1,411 research outputs found
On the temperature dependence of ballistic Coulomb drag in nanowires
We have investigated within the theory of Fermi liquid dependence of Coulomb
drag current in a passive quantum wire on the applied voltage across an
active wire and on the temperature for any values of . We assume
that the bottoms of the 1D minibands in both wires almost coincide with the
Fermi level. We come to conclusions that 1) within a certain temperature
interval the drag current can be a descending function of the temperature ;
2) the experimentally observed temperature dependence of the drag
current can be interpreted within the framework of Fermi liquid theory; 3) at
relatively high applied voltages the drag current as a function of the applied
voltage saturates; 4) the screening of the electron potential by metallic gate
electrodes can be of importance.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
Phonon drag in ballistic quantum wires
The acoustic phonon-mediated drag-contribution to the drag current created in
the ballistic transport regime in a one-dimensional nanowire by phonons
generated by a current-carrying ballistic channel in a nearby nanowire is
calculated. The threshold of the phonon-mediated drag current with respect to
bias or gate voltage is predicted.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Possible origin of the 0.5 plateau in the ballistic conductance of quantum point contacts
A non-equilibrium Green function formalism (NEGF) is used to study the
conductance of a side-gated quantum point contact (QPC) in the presence of
lateral spin-orbit coupling (LSOC). A small difference of bias voltage between
the two side gates (SGs) leads to an inversion asymmetry in the LSOC between
the opposite edges of the channel. In single electron modeling of transport,
this triggers a spontaneous but insignificant spin polarization in the QPC.
However, the spin polarization of the QPC is enhanced substantially when the
effect of electron-electron interaction is included. The spin polarization is
strong enough to result in the occurrence of a conductance plateau at 0.5G0 (G0
= 2e2/h) in the absence of any external magnetic field. In our simulations of a
model QPC device, the 0.5 plateau is found to be quite robust and survives up
to a temperature of 40K. The spontaneous spin polarization and the resulting
magnetization of the QPC can be reversed by flipping the polarity of the source
to drain bias or the potential difference between the two SGs. These numerical
simulations are in good agreement with recent experimental results for
side-gated QPCs made from the low band gap semiconductor InAs
An overview of the ciao multiparadigm language and program development environment and its design philosophy
We describe some of the novel aspects and motivations behind
the design and implementation of the Ciao multiparadigm programming system. An important aspect of Ciao is that it provides the programmer with a large number of useful features from different programming paradigms and styles, and that the use of each of these features can be turned on and off at will for each program module. Thus, a given module may be using e.g. higher order functions and constraints, while another module may be using objects, predicates, and concurrency. Furthermore, the language is designed to be extensible in a simple and modular way. Another important aspect of Ciao is its programming environment, which provides a powerful preprocessor (with an associated assertion language) capable of statically finding non-trivial bugs, verifying that programs comply with specifications, and performing many types of program optimizations. Such optimizations produce code that is highly competitive with other dynamic languages or, when the highest levéis of optimization are used, even that of static languages, all while retaining the interactive development environment of a dynamic language. The environment also includes a powerful auto-documenter. The paper provides an informal overview of the language and program development environment. It aims at illustrating the design philosophy rather than at being exhaustive, which would be impossible in the format of a paper, pointing instead to the existing literature on the system
Verification of Java Bytecode using Analysis and Transformation of Logic Programs
State of the art analyzers in the Logic Programming (LP) paradigm are
nowadays mature and sophisticated. They allow inferring a wide variety of
global properties including termination, bounds on resource consumption, etc.
The aim of this work is to automatically transfer the power of such analysis
tools for LP to the analysis and verification of Java bytecode (JVML). In order
to achieve our goal, we rely on well-known techniques for meta-programming and
program specialization. More precisely, we propose to partially evaluate a JVML
interpreter implemented in LP together with (an LP representation of) a JVML
program and then analyze the residual program. Interestingly, at least for the
examples we have studied, our approach produces very simple LP representations
of the original JVML programs. This can be seen as a decompilation from JVML to
high-level LP source. By reasoning about such residual programs, we can
automatically prove in the CiaoPP system some non-trivial properties of JVML
programs such as termination, run-time error freeness and infer bounds on its
resource consumption. We are not aware of any other system which is able to
verify such advanced properties of Java bytecode
Shot noise of Coulomb drag current
We work out a theory of shot noise in a special case. This is a noise of the
Coulomb drag current excited under the ballistic transport regime in a
one-dimensional nanowire by a ballistic non-Ohmic current in a nearby parallel
nanowire. We predict sharp oscillation of the noise power as a function of gate
voltage or the chemical potential of electrons. We also study dependence of the
noise on the voltage V across the driving wire. For relatively large values of
V the noise power is proportional to V^2.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
A Semantics-Based Approach to Malware Detection
Malware detection is a crucial aspect of software security. Current malware detectors work by checking for signatures, which attempt to capture the syntactic characteristics of the machine-level byte sequence of the malware. This reliance on a syntactic approach makes current detectors vulnerable to code obfuscations, increasingly used by malware writers, that alter the syntactic properties of the malware byte sequence without significantly affecting their execution behavior. This paper takes the position that the key to malware identification lies in their semantics. It proposes a semantics-based framework for reasoning about malware detectors and proving properties such as soundness and completeness of these detectors. Our approach uses a trace semantics to characterize the behavior of malware as well as that of the program being checked for infection, and uses abstract interpretation to ``hide'' irrelevant aspects of these behaviors. As a concrete application of our approach, we show that (1) standard signature matching detection schemes are generally sound but not complete, (2) the semantics-aware malware detector proposed byChristodorescu et al. is complete with respect to a number of common obfuscations used by malware writers and (3) the malware detection scheme proposed by Kinder et al. and based on standard model-checking techniques is sound in general and complete on some, but not all, obfuscations handled by the semantics-aware malware detector
Ballistic electron transport in stubbed quantum waveguides: experiment and theory
We present results of experimental and theoretical investigations of electron
transport through stub-shaped waveguides or electron stub tuners (ESTs) in the
ballistic regime. Measurements of the conductance G as a function of voltages,
applied to different gates V_i (i=bottom, top, and side) of the device, show
oscillations in the region of the first quantized plateau which we attribute to
reflection resonances. The oscillations are rather regular and almost periodic
when the height h of the EST cavity is small compared to its width. When h is
increased, the oscillations become less regular and broad depressions in G
appear. A theoretical analysis, which accounts for the electrostatic potential
formed by the gates in the cavity region, and a numerical computation of the
transmission probabilities successfully explains the experimental observations.
An important finding for real devices, defined by surface Schottky gates, is
that the resonance nima result from size quantization along the transport
direction of the EST.Comment: Text 20 pages in Latex/Revtex format, 11 Postscript figures. Phys.
Rev. B,in pres
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