9,291 research outputs found
Iterated Differential Forms II: Riemannian Geometry Revisited
A natural extension of Riemannian geometry to a much wider context is
presented on the basis of the iterated differential form formalism developed in
math.DG/0605113 and an application to general relativity is given.Comment: 12 pages, extended version of the published note Dokl. Math. 73, n. 2
(2006) 18
Analytical models of probability distribution and excess noise factor of Solid State Photomultiplier signals with crosstalk
Silicon Photomultipliers (SiPM), also so-called Solid State Photomultipliers
(SSPM), are based on Geiger mode avalanche breakdown limited by strong negative
feedback. SSPM can detect and resolve single photons due to high gain and
ultra-low excess noise of avalanche multiplication in this mode. Crosstalk and
afterpulsing processes associated with the high gain introduce specific excess
noise and deteriorate photon number resolution of the SSPM. Probabilistic
features of these processes are widely studied because of its high importance
for the SSPM design, characterization, optimization and application, but the
process modeling is mostly based on Monte Carlo simulations and numerical
methods. In this study, crosstalk is considered to be a branching Poisson
process, and analytical models of probability distribution and excess noise
factor (ENF) of SSPM signals based on the Borel distribution as an advance on
the geometric distribution models are presented and discussed. The models are
found to be in a good agreement with the experimental probability distributions
for dark counts and a few photon spectrums in a wide range of fired pixels
number as well as with observed super-linear behavior of crosstalk ENF.Comment: 10 pages, 2 tables, 3 figures, Reported at 6th International
Conference on "New Developments In Photodetection - NDIP11
Development of ecological tourism in protected areas of Russia
The author of the article, based on the views of industry experts, offers activities aimed at the introduction of eco-tourism in protected areas, and considers man-agement practices in ecotourism in these areas. In the article, the author put forward a definition of "eco-tourism", the basic problems of the development of ecotourism in protected areas, proposed a strategy for the optimal functioning of ecotourism, taking into account its profitability, competitiveness, and reduction of negative environmental impacts of mass tourism in protected natural area
Comment on "Regge Trajectories for All Flavors"
We show that Regge trajectories for all flavors suggested recently by
Filipponi et al. cannot combine both meson spectroscopy and additivity of
intercepts. Other defects of these trajectories are also discussed.Comment: 2 pages, LaTe
Sub-wavelength imaging: Resolution enhancement using metal wire gratings
An experimental evidence of subwavelength imaging with a "lens", which is a
uniaxial negative permittivity wire medium slab, is reported. The slab is
formed by gratings of long thin parallel conducting cylinders. Taking into
account the anisotropy and spatial dispersion in the wire medium we
theoretically show that there are no usual plasmons that could be exited on
surfaces of such a slab, and there is no resonant enhancement of evanescent
fields in the slab. The experimentally observed clear improvement of the
resolution in the presence of the slab is explained as filtering out the
harmonics with small wavenumbers. In other words, the wire gratings (the wire
medium) suppress strong traveling-mode components increasing the role of
evanescent waves in the image formation. This effect can be used in near-field
imaging and detection applications.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
Low-temperature specific heat of real crystals: Possibility of leading contribution of optical and short-wavelength acoustical vibrations
We point out that the repeatedly reported glass-like properties of
crystalline materials are not necessarily associated with localized (or
quasilocalized) excitations. In real crystals, optical and short-wavelength
acoustical vibrations remain damped due to defects down to zero temperature. If
such a damping is frequency-independent, e.g. due to planar defects or charged
defects, these optical and short-wavelength acoustical vibrations yield a
linear-in- contribution to the low-temperature specific heat of the crystal
lattices. At low enough temperatures such a contribution will prevail over that
of the long-wavelength acoustical vibrations (Debye contribution). The
crossover between the linear and the Debye regime takes place at , where is the concentration of the defects responsible for the
damping. Estimates show that this crossover could be observable.Comment: 5 pages. v4: Error in Appendix corrected, which does not change the
main results of the pape
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