11,058 research outputs found
NASA Langley Research Center HBCU/OMU program: 1990 student support survey
The results of a survey of students who are receiving support through the Historically Black Colleges and Universities and Other Minority Universities are given. Information is given on the race, sex, ethnic distribution, grade point average distribution, and target degree distribution
Classical Electron Model with Negative Energy Density in Einstein-Cartan Theory of Gravitation
Experimental result regarding the maximum limit of the radius of the electron
\sim 10^{-16} cm and a few of the theoretical works suggest that the
gravitational mass which is a priori a positive quantity in Newtonian mechanics
may become negative in general theory of relativity. It is argued that such a
negative gravitational mass and hence negative energy density also can be
obtained with a better physical interpretation in the framework of
Einstein-Cartan theory.Comment: 12 Latex pages, added refs and conclusion
Magnetoconductance signatures of chiral domain-wall bound states in magnetic topological insulators
Recent magnetoconductance measurements performed on magnetic topological
insulator candidates have revealed butterfly-shaped hysteresis. This hysteresis
has been attributed to the formation of gapless chiral domain-wall bound states
during a magnetic field sweep. We treat this phenomenon theoretically,
providing a link between microscopic magnetization dynamics and butterfly
hysteresis in magnetoconductance. Further, we illustrate how a spatially
resolved conductance measurement can probe the most striking feature of the
domain-wall bound states: their chirality. This work establishes a regime where
a definitive link between butterfly hysteresis in longitudinal
magneto-conductance and domain-wall bound states can be made. This analysis
provides an important tool for the identification of magnetic topological
insulators.Comment: v2: Final published version; 7 pages, 3 figure
Missing Shapiro steps and the -periodic Josephson effect in interacting helical electron systems
Two-particle backscattering in time-reversal invariant interacting helical
electron systems can lead to the formation of quasiparticles with charge .
We propose a way to detect such states by means of the Josephson effect in the
presence of proximity-induced superconductivity. In this case, the existence of
charges leads to an -periodic component of the Josephson current
which can be identified through measurement of Shapiro steps in Josephson
junctions. In particular, we show that even when there is weak explicit
time-reversal symmetry breaking, which causes the two-particle backscattering
to be a sub-leading effect at low energies, its presence can still be detected
in driven, current-biased Shapiro step measurements. The disappearance of some
of these steps as a function of the drive frequency is directly related to the
existence of non-Abelian zero-energy states. We suggest that this effect can be
measured in current state-of-the-art Rashba wires.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures. A new submission extending and expanding our
analysis in arXiv:1507.08881. (v2) References adde
Dynamic response functions and helical gaps in interacting Rashba nanowires with and without magnetic fields
A partially gapped spectrum due to the application of a magnetic field is one
of the main probes of Rashba spin-orbit coupling in nanowires. Such a "helical
gap" manifests itself in the linear conductance, as well as in dynamic response
functions such as the spectral function, the structure factor, or the
tunnelling density of states. In this paper, we investigate theoretically the
signature of the helical gap in these observables with a particular focus on
the interplay between Rashba spin-orbit coupling and electron-electron
interactions. We show that in a quasi-one-dimensional wire, interactions can
open a helical gap even without magnetic field. We calculate the dynamic
response functions using bosonization, a renormalization group analysis, and
the exact form factors of the emerging sine-Gordon model. For special
interaction strengths, we verify our results by refermionization. We show how
the two types of helical gaps, caused by magnetic fields or interactions, can
be distinguished in experiments.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, v2 refs adde
Acid-adaption by a medic microsymbiont: new insights from the genome of Sinorhizobium medicae WSM419
The poor availability of nitrogen is one of the principal factors limiting global biomass. Legumes are vital components of agricultural systems because of their ability to associate symbiotically with root nodule bacteria (RNB) and subsequently fix atmospheric nitrogen to a form that can be utilised by the plant partner. Furthermore, this symbiotic relationship provides available soil nitrogen for subsequent non-leguminous crops. This RNB-legume interaction is affected by a number of environmental factors. Progressive acidification of agricultural soils is one of the big challenges in agriculture as soil acidity negatively impacts legume productivity. One genus of RNB, Sinorhizobium, is particularly acid-sensitive causing a major reduction in Medicago productivity in acidic soils. Due to the importance of Medic pasture production, alternative strains have been captured, and are still being captured, from the genetic pool that display superior acid tolerance characteristics. This presentation will focus on the acid-tolerant species S. medicae (previously known as S. meliloti) and in particular on the previously used commercial inoculant WSM419
Detecting nonlocal Cooper pair entanglement by optical Bell inequality violation
Based on the Bardeen Cooper Schrieffer (BCS) theory of superconductivity, the
coherent splitting of Cooper pairs from a superconductor to two spatially
separated quantum dots has been predicted to generate nonlocal pairs of
entangled electrons. In order to test this hypothesis, we propose a scheme to
transfer the spin state of a split Cooper pair onto the polarization state of a
pair of optical photons. We show that the produced photon pairs can be used to
violate a Bell inequality, unambiguously demonstrating the entanglement of the
split Cooper pairs.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, v3 with added reference
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