3,684 research outputs found
Picosecond time-resolved pure-rotational coherent anti-Stokes Raman spectroscopy for N-2 thermometry
This paper was published in Optics Letters and is made available as an electronic reprint with the permission of OSA. The paper can be found at the following URL on the OSA website: http://www.opticsinfobase.org/abstract.cfm?URI=ol-34-23-3755. Systematic or multiple reproduction or distribution to multiple locations via electronic or other means is prohibited and is subject to penalties under law.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Query processing of spatial objects: Complexity versus Redundancy
The management of complex spatial objects in applications, such as geography and cartography,
imposes stringent new requirements on spatial database systems, in particular on efficient
query processing. As shown before, the performance of spatial query processing can be improved
by decomposing complex spatial objects into simple components. Up to now, only decomposition
techniques generating a linear number of very simple components, e.g. triangles or trapezoids, have
been considered. In this paper, we will investigate the natural trade-off between the complexity of
the components and the redundancy, i.e. the number of components, with respect to its effect on
efficient query processing. In particular, we present two new decomposition methods generating
a better balance between the complexity and the number of components than previously known
techniques. We compare these new decomposition methods to the traditional undecomposed representation
as well as to the well-known decomposition into convex polygons with respect to their
performance in spatial query processing. This comparison points out that for a wide range of query
selectivity the new decomposition techniques clearly outperform both the undecomposed representation
and the convex decomposition method. More important than the absolute gain in performance
by a factor of up to an order of magnitude is the robust performance of our new decomposition
techniques over the whole range of query selectivity
Implementation of the Backlund transformations for the Ablowitz-Ladik hierarchy
The derivation of the Backlund transformations (BTs) is a standard problem of
the theory of the integrable systems. Here, I discuss the equations describing
the BTs for the Ablowitz-Ladik hierarchy (ALH), which have been already
obtained by several authors. The main aim of this work is to solve these
equations. This can be done in the framework of the so-called functional
representation of the ALH, when an infinite number of the evolutionary
equations are replaced, using the Miwa's shifts, with a few equations linking
tau-functions with different arguments. It is shown that starting from these
equations it is possible to obtain explicit solutions of the BT equations. In
other words, the main result of this work is a presentation of the discrete BTs
as a superposition of an infinite number of evolutionary flows of the
hierarchy. These results are used to derive the superposition formulae for the
BTs as well as pure soliton solutions.Comment: 20 page
Can Hall drag be observed in Coulomb coupled quantum wells in a magnetic field?
We study the transresistivity \tensor\rho_{21} (or equivalently, the drag
rate) of two Coulomb-coupled quantum wells in the presence of a perpendicular
magnetic field, using semi-classical transport theory. Elementary arguments
seem to preclude any possibility of observation of ``Hall drag'' (i.e., a
non-zero off-diagonal component in \tensor\rho_{21}). We show that these
arguments are specious, and in fact Hall drag can be observed at sufficiently
high temperatures when the {\sl intra}layer transport time has
significant energy-dependence around the Fermi energy . The
ratio of the Hall to longitudinal transresistivities goes as , where
is the temperature, is the magnetic field, and .Comment: LaTeX, 13 pages, 2 figures (to be published in Physica Scripta, Proc.
of the 17th Nordic Semiconductor Conference
Anisotropic weakly localized transport in nitrogen-doped ultrananocrystalline diamond films
We establish the dominant effect of anisotropic weak localization (WL) in
three dimensions associated with a propagative Fermi surface, on the
conductivity correction in heavily nitrogen doped ultrananocrystalline diamond
(UNCD) films based on magneto-resistance studies at low temperatures. Also, low
temperature electrical conductivity can show weakly localized transport in 3D
combined with the effect of electron-electron interactions in these materials,
which is remarkably different from the conductivity in 2DWL or strong
localization regime. The corresponding dephasing time of electronic
wavefunctions in these systems described as ~ T^-p with p < 1, follows a
relatively weak temperature dependence compared to the generally expected
nature for bulk dirty metals having . The temperature dependence of
Hall (electron) mobility together with an enhanced electron density has been
used to interpret the unusual magneto-transport features and show delocalized
electronic transport in these n-type UNCD films, which can be described as
low-dimensional superlattice structures.Comment: 27 pages, 6 figures, To be published in Physical Review
Isovector part of nuclear energy density functional from chiral two- and three-nucleon forces
A recent calculation of the nuclear energy density functional from chiral
two- and three-nucleon forces is extended to the isovector terms pertaining to
different proton and neutron densities. An improved density-matrix expansion is
adapted to the situation of small isospin-asymmetries and used to calculate in
the Hartree-Fock approximation the density-dependent strength functions
associated with the isovector terms. The two-body interaction comprises of
long-range multi-pion exchange contributions and a set of contact terms
contributing up to fourth power in momenta. In addition, the leading order
chiral three-nucleon interaction is employed with its parameters fixed in
computations of nuclear few-body systems. With this input one finds for the
asymmetry energy of nuclear matter the value MeV,
compatible with existing semi-empirical determinations. The strength functions
of the isovector surface and spin-orbit coupling terms come out much smaller
than those of the analogous isoscalar coupling terms and in the relevant
density range one finds agreement with phenomenological Skyrme forces. The
specific isospin- and density-dependences arising from the chiral two- and
three-nucleon interactions can be explored and tested in neutron-rich systems.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, to be published in European Physical Journal
Оценка потоков тяжёлых металлов (Hg, Cd, Se, Pb) и As из атмосферы на снежный покров в окрестностях теплоэлектростанции (на примере г. Томска)
Muonium Decay
Modifications of the mu+ lifetime in matter due to muonium (M = mu+ e-)
formation and other medium effects are examined. Muonium and free mu+ decay
spectra are found to differ at O(alpha m_e/m_mu) from Doppler broadening and
O(alpha^2 m_e/m_mu) from the Coulomb bound state potential. However, both types
of corrections are shown to cancel in the total decay rate due to Lorentz and
gauge invariance respectively, leaving a very small time dilation lifetime
difference, (tau_M - tau_mu+)/tau_mu+ = alpha^2 m_e^2/ 2m_mu^2 \simeq 6\times
10^-10, as the dominant bound state effect. It is argued that other medium
effects on the stopped mu+ lifetime are similarly suppressed.Comment: 14 pages, revte
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