4,941 research outputs found
Tunable Magnonic Thermal Hall Effect in Skyrmion Crystal Phases of Ferrimagnets
We theoretically study the thermal Hall effect by magnons in skyrmion crystal
phases of ferrimagnets in the vicinity of the angular momentum compensation
point (CP). To this end, we start by deriving the equation of motion for
magnons in the background of an arbitrary equilibrium spin texture, which gives
rise to the fictitious electromagnetic field for magnons. As the net spin
density varies, the resultant equation of motion interpolates between the
relativistic Klein-Gordon equation at CP and the nonrelativistic
Schr{\"o}dinger-like equation away from it. In skyrmion crystal phases, the
right- and the left-circularly polarized magnons with respect to the order
parameter are shown to form the Landau levels separately within the uniform
skyrmion-density approximation. For an experimental proposal, we predict that
the magnonic thermal Hall conductivity changes its sign when the ferrimagnet is
tuned across CP, providing a way to control heat flux in spin-caloritronic
devices on the one hand and a feasible way to detect CP of ferrimagnets on the
other hand.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, 2 pages of supplemental materia
Off-Farm Labor Supply Responses to Permanent and Transitory Farm Income
A sample of Iowa farm couples is used to evaluate whether off-farm labor supply decisions respond to permanent and transitory components of farm income. Off-farm labor supply of both spouses declines in response to increases in permanent farm income. Farm wives also reduce off-farm labor supply in response to positive transitory farm income shocks. Consequently, one mechanism farm households use to smooth their goods consumption when facing fluctuating farm income is to modify their consumption of leisure. Ability to smooth goods consumption does not imply the absence of liquidity constraints among farm households unless leisure consumption is also smoothed. Key Words: Frisch equations, off-farm labor, farm income, transitory shocks, permanent shocks
Analysis of adaptive algorithms for an integrated communication network
Techniques were examined that trade communication bandwidth for decreased transmission delays. When the network is lightly used, these schemes attempt to use additional network resources to decrease communication delays. As the network utilization rises, the schemes degrade gracefully, still providing service but with minimal use of the network. Because the schemes use a combination of circuit and packet switching, they should respond to variations in the types and amounts of network traffic. Also, a combination of circuit and packet switching to support the widely varying traffic demands imposed on an integrated network was investigated. The packet switched component is best suited to bursty traffic where some delays in delivery are acceptable. The circuit switched component is reserved for traffic that must meet real time constraints. Selected packet routing algorithms that might be used in an integrated network were simulated. An integrated traffic places widely varying workload demands on a network. Adaptive algorithms were identified, ones that respond to both the transient and evolutionary changes that arise in integrated networks. A new algorithm was developed, hybrid weighted routing, that adapts to workload changes
THE DETERMINANTS OF PARTICIPATION DECISION IN OFF-FARM WORK: THE IOWA CASE
This paper examines factors affecting the role of individual, farm production, family finance, and regional characteristics in affecting labor force decisions by farm households. Young, more educated households are much more likely to work off-farm, suggesting that off-farm labor has become an expected part of new farm households.Farm Management, Labor and Human Capital,
Origins of choice-related activity in mouse somatosensory cortex.
During perceptual decisions about faint or ambiguous sensory stimuli, even identical stimuli can produce different choices. Spike trains from sensory cortex neurons can predict trial-to-trial variability in choice. Choice-related spiking is widely studied as a way to link cortical activity to perception, but its origins remain unclear. Using imaging and electrophysiology, we found that mouse primary somatosensory cortex neurons showed robust choice-related activity during a tactile detection task. Spike trains from primary mechanoreceptive neurons did not predict choices about identical stimuli. Spike trains from thalamic relay neurons showed highly transient, weak choice-related activity. Intracellular recordings in cortex revealed a prolonged choice-related depolarization in most neurons that was not accounted for by feed-forward thalamic input. Top-down axons projecting from secondary to primary somatosensory cortex signaled choice. An intracellular measure of stimulus sensitivity determined which neurons converted choice-related depolarization into spiking. Our results reveal how choice-related spiking emerges across neural circuits and within single neurons
Prediction-based virtual instance migration for balanced workload in the cloud datacenters
Datacenters in the cloud today provide virtualized resources of CPU, memory, disk, and networks so that millions of users can use the services at the same time in an efficient and scalable way. One of the major challenges in these datacenters is load balancing and shifting. As a huge number of requests are sent to a particular datacenter or a group of servers are asked to process more than their fair share, some of the servers are overloaded, slowed down, hot spots are created, and even hardware failures may occur. This unbalanced load in the end deteriorates the performance of the entire system easily. In this paper, we propose a load balancer that aims at alleviating hot spots and distributing the load from overloaded servers to underutilized servers. Our load balancer monitors the loads of the servers, detects indications of overloading, then migrates virtual instances from overloaded servers to target servers. We have implemented the load balancer in a real system using the Xen hypervisor. We have also conducted an event-driven simulation to evaluate the performance of our system on a large-scale. Our results indicate that our reactive-predictive load balancing algorithm helps balance load among servers in the cloud as much as the best-case scenario from the exhaustive search with much less overhead
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Theoretical electron-impact-ionization cross section for Fe11+ forming Fe12+
We have calculated cross sections for electron impact ionization (EII) of P-like Fe11+ forming Si-like Fe12+. We have used the flexible atomic code (FAC) and a distorted-wave (DW) approximation. Particular attention has been paid to the ionization through the 3l→nl′ and 2l→nl′ excitation autoionization (EA) channels. We compare our results to previously published FAC DW results and recent experimental results. We find that the previous discrepancy between theory and experiment at the EII threshold can be accounted for by the 3l→nl′ EA channels which were not included in the earlier calculations. At higher energies the discrepancy previously seen between theory and experiment for the magnitude of the 2l→nl′ (n≥4) EA remains, though the difference has been reduced by our newer results. The resulting Maxwellian rate coefficient derived from our calculations lies within 11% of the experimentally derived rate coefficient in the temperature range where Fe11+ forms in collisional ionization equilibrium
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Fe15+ dielectronic recombination and the effects of configuration interaction between resonances with different captured electron principal quantum numbers
Dielectronic recombination (DR) of Na-like Fe15+ forming Mg-like Fe14+ via excitation of a 2l core electron has been investigated. We find that configuration interaction (CI) between DR resonances with different captured electron principal quantum numbers n can lead to a significant reduction in resonance strengths for n≥5. Previous theoretical work for this system has not considered this form of CI. Including it accounts for most of the discrepancy between previous theoretical and experimental results
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