5,549 research outputs found
Sunbeam: A Ray of Hope for Trademark Licensees
In the 1985 decision Lubrizol Enterprises v. Richmond Metal Finishers, the Fourth Circuit established that a licensor’s rejection of an intellectual property license under § 365 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code terminates the licensee’s right to continue using the license. Concerned about the detrimental effects that Lubrizol would have on technological development in the United States, Congress responded swiftly by enacting the Intellectual Property Licenses in Bankruptcy Act (IPLBA), which exempted certain forms of intellectual property, such as copyrights, patents, and trade secrets, from rejection under § 365 of the Code. Trademarks, however, are notably absent from Congress’s definition of “intellectual property,” causing the trademark licensing community to question the reach of the IPLBA’s protections.
Recently, the Seventh Circuit held that a trademark licensee may continue using a licensed trademark following rejection, despite Congress’s omission of trademarks from its listed definition of “intellectual property.” This Note examines the divide between the Fourth and Seventh Circuits, and it contends that careful consideration of existing executory contract doctrine and the IPLBA’s legislative history, as well as the balance of equities, suggests that trademark licensees should retain their rights to continue utilizing licensed trademarks following rejection
Passive interferometric symmetries of multimode Gaussian pure states
As large-scale multimode Gaussian states begin to become accessible in the
laboratory, their representation and analysis become a useful topic of research
in their own right. The graphical calculus for Gaussian pure states provides
powerful tools for their representation, while this work presents a useful tool
for their analysis: passive interferometric (i.e., number-conserving)
symmetries. Here we show that these symmetries of multimode Gaussian states
simplify calculations in measurement-based quantum computing and provide
constructive tools for engineering large-scale harmonic systems with specific
physical properties, and we provide a general mathematical framework for
deriving them. Such symmetries are generated by linear combinations of
operators expressed in the Schwinger representation of U(2), called nullifiers
because the Gaussian state in question is a zero eigenstate of them. This
general framework is shown to have applications in the noise analysis of
continuous-various cluster states and is expected to have additional
applications in future work with large-scale multimode Gaussian states.Comment: v3: shorter, included additional applications, 11 pages, 7 figures.
v2: minor content revisions, additional figures and explanation, 23 pages, 18
figures. v1: 22 pages, 16 figure
Coexistence of glassy antiferromagnetism and giant magnetoresistance (GMR) in Fe/Cr multilayer structures
Using temperature-dependent magnetoresistance and magnetization measurements
on Fe/Cr multilayers that exhibit pronounced giant magnetoresistance (GMR), we
have found evidence for the presence of a glassy antiferromagnetic (GAF) phase.
This phase reflects the influence of interlayer exchange coupling (IEC) at low
temperature (T < 140K) and is characterized by a field-independent glassy
transition temperature, Tg, together with irreversible behavior having
logarithmic time dependence below a "de Almeida and Thouless" (AT) critical
field line. At room temperature, where the GMR effect is still robust, IEC
plays only a minor role, and it is the random potential variations acting on
the magnetic domains that are responsible for the antiparallel interlayer
domain alignment.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Phase diagram of hole doped two-leg Cu-O ladders
In the weak coupling limit, we establish the phase diagram of a two-leg
ladder with a unit cell containing both Cu and O atoms, as a function of
doping. We use bosonization and design a specific RG procedure to handle the
additional degrees of freedom. Significant differences are found with the
single orbital case; for purely repulsive interactions, a completely massless
quantum critical region is obtained at intermediate carrier concentrations
(well inside the bands) where the ground state consists of an incommensurate
pattern of orbital currents plus a spin density wave (SDW) structure.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted to Phys. Rev. B, Rapid Com
Bounday Condition histograms for modulated phases
Boundary conditions strongly affect the results of numerical computations for
finite size inhomogeneous or incommensurate structures. We present a method
which allows to deal with this problem, both for ground state and for critical
properties: it combines fluctuating boundary conditions and specific histogram
techniques. Our approach concerns classical systems possessing a continuous
symmetry as well as quantum systems. In particular, current-current correlation
functions, which probe large scale coherence of the states, can be accurately
evaluated. We illustrate our method on a frustrated two dimensional XY model.Comment: 31 pages, 8 figure
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