5,704 research outputs found
Intrinsic fluctuations in sub 10-nm double-gate MOSFETs introduced by discreteness of charge and matter
We study, using numerical simulation, the intrinsic parameter fluctuations in sub 10 nm gate length double gate MOSFETs introduced by discreteness of charge and atomicity of matter. The employed "atomistic" drift-diffusion simulation approach includes quantum corrections based on the density gradient formalism. The quantum confinement and source-to-drain tunnelling effects are carefully calibrated in respect of self-consistent Poisson-Schrodinger and nonequilibrium Green's function simulations. Various sources of intrinsic parameter fluctuations, including random discrete dopants in the source/drain regions, single dopant or charged defect state in the channel region and gate line edge roughness, are studied in detail
Critical loads for nutrient nitrogen for soil-vegetation systems
Members of the UK Critical Loads Advisory Group (CLAG) have calculated critical loads for nutrient nitrogen to produce maps for Great Britain. The results of three methods, based upon the conclusions from the Lokeberg workshop are described below. Two of these methods use the empirical approachand the other the steady state equation ("mass balance") for nitrogen saturation
Simulation of direct source-to-drain tunnelling using the density gradient formalism: Non-Equilibrium Greens Function calibration
Quantum mechanical confinement effects, gate, hand-to-hand and source-to-drain tunnelling will dramatically affect the characteristics of future generation nanometre scaled devices. It has been demonstrated already that first-order quantum corrections, which satisfactorily describe quantum confinement effects, can be introduced into efficient TCAD orientated drift-diffusion simulators using the density gradient approach. In this paper we refer to Non-Equilibrium Green's Function simulations in order to calibrate the density gradient formalism in respect of both confinement and source-to-drain tunnelling using different effective masses in directions normal and parallel to the conducting channel. We demonstrate that the density gradient formalism can describe accurately the current characteristics in sub 20 nm double gate MOSFETs
Spatio-temporal patterns of crab fisheries in the main bays of Guangdong Province, China
Using a semi-balloon otter trawl, crab fisheries in the main bays of Guangdong Province, China, were carried out seasonally . A total of 70 species were found, all belonging to the South China Sea Faunal sub region in the tropical India-West-Pacific Faunal Region. The clustering and nMDS ordination analysis revealed the existence of three groups. Group 1 included Hailing Bay and four bays to its east where typical species were Portunus sanguinolentus, P. pelagicus and Charybdis feriatus. Group 2 included Shuidong Bay and Leizhou Bay where typical species were P. sanguinolentus, P. pelagicus and P. hastatoides. Group 3 was Liusha Bay where typical species were C. feriatus, C. vadorum and C. truncate. The spatial and temporal variations of crab fisheries were mainly associated with characteristics of the sediment, seasonal changes and their own biological characteristics, but not significantly with water depth, temperature, salinity, and the “mid-summer fishing moratorium” conservation measure
General relativistic spinning fluids with a modified projection tensor
An energy-momentum tensor for general relativistic spinning fluids compatible
with Tulczyjew-type supplementary condition is derived from the variation of a
general Lagrangian with unspecified explicit form. This tensor is the sum of a
term containing the Belinfante-Rosenfeld tensor and a modified perfect-fluid
energy-momentum tensor in which the four-velocity is replaced by a unit
four-vector in the direction of fluid momentum. The equations of motion are
obtained and it is shown that they admit a Friedmann-Robertson-Walker
space-time as a solution.Comment: Submitted to General Relativity and Gravitatio
Two different network topologies yield bistability in models of mesoderm and anterior mesendoderm specification in amphibians
AbstractUnderstanding the Gene Regulatory Networks (GRNs) that underlie development is a major question for systems biology. The establishment of the germ layers is amongst the earliest events of development and has been characterised in numerous model systems. The establishment of the mesoderm is best characterised in the frog Xenopus laevis and has been well studied both experimentally and mathematically. However, the Xenopus network has significant differences from that in mouse and humans, including the presence of multiple copies of two key genes in the network, Mix and Nodal. The axolotl, a urodele amphibian, provides a model with all the benefits of amphibian embryology but crucially only a single Mix and Nodal gene required for the specification of the mesoderm. Remarkably, the number of genes within the network is not the only difference. The interaction between Mix and Brachyury, two transcription factors involved in the establishment of the endoderm and mesoderm respectively, is not conserved. While Mix represses Brachyury in Xenopus, it activates Brachyury in axolotl. Thus, whilst the topology of the networks in the two species differs, both are able to form mesoderm and endoderm in vivo. Based on current knowledge of the structure of the mesendoderm GRN we develop deterministic models that describe the time evolution of transcription factors in a single axolotl cell and compare numerical simulations with previous results from Xenopus. The models are shown to have stable steady states corresponding to mesoderm and anterior mesendoderm, with the in vitro model showing how the concentration of Activin can determine cell fate, while the in vivo model shows that β-catenin concentration can determine cell fate. Moreover, our analysis suggests that additional components must be important in the axolotl network in the specification of the full range of tissues
Generalized Parton Distributions of the Pion
Off-forward structure functions of the pion are investigated in twist-two and
twist-three approximation. A simple model is used for the pion, which allows to
introduce finite size effects, while preserving gauge invariance. Results for
the imaginary parts of the gamma^* pi -> gamma^* pi off-forward amplitude and
of the structure functions are presented. Generalized Callan-Gross relations
are obtained.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, LaTeX, uses espcrc2.sty (included), presented at
QCD03 Conference, Montpellier, France, July 200
Variations of radiocarbon in tree rings: southern hemisphere offset preliminary results
The Queen's University of Belfast, Northern Ireland and University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand radiocarbon laboratories have undertaken a series of high-precision measurements on decadal samples of dendrochronologically dated oak (Quercus patrea) and cedar (Libocedrus bidwillii) from Great Britain and New Zealand, respectively. The results show a real atmospheric offset of 3.4 ± 0.6% (27.2 ± 4.7 ¹⁴C yr) between the two locations for the interval AD 1725 to AD 1885, with the Southern Hemisphere being depleted in ¹⁴C. This result is less than the value currently used to correct Southern Hemisphere calibrations, possibly indicating a gradient in Δ¹⁴C within the Southern Hemisphere
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