13,094 research outputs found
On the r-mode spectrum of relativistic stars
We present a mathematically rigorous proof that the r-mode spectrum of
relativistic stars to the rotational lowest order has a continuous part. A
rigorous definition of this spectrum is given in terms of the spectrum of a
continuous linear operator. This study verifies earlier results by Kojima
(1998) about the nature of the r-mode spectrum.Comment: 6 pages, no figure
Galileo early cruise, including Venus, first Earth, and Gaspra encounters
This article documents Deep Space Network (DSN) support for the Galileo cruise to Jupiter. The unique trajectory affords multiple encounters during this cruise phase. Each encounter had or will have unique requirements for data acquisition and DSN support configurations. An overview of the cruise and encounters through the asteroid Gaspra encounter is provided
Investigations of solutions of Einstein's field equations close to lambda-Taub-NUT
We present investigations of a class of solutions of Einstein's field
equations close to the family of lambda-Taub-NUT spacetimes. The studies are
done using a numerical code introduced by the author elsewhere. One of the main
technical complication is due to the S3-topology of the Cauchy surfaces.
Complementing these numerical results with heuristic arguments, we are able to
yield some first insights into the strong cosmic censorship issue and the
conjectures by Belinskii, Khalatnikov, and Lifschitz in this class of
spacetimes. In particular, the current investigations suggest that strong
cosmic censorship holds in this class. We further identify open issues in our
current approach and point to future research projects.Comment: 24 pages, 12 figures, uses psfrag and hyperref; replaced with
published version, only minor corrections of typos and reference
Macroscopic coherence effects in a mesoscopic system: Weak localization of thin silver films in an undergraduate lab
We present an undergraduate lab that investigates weak localization in thin
silver films. The films prepared in our lab have thickness, , between 60-200
\AA, a mesoscopic length scale. At low temperatures, the inelastic dephasing
length for electrons, , exceeds the thickness of the film (), and the films are then quasi-2D in nature. In this situation, theory
predicts specific corrections to the Drude conductivity due to coherent
interference between conducting electrons' wavefunctions, a macroscopically
observable effect known as weak localization. This correction can be destroyed
with the application of a magnetic field, and the resulting magnetoresistance
curve provides information about electron transport in the film. This lab is
suitable for Junior or Senior level students in an advanced undergraduate lab
course.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures. Replaces earlier version of paper rejected by
Am. J. Phys. because of too much content on vacuum systems. New version deals
with the undergraduate experiment on weak localization onl
Correlation between the reliability of HEMT devices and that of a combined oscillator-amplifier
We evaluate an oscillator-amplifier MMIC submitted to high-temperature operating life time tests. To relate adequately these results with individual components’ results, it is important to realise that failure mechanisms in non-linear MMICs are governed by the maximally instantaneous voltages/currents and hence that comparisons should be conducted at equal instantaneous conditions
The JKind Model Checker
JKind is an open-source industrial model checker developed by Rockwell
Collins and the University of Minnesota. JKind uses multiple parallel engines
to prove or falsify safety properties of infinite state models. It is portable,
easy to install, performance competitive with other state-of-the-art model
checkers, and has features designed to improve the results presented to users:
inductive validity cores for proofs and counterexample smoothing for test-case
generation. It serves as the back-end for various industrial applications.Comment: CAV 201
Dynamics of photoinduced Charge Density Wave-metal phase transition in K0.3MoO3
We present first systematic studies of the photoinduced phase transition from
the ground charge density wave (CDW) state to the normal metallic (M) state in
the prototype quasi-1D CDW system K0.3MoO3. Ultrafast non-thermal CDW melting
is achieved at the absorbed energy density that corresponds to the electronic
energy difference between the metallic and CDW states. The results imply that
on the sub-picosecond timescale when melting and subsequent initial recovery of
the electronic order takes place the lattice remains unperturbed.Comment: Phys. Rev. Lett., accepted for publicatio
Observation of vortices and hidden pseudogap from scanning tunneling spectroscopic studies of electron-doped cuprate superconductor
We present the first demonstration of vortices in an electron-type cuprate
superconductor, the highest (= 43 K) electron-type cuprate
. Our spatially resolved quasiparticle tunneling spectra
reveal a hidden low-energy pseudogap inside the vortex core and unconventional
spectral evolution with temperature and magnetic field. These results cannot be
easily explained by the scenario of pure superconductivity in the ground state
of high- superconductivity.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Two new graphs have been added into Figure 2.
Accepted for publication in Europhysics Letters. Corresponding author:
Nai-Chang Yeh (E-mail: [email protected]
Investigation of nonlinear absorption processes with femtosecond light pulses in lithium niobate crystals
The propagation of high-power femtosecond light pulses in lithium niobate crystals (LiNbO3) is investigated experimentally and theoretically in collinear pump-probe transmission experiments. It is found within a wide intensity range that a strong decrease of the pump transmission coefficient at wavelength 388 nm fully complies with the model of two-photon absorption; the corresponding nonlinear absorption coefficient is betap~=3.5 cm/GW. Furthermore, strong pump pulses induce a considerable absorption for the probe at 776 nm. The dependence of the probe transmission coefficient on the time delay Deltat between probe and pump pulses is characterized by a narrow dip (at Deltat~=0) and a long (on the picosecond time scale) lasting plateau. The dip is due to direct two-photon transitions involving pump and probe photons; the corresponding nonlinear absorption coefficient is betar~=0.9 cm/GW. The plateau absorption is caused by the presence of pump-excited charge carriers; the effective absorption cross section at 776 nm is sigmar~=8×10^–18 cm^2. The above nonlinear absorption parameters are not strongly polarization sensitive. No specific manifestations of the relaxation of hot carriers are found for a pulse duration of ~=0.24 ps
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