23,539 research outputs found
Did Open Solar Magnetic Field Increase during the Last 100 Years: A Reanalysis of Geomagnetic Activity
Long-term geomagnetic activity presented by the aa index has been used to
show that the heliospheric magnetic field has more than doubled during the last
100 years. However, serious concern has been raised on the long-term
consistency of the aa index and on the centennial rise of the solar magnetic
field. Here we reanalyze geomagnetic activity during the last 100 years by
calculating the recently suggested IHV (Inter-Hour Variability) index as a
measure of local geomagnetic activity for seven stations. We find that local
geomagnetic activity at all stations follows the same qualitative long-term
pattern: an increase from early 1900s to 1960, a dramatic dropout in 1960s and
a (mostly weaker) increase thereafter. Moreover, at all stations, the activity
at the end of the 20th century has a higher average level than at the beginning
of the century. This agrees with the result based on the aa index that global
geomagnetic activity, and thereby, the open solar magnetic field has indeed
increased during the last 100 years. However, quantitatively, the estimated
centennial increase varies greatly from one station to another. We find that
the relative increase is higher at the high-latitude stations and lower at the
low and mid-latitude stations. These differences may indicate that the fraction
of solar wind disturbances leading to only moderate geomagnetic activity has
increased during the studied time interval. We also show that the IHV index
needs to be corrected for the long-term change of the daily curve, and
calculate the corrected IHV values. Most dramatically, we find the centennial
increase in global geomagnetic activity was considerably smaller, only about
one half of that depicted by the aa index.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, Solar Physics, Topical Issue of Space Climate
Symposium, in prin
Multiparticle Quantum Superposition and Stimulated Entanglement by Parity Selective Amplification of Entangled States
A multiparticle quantum superposition state has been generated by a novel
phase-selective parametric amplifier of an entangled two-photon state. This
realization is expected to open a new field of investigations on the
persistence of the validity of the standard quantum theory for systems of
increasing complexity, in a quasi decoherence-free environment. Because of its
nonlocal structure the new system is expected to play a relevant role in the
modern endeavor on quantum information and in the basic physics of
entanglement.Comment: 13 pages and 3 figure
The Giant Branches of Open and Globular Clusters in the Infrared as Metallicity Indicators: A Comparison with Theory
We apply the giant branch slope-[Fe/H] relation derived by Kuchinski et al.
[AJ, 109, 1131 (1995)] to a sample of open clusters. We find that the slope of
the giant branch in K vs. (J-K) color-magnitude diagrams correlates with [Fe/H]
for open clusters as it does for metal-rich globular clusters but that the open
cluster data are systematically shifted to less negative values of giant branch
slope, at constant [Fe/H]. We use isochrone models to examine the theoretical
basis for this relationship and find that for a given value of [Fe/H], the
slope of the relationship remains constant with decreasing population age but
the relation shifts to less negative values of giant branch slope with
decreasing age. Both of these theoretical predictions agree with the trends
found in the data. Finally, we derive new coefficients for the giant branch
slope-[Fe/H] relation for specific members of 3 populations, metal-rich
globular clusters, bulge stars and open clusters.Comment: 16 pages including 3 figures (AASTEX), AJ Accepted, also available at
http://www.astronomy.ohio-state.edu/~martini/pubs.htm
Implementation of optimal phase-covariant cloning machines
The optimal phase covariant cloning machine (PQCM) broadcasts the information
associated to an input qubit into a multi-qubit systems, exploiting a partial
a-priori knowledge of the input state. This additional a priori information
leads to a higher fidelity than for the universal cloning. The present article
first analyzes different experimental schemes to implement the 1->3 PQCM. The
method is then generalized to any 1->M machine for odd value of M by a
theoretical approach based on the general angular momentum formalism. Finally
different experimental schemes based either on linear or non-linear methods and
valid for single photon polarization encoded qubits are discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Nuclear response functions with finite range Gogny force: tensor terms and instabilities
A fully-antisymmetrized random phase approximation calculation employing the
continued fraction technique is performed to study nuclear matter response
functions with the finite range Gogny force. The most commonly used parameter
sets of this force, as well as some recent generalizations that include the
tensor terms are considered and the corresponding response functions are shown.
The calculations are performed at the first and second order in the continued
fraction expansion and the explicit expressions for the second order tensor
contributions are given. Comparison between first and second order continued
fraction expansion results are provided. The differences between the responses
obtained at the two orders turn to be more pronounced for the forces including
tensor terms than for the standard Gogny ones. In the vector channels the
responses calculated with Gogny forces including tensor terms are characterized
by a large heterogeneity, reflecting the different choices for the tensor part
of the interaction. For sake of comparison the response functions obtained
considering a G-matrix based nuclear interaction are also shown. As first
application of the present calculation, the possible existence of spurious
finite-size instabilities of the Gogny forces with or without tensor terms has
been investigated. The positive conclusion is that all the Gogny forces, but
the GT2 one, are free of spurious finite-size instabilities. In perspective,
the tool developed in the present paper can be inserted in the fitting
procedure to construct new Gogny-type forces
Effect of Substrate Support on Dynamic Graphene/Metal Electrical Contacts.
Recent advances in graphene and other two-dimensional (2D) material synthesis and characterization have led to their use in emerging technologies, including flexible electronics. However, a major challenge is electrical contact stability, especially under mechanical straining or dynamic loading, which can be important for 2D material use in microelectromechanical systems. In this letter, we investigate the stability of dynamic electrical contacts at a graphene/metal interface using atomic force microscopy (AFM), under static conditions with variable normal loads and under sliding conditions with variable speeds. Our results demonstrate that contact resistance depends on the nature of the graphene support, specifically whether the graphene is free-standing or supported by a substrate, as well as on the contact load and sliding velocity. The results of the dynamic AFM experiments are corroborated by simulations, which show that the presence of a stiff substrate, increased load, and reduced sliding velocity lead to a more stable low-resistance contact
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