel than the decentralized channel; and the competition can strengthen its motivation to extend the line

    Emergent charge density wave featuring quasi-one-dimensional chains in Ta-intercalated bilayer 2HH-TaS2_{2} with coexisting superconductivity

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    Recently, intercalation emerges as an effective way to manipulate ground-state properties and enrich quantum phase diagrams of layered transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs). In this work, we focus on fully Ta-intercalated bilayer 2HH-TaS2_{2} with a stoichiometry of Ta3_{3}S4_{4}, which has recently been experimentally synthesized. Based on first-principles calculations, we computationally show the suppression of an intrinsic 3×33\times3 charge-density wave (CDW) in the TaS2_{2} layer, and the emergence of a 2×12\times1 CDW in intercalated Ta layer. The formation of the CDW in Ta3_{3}S4_{4} is triggered by strong electron-phonon coupling (EPC) between the dd-like orbitals of intercalated Ta atoms via the imaginary phonon modes at M point. A 2×\times1 CDW structure is identified, featuring quasi-one-dimensional Ta chains, attributable to the competition between the CDW displacements associated with potential CDW vectors (qCDW\boldsymbol{q}_{\text{CDW}}s). Superconductivity is found to coexist with the 2×\times1 CDW in Ta3_{3}S4_{4}, with an estimated superconducting transition temperature (TcT_{\mathrm{c}}) of 3.0 K, slightly higher than that of bilayer TaS2_{2}. The Ta3_{3}S4_{4} structures of non-CDW, 2×\times1 CDW, and 2×2\times2 CDW can be switched by strain. Our work enriches the phase diagram of TaS2_{2}, offers a candidate material for studying the interplay between CDW and superconductivity, and highlights intercalation as an effective way to tune the physical properties of layered materials.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. Published as a Letter in PR

    Unlocking Foundation Models for Privacy-Enhancing Speech Understanding: An Early Study on Low Resource Speech Training Leveraging Label-guided Synthetic Speech Content

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    Automatic Speech Understanding (ASU) leverages the power of deep learning models for accurate interpretation of human speech, leading to a wide range of speech applications that enrich the human experience. However, training a robust ASU model requires the curation of a large number of speech samples, creating risks for privacy breaches. In this work, we investigate using foundation models to assist privacy-enhancing speech computing. Unlike conventional works focusing primarily on data perturbation or distributed algorithms, our work studies the possibilities of using pre-trained generative models to synthesize speech content as training data with just label guidance. We show that zero-shot learning with training label-guided synthetic speech content remains a challenging task. On the other hand, our results demonstrate that the model trained with synthetic speech samples provides an effective initialization point for low-resource ASU training. This result reveals the potential to enhance privacy by reducing user data collection but using label-guided synthetic speech content

    An extremely bad-cavity laser

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    Lasing in the bad-cavity regime has promising applications in precision measurement and frequency metrology due to the reduced sensitivity of the laser frequency to cavity length fluctuations. Thus far, relevant studies have been mainly focused on conventional cavities whose finesse is high enough that the resonance linewidth is sufficiently narrow compared to the cavity's free spectral range, though still in the bad-cavity regime. However, lasing output from the cavity whose finesse is close to the limit of 2 has never been experimentally accessed. Here, we demonstrate an extremely bad-cavity laser, analyze the physical mechanisms limiting cavity finesse, and report on the worst ever laser cavity with finesse reaching 2.01. The optical cavity has a reflectance close to zero and only provides a weak optical feedback. The laser power can be as high as tens of μ\muW and the spectral linewidth reaches a few kHz, over one thousand times narrower than the gain bandwidth. In addition, the measurement of cavity pulling reveals a pulling coefficient of 0.0148, the lowest value ever achieved for a continuous wave laser. Our findings open up an unprecedentedly innovative perspective for future new ultra-stable lasers, which could possibly trigger the future discoveries in optical clocks, cavity QED, continuous wave superradiant laser, and explorations of quantum manybody physics

    An 852 nm Faraday laser with 8 kHz linewidth based on corner-cube retroreflector

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    A single-mode Cs atom 852 nm Faraday laser based on the corner-cube reflector feedback is first demonstrated to our best knowledge. Using the corner-cube reflector as external cavity feedback in Faraday laser, the robustness can be greatly improved. This Faraday laser can always achieve laser oscillation unless the angle between incident light and the optical axis of corner-cube retroreflector is beyond the plus or minus 3{\deg} range. Furthermore, the Faraday laser achieves single-mode operation within the current range of 100 mA , and its output wavelength is automatically limited to the vicinity of the Cs atomic transition lines. The wavelength fluctuation range is limited to plus or minus 1.2 pm within 9 hours under +3{\deg} rotation angle. Moreover, the most probable linewidth is 7.97 kHz measured by heterodyne beating. The Faraday laser with high robustness as well as narrow linewidth can be widely used in quantum precision measurement fields including quantum optics, atomic clocks, atomic magnetometers, cold atoms, and atomic gravimeters, etc
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