2,343 research outputs found
Magnetization reversal in Kagome artificial spin ice studied by first-order reversal curves
Magnetization reversal of interconnected Kagome artificial spin ice was
studied by the first-order reversal curve (FORC) technique based on the
magneto-optical Kerr effect and magnetoresistance measurements. The
magnetization reversal exhibits a distinct six-fold symmetry with the external
field orientation. When the field is parallel to one of the nano-bar branches,
the domain nucleation/propagation and annihilation processes sensitively depend
on the field cycling history and the maximum field applied. When the field is
nearly perpendicular to one of the branches, the FORC measurement reveals the
magnetic interaction between the Dirac strings and orthogonal branches during
the magnetization reversal process. Our results demonstrate that the FORC
approach provides a comprehensive framework for understanding the magnetic
interaction in the magnetization reversal processes of spin-frustrated systems
Performance Bounds and Optimization for CSI-Ratio based Bi-static Doppler Sensing in ISAC Systems
Bi-static sensing is crucial for exploring the potential of networked sensing
capabilities in integrated sensing and communications (ISAC). However, it
suffers from the challenging clock asynchronism issue. CSI ratio-based sensing
is an effective means to address the issue. Its performance bounds, particular
for Doppler sensing, have not been fully understood yet. This work endeavors to
fill the research gap. Focusing on a single dynamic path in high-SNR scenarios,
we derive the closed-form CRB. Then, through analyzing the mutual interference
between dynamic and static paths, we simplify the CRB results by deriving close
approximations, further unveiling new insights of the impact of numerous
physical parameters on Doppler sensing. Moreover, utilizing the new CRB and
analyses, we propose novel waveform optimization strategies for noise- and
interference-limited sensing scenarios, which are also empowered by closed-form
and efficient solutions. Extensive simulation results are provided to validate
the preciseness of the derived CRB results and analyses, with the aid of the
maximum-likelihood estimator. The results also demonstrate the substantial
enhanced Doppler sensing accuracy and the sensing capabilities for low-speed
target achieved by the proposed waveform design.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figures, journal pape
An Empirical Approach to the Bond Additivity Model in Quantitative Interpretation of Sum Frequency Generation Vibrational Spectra
A complete empirical approach from known Raman and IR spectra is used to make
corrections to the bond additivity model for quantitative interpretation of Sum
Frequency generation Vibrational Spectra (SFG-VS) from molecular interfaces.
This empirical correction successfully addresses the failures of the simple
bond additivity model. This empirical approach not only provides new
understandings of the effectiveness and limitations of the bond additivity
model, but also provides a practical roadmap for its application in SFG-VS
studies of molecular interfaces
"quasi-particles" in bosonization theory of interacting fermion liquids at arbitrary dimensions
Within bosonization theory we introduce in this paper a new definition of
"quasi-particles" for interacting fermions at arbitrary space dimenions. In
dimensions higher than one we show that the constructed quasi-particles are
consistent with quasi-particle descriptions in Landau Fermi liquid theory
whereas in one-dimension the quasi-particles" are non-perturbative objects
(spinons and holons) obeying fractional statistics. The more general situation
of Fermi liquids with singular Landau interaction is discussed.Comment: 10 page
DeepSeek-Coder: When the Large Language Model Meets Programming -- The Rise of Code Intelligence
The rapid development of large language models has revolutionized code
intelligence in software development. However, the predominance of
closed-source models has restricted extensive research and development. To
address this, we introduce the DeepSeek-Coder series, a range of open-source
code models with sizes from 1.3B to 33B, trained from scratch on 2 trillion
tokens. These models are pre-trained on a high-quality project-level code
corpus and employ a fill-in-the-blank task with a 16K window to enhance code
generation and infilling. Our extensive evaluations demonstrate that
DeepSeek-Coder not only achieves state-of-the-art performance among open-source
code models across multiple benchmarks but also surpasses existing
closed-source models like Codex and GPT-3.5. Furthermore, DeepSeek-Coder models
are under a permissive license that allows for both research and unrestricted
commercial use
Revealing inherent quantum interference and entanglement of a Dirac Fermion
The Dirac equation is critical to understanding the universe, and plays an
important role in technological advancements. Compared to the stationary
solution, the dynamical evolution under the Dirac Hamiltonian is less
understood, exemplified by Zitterbewegung. Although originally predicted in
relativistic quantum mechanics, Zitterbewegung can also appear in some
classical systems, which leads to the important question of whether
Zitterbewegung of Dirac Fermions is underlain by a more fundamental and
universal interference behavior without classical analogs. We here reveal such
an interference pattern in phase space, which underlies but goes beyond
Zitterbewegung, and whose nonclassicality is manifested by the negativity of
the phase-space quasiprobability distribution, and the associated
pseudospin-momentum entanglement. We confirm this discovery by numerical
simulation and an on-chip experiment, where a superconducting qubit and a
quantized microwave field respectively emulate the internal and external
degrees of freedom of a Dirac particle. The measured quasiprobability
negativities well agree with the numerical simulation. Besides being of
fundamental importance, the demonstrated nonclassical effects are useful in
quantum technology.Comment: 18 pages, 15 figure
Ultrafast control of donor-bound electron spins with single detuned optical pulses
The ability to control spins in semiconductors is important in a variety of
fields including spintronics and quantum information processing. Due to the
potentially fast dephasing times of spins in the solid state [1-3], spin
control operating on the picosecond or faster timescale may be necessary. Such
speeds, which are not possible to attain with standard electron spin resonance
(ESR) techniques based on microwave sources, can be attained with broadband
optical pulses. One promising ultrafast technique utilizes single broadband
pulses detuned from resonance in a three-level Lambda system [4]. This
attractive technique is robust against optical pulse imperfections and does not
require a fixed optical reference phase. Here we demonstrate the principle of
coherent manipulation of spins theoretically and experimentally. Using this
technique, donor-bound electron spin rotations with single-pulse areas
exceeding pi/4 and two-pulses areas exceeding pi/2 are demonstrated. We believe
the maximum pulse areas attained do not reflect a fundamental limit of the
technique and larger pulse areas could be achieved in other material systems.
This technique has applications from basic solid-state ESR spectroscopy to
arbitrary single-qubit rotations [4, 5] and bang-bang control[6] for quantum
computation.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, submitted 12/2008. Since the submission of this
work we have become aware of related work: J. Berezovsky, M. H. Mikkelsen, N.
G. Stoltz, L. A. Coldren, and D. D. Awschalom, Science 320: 349-352 (2008
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