9,337 research outputs found

    A study of Al1-xInxN growth by reflection high-energy electron diffraction-incorporation of cation atoms during molecular-beam epitaxy

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    Molecular-beam epitaxy of Al1-x Inx N alloys with different indium (In) contents, x, were studied by in situ reflection high-energy electron diffraction (RHEED). Growth rates of the alloys were measured by the RHEED intensity oscillations for different source flux conditions, while the lattice parameters were derived from the diffraction patterns. It was found that under the excess nitrogen growth regime, incorporation of aluminum was complete whereas incorporation of In atoms was incomplete even at temperatures below 400 °C. © 2008 American Institute of Physics.published_or_final_versio

    Transition between wurtzite and zinc-blende GaN: An effect of deposition condition of molecular-beam epitaxy

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    GaN exists in both wurtzite and zinc-blende phases and the growths of the two on its (0001) or (111) surfaces are achieved by choosing proper deposition conditions of molecular-beam epitaxy (MBE). At low substrate temperatures but high gallium fluxes, metastable zinc-blende GaN films are obtained, whereas at high temperatures and/or using high nitrogen fluxes, equilibrium wurtzite phase GaN epilayers resulted. This dependence of crystal structure on substrate temperature and source flux is not affected by deposition rate. Rather, the initial stage nucleation kinetics plays a primary role in determining the crystallographic structures of epitaxial GaN by MBE. © 2006 American Institute of Physics.published_or_final_versio

    Multiscale characterization of chronobiological signals based on the discrete wavelet transform

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    To compensate for the deficiency of conventional frequency-domain or time-domain analysis, this paper presents a multiscale approach to characterize the chronobiological time series (CTS) based on a discrete wavelet transform (DWT). We have shown that the local modulus maxima and zero-crossings of the wavelet coefficients at different scales give a complete characterization of rhythmic activities. We further constructed a tree scheme to represent those interacting activities across scales. Using the bandpass filter property of the DWT in the frequency domain, we also characterized the band-related activities by calculating energy in respective rhythmic bands. Moreover, since there is a fast and easily implemented algorithm for the DWT, this new approach may simplify the signal processing and provide a more efficient and complete study of the temporal-frequency dynamics of the CTS. Preliminary results are presented using the proposed method on the locomotion of mice under altered lighting conditions, verifying its competency for CTS analysis. | To compensate for the deficiency of conventional frequency-domain or time-domain analysis, this paper presents a multiscale approach to characterize the chronobiological time series (CTS) based on a discrete wavelet transform (DWT). We have shown that the local modulus maxima and zero-crossings of the wavelet coefficients at different scales give a complete characterization of rhythmic activities. We further constructed a tree scheme to represent those interacting activities across scales. Using the bandpass filter property of the DWT in the frequency domain, we also characterized the band-related activities by calculating energy in respective rhythmic bands. Moreover, since there is a fast and easily implemented algorithm for the DWT, this next approach may simplify the signal processing and provide a more efficient and complete study of the temporal-frequency dynamics of the CTS. Preliminary results are presented using the proposed method on the locomotion of mice under altered lighting conditions, verifying its competency for CTS analysis.published_or_final_versio

    Multiscale analysis of activity rhythms of animals

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    In this paper we propose a multiscale approach to analyze locomotion activity rhythms of animals. The Wavelet Transform (WT) is used to decompose the locomotion signal into different scales. An activity-section segmentation procedure is introduced to segment different scale activity sections following a strategy of from large scale to small scale with the results arranged in a tree description. Furthermore, each activity segment can be characterized by several parameters. Initial study results on mice are presented.published_or_final_versio

    A PC-based system for long-term monitoring of animal activity

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    This paper describes a PC-based animal locomotor and sound activities synchronous analysis and recording system. In the former, using video recording and image analysis techniques, the geometric locations of an animal in a cage and its bodily displacement areas between consecutive time in two-dimensions were detected. Tremendous data reduction rate has also been obtained (512×512:4), which facilitates our PC computer (Pentium 100) to perform a long-term (up to several weeks according to the space of hard disk) and on-line (1 sec) analysis and storage of the animal locomotor signals. In the latter, the sounds generated by the animal were recorded at the cage over a consecutive 1-sec time and its root mean square (RMS) value was used to index the sound level. Our preliminary study showed that such a combination of monitoring and recording system gives a faithful and comprehensive representation of animal activity.published_or_final_versio

    Estimating black hole masses of blazars

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    Estimating black hole masses of blazars is still a big challenge. Because of the contamination of jets, using the previously suggested size -- continuum luminosity relation can overestimate the broad line region (BLR) size and black hole mass for radio-loud AGNs, including blazars. We propose a new relation between the BLR size and HβH_{\beta} emission line luminosity and present evidences for using it to get more accurate black hole masses of radio-loud AGNs. For extremely radio-loud AGNs such as blazars with weak/absent emission lines, we suggest to use the fundamental plane relation of their elliptical host galaxies to estimate the central velocity dispersions and black hole masses, if their velocity dispersions are not known but the host galaxies can be mapped. The black hole masses of some well-known blazars, such as OJ 287, AO 0235+164 and 3C 66B, are obtained using these two methods and the M - σ\sigma relation. The implications of their black hole masses on other related studies are also discussed.Comment: 7 pages, invited talk presented in the workshop on Multiwavelength Variability of Blazars (Guangzhou, China, Sept. 22-24, 2010). To be published in the Journal of Astrophysics and Astronom

    Characterization of the chronobiological signals based on the continuous wavelet transform

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    Chronobiology, which studies periodic patterns or rhythms of the living beings, often needs to characterize the observed chronobiological time series (CTS) and to study the stability and adaptability of the periodic patterns in different environmental conditions. Fourier transform (FT) based methods and complex demodulation (CD) approach have been widely used in such study. However, the former lacks temporal resolution and the later needs to extract the temporal behaviors of individual frequencies. In this paper, we proposed a new approach to characterize the CTS based on the continuous wavelet transform (CWT). It allows us to investigate the time-frequency dynamics of different rhythmic-band activities in the CTS simultaneously. Two application results have been presented to illustrate the proposed method.published_or_final_versio

    The J-triplet Cooper pairing with magnetic dipolar interactions

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    Recently, cold atomic Fermi gases with the large magnetic dipolar interaction have been laser cooled down to quantum degeneracy. Different from electric-dipoles which are classic vectors, atomic magnetic dipoles are quantum-mechanical matrix operators proportional to the hyperfine-spin of atoms, thus provide rich opportunities to investigate exotic many-body physics. Furthermore, unlike anisotropic electric dipolar gases, unpolarized magnetic dipolar systems are isotropic under simultaneous spin-orbit rotation. These features give rise to a robust mechanism for a novel pairing symmetry: orbital p-wave (L=1) spin triplet (S=1) pairing with total angular momentum of the Cooper pair J=1. This pairing is markedly different from both the 3^3He-B phase in which J=0 and the 3^3He-AA phase in which JJ is not conserved. It is also different from the p-wave pairing in the single-component electric dipolar systems in which the spin degree of freedom is frozen

    The absolute position of a resonance peak

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    It is common practice in scattering theory to correlate between the position of a resonance peak in the cross section and the real part of a complex energy of a pole of the scattering amplitude. In this work we show that the resonance peak position appears at the absolute value of the pole's complex energy rather than its real part. We further demonstrate that a local theory of resonances can still be used even in cases previously thought impossible
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