27,356 research outputs found

    The influence of conducting flaps on the reflection coefficient of a parallel-plate waveguide illuminating a conducting sheet

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    Conducting flap effects on reflection coefficient of parallel-plate waveguide illuminating conducting shee

    Aperture reflection coefficient of a parallel- plate waveguide by wedge diffraction analysis

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    Aperture reflection coefficient of parallel plate waveguide by wedge diffraction analysi

    The reflection coefficient of a ground-plane mounted TEM mode parallel-plate waveguide illuminating a conducting sheet

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    Reflection coefficient of ground-plane mounted transverse electromagnetic mode parallel-plate waveguide illuminating conducting shee

    Accuracy of approximate formulations for near-field wedge diffraction of a line source

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    Diffraction of a cylindrical wave by a wedge for application to antenna diffraction problem

    Exotic Superconducting Phases of Ultracold Atom Mixtures on Triangular Lattices

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    We study the phase diagram of two-dimensional Bose-Fermi mixtures of ultracold atoms on a triangular optical lattice, in the limit when the velocity of bosonic condensate fluctuations is much larger than the Fermi velocity. We contrast this work with our previous results for a square lattice system in Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 97}, 030601 (2006). Using functional renormalization group techniques we show that the phase diagrams for a triangular lattice contain exotic superconducting phases. For spin-1/2 fermions on an isotropic lattice we find a competition of ss-, pp-, extended dd-, and ff-wave symmetry, as well as antiferromagnetic order. For an anisotropic lattice, we further find an extended p-wave phase. A Bose-Fermi mixture with spinless fermions on an isotropic lattice shows a competition between pp- and ff-wave symmetry. These phases can be traced back to the geometric shapes of the Fermi surfaces in various regimes, as well as the intrinsic frustration of a triangular lattice.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, extended version, slight modification

    Spin Relaxation Times of Single-Wall Carbon Nanotubes

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    We have measured temperature (TT)- and power-dependent electron spin resonance in bulk single-wall carbon nanotubes to determine both the spin-lattice and spin-spin relaxation times, T1T_1 and T2T_2. We observe that T11T_1^{-1} increases linearly with TT from 4 to 100 K, whereas T21T_2^{-1} {\em decreases} by over a factor of two when TT is increased from 3 to 300 K. We interpret the T11TT_1^{-1} \propto T trend as spin-lattice relaxation via interaction with conduction electrons (Korringa law) and the decreasing TT dependence of T21T_2^{-1} as motional narrowing. By analyzing the latter, we find the spin hopping frequency to be 285 GHz. Last, we show that the Dysonian lineshape asymmetry follows a three-dimensional variable-range hopping behavior from 3 to 20 K; from this scaling relation, we extract a localization length of the hopping spins to be \sim100 nm.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure

    Interstitial gas and density-segregation in vertically-vibrated granular media

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    We report experimental studies of the effect of interstitial gas on mass-density-segregation in a vertically-vibrated mixture of equal-sized bronze and glass spheres. Sufficiently strong vibration in the presence of interstitial gas induces vertical segregation into sharply separated bronze and glass layers. We find that the segregated steady state (i.e., bronze or glass layer on top) is a sensitive function of gas pressure and viscosity, as well as vibration frequency and amplitude. In particular, we identify distinct regimes of behavior that characterize the change from bronze-on-top to glass-on-top steady-state.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PRL; accepted in PRE as rapid communication, with revised text and reference
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