6,188 research outputs found
Double-averaged velocity and stress distributions for hydraulically-smooth and transitionally-rough turbulent flows
Peer reviewedPreprin
Semimetallic features in quantum transport through a gate-defined point contact in bilayer graphene
We demonstrate that, at the onset of conduction, an electrostatically defined
quantum wire in bilayer graphene (BLG) with an interlayer asymmetry gap may act
as a 1D semimetal, due to the multiple minivalley dispersion of its lowest
subband. Formation of a non-monotonic subband coincides with a near-degeneracy
between the bottom edges of the lowest two subbands in the wire spectrum,
suggesting an step at the conduction threshold, and the semimetallic
behaviour of the lowest subband in the wire would be manifest as resonance
transmission peaks on an conductance plateau.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures (including appendices
Twist-controlled Resonant Tunnelling between Monolayer and Bilayer Graphene
We investigate the current-voltage characteristics of a field-effect
tunnelling transistor comprised of both monolayer and bilayer graphene with
well-aligned crystallographic axes, separated by three layers of hexagonal
boron nitride. Using a self-consistent description of the device's
electrostatic configuration we relate the current to three distinct tunable
voltages across the system and hence produce a two-dimensional map of the I-V
characteristics in the low energy regime. We show that the use of gates either
side of the heterostructure offers a fine degree of control over the device's
rich array of characteristics, as does varying the twist between the graphene
electrodes.Comment: 5 pages including references and 3 figure
Calculation of transition probabilities and ac Stark shifts in two-photon laser transitions of antiprotonic helium
Numerical ab initio variational calculations of the transition probabilities
and ac Stark shifts in two-photon transitions of antiprotonic helium atoms
driven by two counter-propagating laser beams are presented. We found that
sub-Doppler spectroscopy is in principle possible by exciting transitions of
the type (n,L)->(n-2,L-2) between antiprotonic states of principal and angular
momentum quantum numbers n~L-1~35, first by using highly monochromatic,
nanosecond laser beams of intensities 10^4-10^5 W/cm^2, and then by tuning the
virtual intermediate state close (e.g., within 10-20 GHz) to the real state
(n-1,L-1) to enhance the nonlinear transition probability. We expect that ac
Stark shifts of a few MHz or more will become an important source of systematic
error at fractional precisions of better than a few parts in 10^9. These shifts
can in principle be minimized and even canceled by selecting an optimum
combination of laser intensities and frequencies. We simulated the resonance
profiles of some two-photon transitions in the regions n=30-40 of the
\bar{p}^4He^+ and \bar{p} ^3He^+ isotopes to find the best conditions that
would allow this.Comment: 18 pages 2 tables 12 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Bering's proposal for boundary contribution to the Poisson bracket
It is shown that the Poisson bracket with boundary terms recently proposed by
Bering (hep-th/9806249) can be deduced from the Poisson bracket proposed by the
present author (hep-th/9305133) if one omits terms free of Euler-Lagrange
derivatives ("annihilation principle"). This corresponds to another definition
of the formal product of distributions (or, saying it in other words, to
another definition of the pairing between 1-forms and 1-vectors in the formal
variational calculus). We extend the formula (initially suggested by Bering
only for the ultralocal case with constant coefficients) onto the general
non-ultralocal brackets with coefficients depending on fields and their spatial
derivatives. The lack of invariance under changes of dependent variables (field
redefinitions) seems a drawback of this proposal.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX, amssym
Diffusion of bedload particles in open-channel flows : distribution of travel times and second-order statistics of particle trajectories
Acknowledgments The authors are grateful to the reviewers for thorough reviews, constructive comments and useful suggestions that have been gratefully incorporated in the final manuscript. Funding for this research was provided in part by the Institute of Geophysics of the Polish Academy of Sciences through the Project for Young Scientists No. 16/IGF PAN/2011/Mł ‘‘Dynamics and topography of riverbed forms: an analysis of experimental data and modelling of sediment transport in the light of Einstein’s theory’’, by Ministry of Sciences and Higher Education within statutory activities No. 3841/E-41/S/2015, and by EPSRC, UK (EP/G056404/1) within the project ‘‘High-resolution numerical and experimental studies of turbulence-induced sediment erosion and near-bed transport.’’ Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Trapped Rainbow Techniques for Spectroscopy on a Chip and Fluorescence Enhancement
We report on the experimental demonstration of the broadband "trapped
rainbow" in the visible range using arrays of adiabatically tapered optical
nano waveguides. Being a distinct case of the slow light phenomenon, the
trapped rainbow effect could be applied to optical signal processing, and
sensing in such applications as spectroscopy on a chip, and to providing
enhanced light-matter interactions. As an example of the latter applications,
we have fabricated a large area array of tapered nano-waveguides, which exhibit
broadband "trapped rainbow" effect. Considerable fluorescence enhancement due
to slow light behavior in the array has been observed.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, Published in Applied Physics
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