1,181 research outputs found
PCV34 Evaluation of pharmacological management for type-2 diabetes post-myocardial infarction
Tàpies Puig, AntoniPla de detall de l'obra "Monument a Picasso", situat al Passeig Picasso al costat del Parc de la Ciutadella.
S'observa un cub de vidre sobre un estany,
a l'interior del qual hi ha un sofà foradat per unes llances
Anomalous Hopping Exponents of Ultrathin Films of Metals
The temperature dependence of the resistance R(T) of ultrathin
quench-condensed films of Ag, Bi, Pb and Pd has been investigated. In the most
resistive films, R(T)=Roexp(To/T)^x, where x=0.75. Surprisingly, the exponent x
was found to be constant for a wide range of Ro and To in all four materials,
possibly implying a consistent underlying conduction mechanism. The results are
discussed in terms of several different models of hopping conduction.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
q-Breathers and thermalization in acoustic chains with arbitrary nonlinearity index
Nonlinearity shapes lattice dynamics affecting vibrational spectrum,
transport and thermalization phenomena. Beside breathers and solitons one finds
the third fundamental class of nonlinear modes -- -breathers -- periodic
orbits in nonlinear lattices, exponentially localized in the reciprocal mode
space. To date, the studies of -breathers have been confined to the cubic
and quartic nonlinearity in the interaction potential. In this paper we study
the case of arbitrary nonlinearity index in an acoustic chain. We
uncover qualitative difference in the scaling of delocalization and stability
thresholds of -breathers with the system size: there exists a critical index
, below which both thresholds (in nonlinearity strength) tend to
zero, and diverge when above. We also demonstrate that this critical index
value is decisive for the presence or absense of thermalization. For a generic
interaction potential the mode space localized dynamics is determined only by
the three lowest order nonlinear terms in the power series expansion.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Tunneling through a multigrain system: deducing the sample topology from the nonlinear conductance
We study a current transport through a system of a few grains connected with
tunneling links. The exact solution is given for an arbitrarily connected
double-grain system with a shared gate in the framework of the orthodox model.
The obtained result is generalized for multigrain systems with strongly
different tunneling resistances. We analyse the large-scale nonlinear
conductance and demonstrate how the sample topology can be unambiguously
deduced from the spectroscopy pattern (differential conductance versus
gate-bias plot). We present experimental data for a multigrain sample and
reconstruct the sample topology. A simple selection rule is formulated to
distinguish samples with spectral patterns free from spurious disturbance
caused by recharging of some grains nearby. As an example, we demonstrate
experimental data with additional peaks in the spectroscopy pattern, which can
not be attributed to coupling to additional grains. The described approach can
be used to judge the sample topology when it is not guaranteed by fabrication
and direct imaging is not possible.Comment: 13 pages (including 8 figures
Electrical transport studies of quench condensed Bi films at the initial stage of film growth: Structural transition and the possible formation of electron droplets
The electrical transport properties of amorphous Bi films prepared by
sequential quench deposition have been studied in situ. A
superconductor-insulator (S-I) transition was observed as the film was made
increasingly thicker, consistent with previous studies. Unexpected behavior was
found at the initial stage of film growth, a regime not explored in detail
prior to the present work. As the temperature was lowered, a positive
temperature coefficient of resistance (dR/dT > 0) emerged, with the resistance
reaching a minimum before the dR/dT became negative again. This behavior was
accompanied by a non-linear and asymmetric I-V characteristic. As the film
became thicker, conventional variable-range hopping (VRH) was recovered. We
attribute the observed crossover in the electrical transport properties to an
amorphous to granular structural transition. The positive dR/dT found in the
amorphous phase of Bi formed at the initial stage of film growth was
qualitatively explained by the formation of metallic droplets within the
electron glass.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Anisotropic Magnetoconductance in Quench-Condensed Ultrathin Beryllium Films
Near the superconductor-insulator (S-I) transition, quench-condensed
ultrathin Be films show a large magnetoconductance which is highly anisotropic
in the direction of the applied field. Film conductance can drop as much as
seven orders of magnitude in a weak perpendicular field (< 1 T), but is
insensitive to a parallel field in the same field range. We believe that this
negative magnetoconductance is due to the field de-phasing of the
superconducting pair wavefunction. This idea enables us to extract the finite
superconducting phase coherence length in nearly superconducting films. Our
data indicate that this local phase coherence persists even in highly
insulating films in the vicinity of the S-I transition.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure RevTex, Typos Correcte
Infrared Studies of the Onset of Conductivity in Ultra-Thin Pb Films
In this paper we report the first experimental measurement of the infrared
conductivity of ultra-thin quenched-condensed Pb films. For dc sheet
resistances such that the ac conductance increases with
frequency but is in disagreement with the predictions of weak localization. We
attribute this behavior to the effects of an inhomogeneous granular structure
of these films, which is manifested at the very small probing scale of infrared
measurements. Our data are consistent with predictions of two-dimensional
percolation theory.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review Letter
Nonlinear response of a driven vibrating nanobeam in the quantum regime
We analytically investigate the nonlinear response of a damped doubly clamped
nanomechanical beam under static longitudinal compression which is excited to
transverse vibrations. Starting from a continuous elasticity model for the
beam, we consider the dynamics of the beam close to the Euler buckling
instability. There, the fundamental transverse mode dominates and a quantum
mechanical time-dependent effective single particle Hamiltonian for its
amplitude can be derived. In addition, we include the influence of a
dissipative Ohmic or super-Ohmic environment. In the rotating frame, a
Markovian master equation is derived which includes also the effect of the
time-dependent driving in a non-trivial way. The quasienergies of the pure
system show multiple avoided level crossings corresponding to multiphonon
transitions in the resonator. Around the resonances, the master equation is
solved analytically using Van Vleck perturbation theory. Their lineshapes are
calculated resulting in simple expressions. We find the general solution for
the multiple multiphonon resonances and, most interestingly, a bath-induced
transition from a resonant to an antiresonant behavior of the nonlinear
response.Comment: 25 pages, 5 figures, submitted to NJ
Electron pumping in graphene mechanical resonators
The combination of high frequency vibrations and metallic transport in
graphene makes it a unique material for nano-electromechanical devices. In this
letter, we show that graphene-based nano-electromechanical devices are
extremely well suited for charge pumping, due to the sensitivity of its
transport coefficients to perturbations in electrostatic potential and
mechanical deformations, with the potential for novel small scale devices with
useful applications
Universal Vectorial and Ultrasensitive Nanomechanical Force Field Sensor
Miniaturization of force probes into nanomechanical oscillators enables
ultrasensitive investigations of forces on dimensions smaller than their
characteristic length scale. Meanwhile it also unravels the force field
vectorial character and how its topology impacts the measurement. Here we
expose an ultrasensitive method to image 2D vectorial force fields by
optomechanically following the bidimensional Brownian motion of a singly
clamped nanowire. This novel approach relies on angular and spectral tomography
of its quasi frequency-degenerated transverse mechanical polarizations:
immersing the nanoresonator in a vectorial force field does not only shift its
eigenfrequencies but also rotate eigenmodes orientation as a nano-compass. This
universal method is employed to map a tunable electrostatic force field whose
spatial gradients can even take precedence over the intrinsic nanowire
properties. Enabling vectorial force fields imaging with demonstrated
sensitivities of attonewton variations over the nanoprobe Brownian trajectory
will have strong impact on scientific exploration at the nanoscale
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