2,198 research outputs found
Delayed currents and interaction effects in mesoscopic capacitors
We propose an alternative derivation for the dynamic admittance of a gated
quantum dot connected by a single-channel lead to an electron reservoir. Our
derivation, which reproduces the result of Pr\^{e}tre, Thomas, and B\"{u}ttiker
for the universal charge-relaxation resistance, shows that at low frequencies,
the current leaving the dot lags after the entering one by the Wigner-Smith
delay time. We compute the capacitance when interactions are taken into account
only on the dot within the Hartree-Fock approximation and study the
Coulomb-blockade oscillations as a function of the Fermi energy in the
reservoir. In particular we find that those oscillations disappear when the dot
is fully `open', thus we reconcile apparently conflicting previous results.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
Topological Wilson-loop area law manifested using a superposition of loops
We introduce a new topological effect involving interference of two meson
loops, manifesting a path-independent topological area dependence. The effect
also draws a connection between quark confinement, Wilson-loops and topological
interference effects. Although this is only a gedanken experiment in the
context of particle physics, such an experiment may be realized and used as a
tool to test confinement effects and phase transitions in quantum simulation of
dynamic gauge theories.Comment: Superceding arXiv:1206.2021v1 [quant-ph
Demagnetization Borne Microscale Skyrmions
Magnetic systems are an exciting realm of study that is being explored on
smaller and smaller scales. One extremely interesting magnetic state that has
gained momentum in recent years is the skyrmionic state. It is characterized by
a vortex where the edge magnetic moments point opposite to the core. Although
skyrmions have many possible realizations, in practice, creating them in a lab
is a difficult task to accomplish. In this work, new methods for skyrmion
generation and customization are suggested. Skyrmionic behavior was numerically
observed in minimally customized simulations of spheres, hemisphere,
ellipsoids, and hemi-ellipsoids, for typ- ical Cobalt parameters, in a range
from approximately 40 nm to 120 nm in diameter simply by applying a field
Using a focal-plane array to estimate antenna pointing errors
The use of extra collecting horns in the focal plane of an antenna as a means of determining the Direction of Arrival (DOA) of the signal impinging on it, provided it is within the antenna beam, is considered. Our analysis yields a relatively simple algorithm to extract the DOA from the horns' outputs. An algorithm which, in effect, measures the thermal noise of the horns' signals and determines its effect on the uncertainty of the extracted DOA parameters is developed. Both algorithms were implemented in software and tested in simulated data. Based on these tests, it is concluded that this is a viable approach to the DOA determination. Though the results obtained are of general applicability, the particular motivation for the present work is their application to the pointing of a mechanically deformed antenna. It is anticipated that the pointing algorithm developed for a deformed antenna could be obtained as a small perturbation of the algorithm developed for an undeformed antenna. In this context, it should be pointed out that, with a deformed antenna, the array of horns and its associated circuitry constitute the main part of the deformation-compensation system. In this case, the pointing system proposed may be viewed as an additional task carried out by the deformation-compensation hardware
Frequency-Domain Coherent Control of Femtosecond Two-Photon Absorption: Intermediate-Field vs. Weak-Field Regime
Coherent control of femtosecond two-photon absorption in the
intermediate-field regime is analyzed in detail in the powerful frequency
domain using an extended 4th-order perturbative description. The corresponding
absorption is coherently induced by the weak-field non-resonant two-photon
transitions as well as by four-photon transitions involving three absorbed
photons and one emitted photons. The interferences between these two groups of
transitions lead to a difference between the intermediate-field and weak-field
absorption dynamics. The corresponding interference nature (constructive or
destructive) strongly depends on the detuning direction of the pulse spectrum
from half the two-photon transition frequency. The model system of the study is
atomic sodium, for which both experimental and theoretical results are
obtained. The detailed understanding obtained here serves as a basis for
coherent control with rationally-shaped femtosecond pulses in a regime of
sizable absorption yields.Comment: 25 pages, 5 figure
Goal-conflict detection based on temporal satisfiability checking
Goal-oriented requirements engineering approaches propose capturing how a system should behave through the speci ca- tion of high-level goals, from which requirements can then be systematically derived. Goals may however admit subtle situations that make them diverge, i.e., not be satis able as a whole under speci c circumstances feasible within the domain, called boundary conditions . While previous work al- lows one to identify boundary conditions for con icting goals written in LTL, it does so through a pattern-based approach, that supports a limited set of patterns, and only produces pre-determined formulations of boundary conditions. We present a novel automated approach to compute bound- ary conditions for general classes of con icting goals expressed in LTL, using a tableaux-based LTL satis ability procedure. A tableau for an LTL formula is a nite representation of all its satisfying models, which we process to produce boundary conditions that violate the formula, indicating divergence situations. We show that our technique can automatically produce boundary conditions that are more general than those obtainable through existing previous pattern-based approaches, and can also generate boundary conditions for goals that are not captured by these patterns
Multiresolution community detection for megascale networks by information-based replica correlations
We use a Potts model community detection algorithm to accurately and
quantitatively evaluate the hierarchical or multiresolution structure of a
graph. Our multiresolution algorithm calculates correlations among multiple
copies ("replicas") of the same graph over a range of resolutions. Significant
multiresolution structures are identified by strongly correlated replicas. The
average normalized mutual information, the variation of information, and other
measures in principle give a quantitative estimate of the "best" resolutions
and indicate the relative strength of the structures in the graph. Because the
method is based on information comparisons, it can in principle be used with
any community detection model that can examine multiple resolutions. Our
approach may be extended to other optimization problems. As a local measure,
our Potts model avoids the "resolution limit" that affects other popular
models. With this model, our community detection algorithm has an accuracy that
ranks among the best of currently available methods. Using it, we can examine
graphs over 40 million nodes and more than one billion edges. We further report
that the multiresolution variant of our algorithm can solve systems of at least
200000 nodes and 10 million edges on a single processor with exceptionally high
accuracy. For typical cases, we find a super-linear scaling, O(L^{1.3}) for
community detection and O(L^{1.3} log N) for the multiresolution algorithm
where L is the number of edges and N is the number of nodes in the system.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, published version with minor change
Planar quark scattering at strong coupling and universality
We discuss scattering of fundamental matter in the planar and strong coupling
limit via the AdS/CFT correspondence, generalizing the recently proposed
calculation for adjoint matter due to Alday and Maldacena [arXiv:0705.0303].
Color decomposition of quark amplitudes is a key property allowing to repeat
the procedure in the case of fundamental matter and to derive the relation of
these strong coupling amplitudes to minimal area problems. We present the
results for two different D3-D7 systems, one is only conformal in the planar
limit and the other is exactly conformal. Our results suggest a universal
behavior of scattering amplitudes at strong coupling and planar limit (both for
gluons and quarks).Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, JHEP format. v2: added references and minor
corrections. v3: following arXiv:0710.0393 we change our claim about a
minimal surface solution without spike singularities. We make the appropriate
corrections where necessar
Enzyme dynamics during catalysis
Internal protein dynamics are intimately connected to enzymatic catalysis. However, enzyme motions linked to substrate turnover remain largely unknown. We have studied dynamics of an enzyme during catalysis at atomic resolution using nuclear magnetic resonance relaxation methods. During catalytic action of the enzyme cyclophilin A, we detect conformational fluctuations of the active site that occur on a time scale of hundreds of microseconds. The rates of conformational dynamics of the enzyme strongly correlate with the microscopic rates of substrate turnover. The present results, together with available structural data, allow a prediction of the reaction trajectory
- …