360 research outputs found
On Possible Measurement of Gravitational Interaction Parameters on Board a Satellite
The recently suggested SEE (Satellite Energy Exchange) method of measuring
the gravitational constant , possible equivalence principle violation
(measured by the E\"{o}tv\"{o}s parameter ) and the hypothetic 5th force
parameters and on board a drag-free Earth's satellite is
discussed and further developed. Various particle trajectories near a heavy
ball are numerically simulated. Some basic sources of error are analysed. The
measurement procedure is modelled by noise insertion to a ``true''
trajectory. It is concluded that the present knowledge of (for
m) and can be improved by at least two orders of
magnitude.Comment: (only two misprints on title page) 7 page
Influence of e-e scattering on the temperature dependence of the resistance of a classical ballistic point contact in a two-dimensional electron system
We experimentally investigate the temperature (T) dependence of the
resistance of a classical ballistic point contact (PC) in a two-dimensional
electron system (2DES). The split-gate PC is realized in a high-quality
AlGaAs/GaAs heterostructure. The PC resistance is found to drop by more than
10% as T is raised from 0.5 K to 4.2 K. In the absence of a magnetic field, the
T dependence is roughly linear below 2 K and tends to saturate at higher T.
Perpendicular magnetic fields on the order of a few 10 mT suppress the
T-dependent contribution dR. This effect is more pronounced at lower
temperatures, causing a crossover to a nearly parabolic T dependence in a
magnetic field. The normalized magnetic field dependencies dR(B) permit an
empiric single parameter scaling in a wide range of PC gate voltages. These
observations give strong evidence for the influence of electron-electron (e-e)
scattering on the resistance of ballistic PCs. Our results are in qualitative
agreement with a recent theory of the e-e scattering based T dependence of the
conductance of classical ballistic PCs [ Phys. Rev. Lett. 101 216807 (2008) and
Phys. Rev. B 81 125316 (2010)].Comment: as publishe
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