3,154 research outputs found
Argon assisted chemical vapor deposition of CrO: an efficient process leading to high quality epitaxial films
A comparative study of the structural, microstructural and magnetic
properties of CrO thin films grown onto (110) and (100) TiO rutile
single crystal substrates by chemical vapor deposition (CVD), using CrO as
chromium precursor and either oxygen or argon as carrier gas is presented. Our
results show that growth under argon carrier gas leads to high quality CrO
epilayers with structural and magnetic properties similar to those obtained
using the more standard oxygen carrier gas. Furthermore, we interpret the
larger magnetic coercivity observed for the (110) oriented films in terms of
their microstructure, in particular of the highest strain and edge roughness of
the building structures of the CrO epilayers, which are settled by the
substrate crystallographic orientation.Comment: 27 pages, 2 tables, 8 figure
Towards absolute calibration of optical tweezers
Aiming at absolute force calibration of optical tweezers, following a
critical review of proposed theoretical models, we present and test the results
of MDSA (Mie-Debye-Spherical Aberration) theory, an extension of a previous
(MD) model, taking account of spherical aberration at the glass/water
interface. This first-principles theory is formulated entirely in terms of
experimentally accessible parameters (none adjustable). Careful experimental
tests of the MDSA theory, undertaken at two laboratories, with very different
setups, are described. A detailed description is given of the procedures
employed to measure laser beam waist, local beam power at the transparent
microspheres trapped by the tweezers, microsphere radius and the trap
transverse stiffness, as a function of radius and height in the (inverted
microscope) sample chamber. We find generally very good agreement with MDSA
theory predictions, for a wide size range, from the Rayleigh domain to large
radii, including the values most often employed in practice, and at different
chamber heights, both with objective overfilling and underfilling. The results
asymptotically approach geometrical optics in the mean over size intervals, as
they should, and this already happens for size parameters not much larger than
unity. MDSA predictions for the trapping threshold, position of stiffness peak,
stiffness variation with height, multiple equilibrium points and `hopping'
effects among them are verified. Remaining discrepancies are ascribed to focus
degradation, possibly arising from objective aberrations in the infrared, not
yet included in MDSA theory.Comment: 15 pages, 20 figure
Finite Size Effects in Separable Recurrent Neural Networks
We perform a systematic analytical study of finite size effects in separable
recurrent neural network models with sequential dynamics, away from saturation.
We find two types of finite size effects: thermal fluctuations, and
disorder-induced `frozen' corrections to the mean-field laws. The finite size
effects are described by equations that correspond to a time-dependent
Ornstein-Uhlenbeck process. We show how the theory can be used to understand
and quantify various finite size phenomena in recurrent neural networks, with
and without detailed balance.Comment: 24 pages LaTex, with 4 postscript figures include
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Implementação de uma Ferramenta Computacional para o Ensino de Redes de Computadores na EaD do IFPE
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Aplicação de Análise e Modelagem Multidimensional para o Monitoramento de Resíduos Sólidos Industriais
Prominent effect of soil network heterogeneity on microbial invasion
Using a network representation for real soil samples and mathematical models for microbial spread, we show that the structural heterogeneity of the soil habitat may have a very significant influence on the size of microbial invasions of the soil pore space. In particular, neglecting the soil structural heterogeneity may lead to a substantial underestimation of microbial invasion. Such effects are explained in terms of a crucial interplay between heterogeneity in microbial spread and heterogeneity in the topology of soil networks. The main influence of network topology on invasion is linked to the existence of long channels in soil networks that may act as bridges for transmission of microorganisms between distant parts of soil
Persistência de extrato aquoso de folhas de nim em mistura com melaço para o controle de Spodoptera frugiperda, no milho.
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