10,788 research outputs found
Simultaneous observation of small- and large-energy-transfer electron-electron scattering in three dimensional indium oxide thick films
In three dimensional (3D) disordered metals, the electron-phonon
(\emph{e}-ph) scattering is the sole significant inelastic process. Thus the
theoretical predication concerning the electron-electron (\emph{e}-\emph{e})
scattering rate as a function of temperature in 3D
disordered metal has not been fully tested thus far, though it was proposed 40
years ago [A. Schmid, Z. Phys. \textbf{271}, 251 (1974)]. We report here the
simultaneous observation of small- and large-energy-transfer \emph{e}-\emph{e}
scattering in 3D indium oxide thick films. In temperature region of
\,K, the temperature dependence of resistivities curves of the
films obey Bloch-Gr\"{u}neisen law, indicating the films possess degenerate
semiconductor characteristics in electrical transport property. In the low
temperature regime, as a function of for each film can not
be ascribed to \emph{e}-ph scattering. To quantitatively describe the
temperature behavior of , both the 3D small- and
large-energy-transfer \emph{e}-\emph{e} scattering processes should be
considered (The small- and large-energy-transfer \emph{e}-\emph{e} scattering
rates are proportional to and , respectively). In addition, the
experimental prefactors of and are proportional to
and ( is the Fermi wave number,
is the electron elastic mean free path, and is the Fermi energy),
respectively, which are completely consistent with the theoretical
predications. Our experimental results fully demonstrate the validity of
theoretical predications concerning both small- and large-energy-transfer
\emph{e}-\emph{e} scattering rates.Comment: 5 pages and 4 figure
Distributed Flow Scheduling in an Unknown Environment
Flow scheduling tends to be one of the oldest and most stubborn problems in
networking. It becomes more crucial in the next generation network, due to fast
changing link states and tremendous cost to explore the global structure. In
such situation, distributed algorithms often dominate. In this paper, we design
a distributed virtual game to solve the flow scheduling problem and then
generalize it to situations of unknown environment, where online learning
schemes are utilized. In the virtual game, we use incentives to stimulate
selfish users to reach a Nash Equilibrium Point which is valid based on the
analysis of the `Price of Anarchy'. In the unknown-environment generalization,
our ultimate goal is the minimization of cost in the long run. In order to
achieve balance between exploration of routing cost and exploitation based on
limited information, we model this problem based on Multi-armed Bandit Scenario
and combined newly proposed DSEE with the virtual game design. Armed with these
powerful tools, we find a totally distributed algorithm to ensure the
logarithmic growing of regret with time, which is optimum in classic
Multi-armed Bandit Problem. Theoretical proof and simulation results both
affirm this claim. To our knowledge, this is the first research to combine
multi-armed bandit with distributed flow scheduling.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, conferenc
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