7,241 research outputs found
Effects of thermal conduction in sonoluminescence
We show by numerical hydrodynamic calculations that there are two important effects of thermal conduction in sonoluminescence: (i) the bubble remains close to being isothermal during the expansion phase; and (ii) a cold, dense layer of air is formed at the bubble wall during the contraction phase. These conclusions are not sensitive to the particular equation of state used, although details of the dynamical evolution of the bubble are
Type I superconductivity in the Dirac semimetal PdTe2
The superconductor PdTe was recently classified as a Type II Dirac
semimetal, and advocated to be an improved platform for topological
superconductivity. Here we report magnetic and transport measurements conducted
to determine the nature of the superconducting phase. Surprisingly, we find
that PdTe is a Type I superconductor with K and a critical
field mT. Our crystals also exhibit the intermediate
state as demonstrated by the differential paramagnetic effect. For we
observe superconductivity of the surface sheath. This calls for a close
examination of superconductivity in PdTe in view of the presence of
topological surface states.Comment: 5 page
State detection using coherent Raman repumping and two-color Raman transfers
We demonstrate state detection based on coherent Raman repumping and a
two-color Raman state transfer. The Raman coupling during detection selectively
eliminates unwanted dark states in the fluorescence cycle without compromising
the immunity of the desired dark state to off-resonant scattering. We
demonstrate this technique using where a combination of
Raman coupling and optical pumping leaves the
metastable state optically dark and immune to off-resonant scattering. All
other states are strongly coupled to the upper levels. We achieve a
single shot state-detection efficiency of in a
integration time, limited almost entirely by technical imperfections. Shelving
to the state before detection is performed via a two-color
Raman transfer with a fidelity of
Muon spin rotation study of the topological superconductor SrxBi2Se3
We report transverse-field (TF) muon spin rotation experiments on single
crystals of the topological superconductor SrBiSe with nominal
concentrations and ( K). The TF spectra (
mT), measured after cooling to below in field, did not show any
additional damping of the muon precession signal due to the flux line lattice
within the experimental uncertainty. This puts a lower bound on the magnetic
penetration depth m. However, when we induce disorder in
the vortex lattice by changing the magnetic field below a sizeable
damping rate is obtained for . The data provide microscopic
evidence for a superconducting volume fraction of in the
crystal and thus bulk superconductivity.Comment: 6 pages, includes 4 figure
Classification of Overlapped Audio Events Based on AT, PLSA, and the Combination of Them
Audio event classification, as an important part of Computational Auditory Scene Analysis, has attracted much attention. Currently, the classification technology is mature enough to classify isolated audio events accurately, but for overlapped audio events, it performs much worse. While in real life, most audio documents would have certain percentage of overlaps, and so the overlap classification problem is an important part of audio classification. Nowadays, the work on overlapped audio event classification is still scarce, and most existing overlap classification systems can only recognize one audio event for an overlap. In this paper, in order to deal with overlaps, we innovatively introduce the author-topic (AT) model which was first proposed for text analysis into audio classification, and innovatively combine it with PLSA (Probabilistic Latent Semantic Analysis). We propose 4 systems, i.e. AT, PLSA, AT-PLSA and PLSA-AT, to classify overlaps. The 4 proposed systems have the ability to recognize two or more audio events for an overlap. The experimental results show that the 4 systems perform well in classifying overlapped audio events, whether it is the overlap in training set or the overlap out of training set. Also they perform well in classifying isolated audio events
A Comparative Study of Current and Potential Users of Mobile Payment Services
Previous studies of mobile payment (m-payment) services have primarily focused on a single group of adopters. This study identifies the factors that influence an individual’s intention to use m-payment services and compares groups of current users (adopters) with potential users (non-adopters). A research model that reflects the behavioral intention to use m-payment services is developed and empirically tested using structural equation modeling on a data set consisting of 529 potential users and 256 current users of m-payment services in Thailand. The results show that the factors that influence current users’ intentions to use m-payment services are compatibility, subjective norms, perceived trust, and perceived cost. Subjective norms, compatibility, ease of use, and perceived risk influenced potential users’ intentions to use m-payment. Subjective norms and perceived risk had a stronger influence on potential users, while perceived cost had a stronger influence on current users, in terms of their intentions to use m-payment services. Discussions, limitations, and recommendations for future research are addressed
Kinetic modeling of electro-Fenton reaction in aqueous solution
Author name used in this publication: H. LiuAuthor name used in this publication: X. Z. LiAuthor name used in this publication: Y. J. LengAuthor name used in this publication: C. Wang2006-2007 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalAccepted ManuscriptPublishe
A high-resolution late Holocene lake isotope record from Turkey and links to North Atlantic and monsoon climate
A high resolution proxy record of precipitation and evaporation variability through the past 1700 yr from δ18O analysis of a varved lake sequence from central Turkey shows rapid shifts between dry periods (AD 300–500 and AD 1400–1950) and wetter intervals (AD 560–750 and AD 1000–1350). Changes are consistent with changes in instrumental and proxy records of the Indian monsoon, dry summers in the Eastern Mediterranean being associated with periods of enhanced monsoon rainfall. In addition major shifts in the record are coherent with changes in North Atlantic winter climate with cold, wet periods in the Alps occurring at times of dry Turkish climate
- …
