7,490 research outputs found
Skyrmion dynamics in a chiral magnet driven by periodically varying spin currents
In this work, we investigated the spin dynamics in a slab of chiral magnets
induced by an alternating (ac) spin current. Periodic trajectories of the
skyrmion in real space are discovered under the ac current as a result of the
Magnus and viscous forces, which originate from the Gilbert damping, the spin
transfer torque, and the -nonadiabatic torque effects. The results are
obtained by numerically solving the Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert equation and can be
explained by the Thiele equation characterizing the skyrmion core motion
Throughput and Delay Scaling in Supportive Two-Tier Networks
Consider a wireless network that has two tiers with different priorities: a
primary tier vs. a secondary tier, which is an emerging network scenario with
the advancement of cognitive radio technologies. The primary tier consists of
randomly distributed legacy nodes of density , which have an absolute
priority to access the spectrum. The secondary tier consists of randomly
distributed cognitive nodes of density with , which
can only access the spectrum opportunistically to limit the interference to the
primary tier. Based on the assumption that the secondary tier is allowed to
route the packets for the primary tier, we investigate the throughput and delay
scaling laws of the two tiers in the following two scenarios: i) the primary
and secondary nodes are all static; ii) the primary nodes are static while the
secondary nodes are mobile. With the proposed protocols for the two tiers, we
show that the primary tier can achieve a per-node throughput scaling of
in the above two scenarios. In the associated
delay analysis for the first scenario, we show that the primary tier can
achieve a delay scaling of
with . In the second scenario, with two mobility
models considered for the secondary nodes: an i.i.d. mobility model and a
random walk model, we show that the primary tier can achieve delay scaling laws
of and , respectively, where is the random walk
step size. The throughput and delay scaling laws for the secondary tier are
also established, which are the same as those for a stand-alone network.Comment: 13 pages, double-column, 6 figures, accepted for publication in JSAC
201
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