45,841 research outputs found
Studies of Effects of Current on Exchange-Bias: A Brief Review
MacDonald and co-workers recently predicted that high current densities could
affect the magnetic order of antiferromagnetic (AFM) multilayers, in ways
similar to those that occur in ferromagnetic (F) multilayers, and that changes
in AFM magnetic order can produce an antiferromagnetic Giant Magnetoresistance
(AGMR). Four groups have now studied current-driven effects on exchange bias at
F/AFM interfaces. In this paper, we first briefly review the main predictions
by MacDonald and co-workers, and then the results of experiments on exchange
bias that these predictions stimulated.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Proper Matter Collineations of Plane Symmetric Spacetimes
We investigate matter collineations of plane symmetric spacetimes when the
energy-momentum tensor is degenerate. There exists three interesting cases
where the group of matter collineations is finite-dimensional. The matter
collineations in these cases are either four, six or ten in which four are
isometries and the rest are proper.Comment: 10 pages, LaTex, accepted for publication in Modern Physics Letters
Drought events and their effects on vegetation productivity in China
Many parts of the world have experienced frequent and severe droughts during the last few decades. Most previous studies examined the effects of specific drought events on vegetation productivity. In this study, we characterized the drought events in China from 1982 to 2012 and assessed their effects on vegetation productivity inferred from satellite data. We first assessed the occurrence, spatial extent, frequency, and severity of drought using the Palmer Drought Severity Index (PDSI). We then examined the impacts of droughts on China\u27s terrestrial ecosystems using the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI). During the period 1982–2012, China\u27s land area (%) experiencing drought showed an insignificant trend. However, the drought conditions had been more severe over most regions in northern parts of China since the end of the 1990s, indicating that droughts hit these regions more frequently due to the drier climate. The severe droughts substantially reduced annual and seasonal NDVI. The magnitude and direction of the detrended NDVI under drought stress varied with season and vegetation type. The inconsistency between the regional means of PDSI and detrended NDVI could be attributed to different responses of vegetation to drought and the timing, duration, severity, and lag effects of droughts. The negative effects of droughts on vegetation productivity were partly offset by the enhancement of plant growth resulting from factors such as lower cloudiness, warming climate, and human activities (e.g., afforestation, improved agricultural management practices)
The X-ray afterglow of GRB 081109A: clue to the wind bubble structure
We present the prompt BAT and afterglow XRT data of Swift-discovered
GRB081109A up to ~ 5\times 10^5 sec after the trigger, and the early
ground-based optical follow-ups. The temporal and spectral indices of the X-ray
afterglow emission change remarkably. We interpret this as the GRB jet first
traversing the freely expanding supersonic stellar wind of the progenitor with
density varying as . Then after approximately 300 sec the
jet traverses into a region of apparent constant density similar to that
expected in the stalled-wind region of a stellar wind bubble or the
interstellar medium (ISM). The optical afterglow data are generally consistent
with such a scenario. Our best numerical model has a wind density parameter
{, a density of the stalled wind ,
and a transition radius cm}. Such a transition
radius is smaller than that predicted by numerical simulations of the stellar
wind bubbles and may be due to a rapidly evolving wind of the progenitor close
to the time of its core-collapse.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables, MNRAS accepted for publicatio
Entanglement Switch for Dipole Arrays
We propose a new entanglement switch of qubits consisting of electric
dipoles, oriented along or against an external electric field and coupled by
the electric dipole-dipole interaction. The pairwise entanglement can be tuned
and controlled by the ratio of the Rabi frequency and the dipole-dipole
coupling strength. Tuning the entanglement can be achieved for one, two and
three-dimensional arrangements of the qubits. The feasibility of building such
an entanglement switch is also discussed.Comment: 6 pages and 4 figures. To be published on Journal of Chemical Physic
Single transverse-spin asymmetry for -meson production in semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering
We study the single-transverse spin asymmetry for open charm production in
the semi-inclusive lepton-hadron deep inelastic scattering. We calculate the
asymmetry in terms of the QCD collinear factorization approach for mesons
at high enough , and find that the asymmetry is proportional to the
twist-three tri-gluon correlation function in the proton. With a simple model
for the tri-gluon correlation function, we estimate the asymmetry for both
COMPASS and eRHIC kinematics, and discuss the possibilities of extracting the
tri-gluon correlation function in these experiments.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figure
Improved Current Densities in MgB2 By Liquid-Assisted Sintering
Polycrystalline MgB2 samples with GaN additions were prepared by reaction of
Mg, B, and GaN powders. The presence of Ga leads to a low melting eutectic
phase which allowed liquid phase sintering and produces plate-like grains. For
low-level GaN additions (5% at. % or less), the critical transition
temperature, Tc, remained unchanged and in 1T magnetic field, the critical
current density, Jc was enhanced by a factor of 2 and 10, for temperatures of
\~5K and 20K, respectively. The values obtained are approaching those of hot
isostatically pressed samples.Comment: 12 pages, 1 table, 4 figures, accepted in Applied Physics Letter
Integrated IMU and radiolocation-based navigation using a Rao-Blackwellized particle filter
In this paper, we develop a cooperative IMU/radio-location-based navigation system, where each node tracks the location not only based on its own measurements, but also via collaboration with neighbor nodes. The key problem is to design a nonlinear filter to fuse IMU and radiolocation information. We apply the Rao-Blackwellization method by using a particle filter and parallel Kalman filters for the estimation of orientation and other states (i.e., position, velocity, etc.), respectively. The proposed method significantly outperforms the extended Kalman filter (EKF) in the set of simulations here.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant ECCS-0901034)United States. Office of Naval Research (Grant N00014-11-1-0397)Defense University Research Instrumentation Program (U.S.) (Grant N00014-08-1-0826)Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologie
A smartphone localization algorithm using RSSI and inertial sensor measurement fusion
Indoor navigation using the existing wireless infrastructure and mobile devices is a very active research area. The major challenge is to leverage the extensive smartphone sensor suite to achieve location tracking with high accuracy. In this paper, we develop a navigation algorithm which fuses the WiFi received signal strength indicator (RSSI) and smartphone inertial sensor measurements. A sequential Monte Carlo filter is developed for inertial sensor based tracking, and a radiolocation algorithm is developed to infer mobile location based on RSSI measurements. The simulation results show that the proposed algorithm significantly outperforms the extended Kalman filter (EKF), and achieves competitive location accuracy compared with the round trip time (RTT) based ultra-wideband (UWB) system.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant ECCS-0901034)United States. Office of Naval Research (Grant N00014-11-1-0397)Defense University Research Instrumentation Program (U.S.) (Grant N00014-08-1-0826)Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologie
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