20,230 research outputs found
EffiTest: Efficient Delay Test and Statistical Prediction for Configuring Post-silicon Tunable Buffers
At nanometer manufacturing technology nodes, process variations significantly
affect circuit performance. To combat them, post- silicon clock tuning buffers
can be deployed to balance timing bud- gets of critical paths for each
individual chip after manufacturing. The challenge of this method is that path
delays should be mea- sured for each chip to configure the tuning buffers
properly. Current methods for this delay measurement rely on path-wise
frequency stepping. This strategy, however, requires too much time from ex-
pensive testers. In this paper, we propose an efficient delay test framework
(EffiTest) to solve the post-silicon testing problem by aligning path delays
using the already-existing tuning buffers in the circuit. In addition, we only
test representative paths and the delays of other paths are estimated by
statistical delay prediction. Exper- imental results demonstrate that the
proposed method can reduce the number of frequency stepping iterations by more
than 94% with only a slight yield loss.Comment: ACM/IEEE Design Automation Conference (DAC), June 201
Numerical modeling of quasiplanar giant water waves
In this work we present a further analytical development and a numerical
implementation of the recently suggested theoretical model for highly nonlinear
potential long-crested water waves, where weak three-dimensional effects are
included as small corrections to exact two-dimensional equations written in the
conformal variables [V.P. Ruban, Phys. Rev. E 71, 055303(R) (2005)]. Numerical
experiments based on this theory describe the spontaneous formation of a single
weakly three-dimensional large-amplitude wave (alternatively called freak,
killer, rogue or giant wave) on the deep water.Comment: revtex4, 8 pages, 7 figure
Spontaneous Crystallization of Skyrmions and Fractional Vortices in the Fast-rotating and Rapidly-quenched Spin-1 Bose-Einstein Condensates
We investigate the spontaneous generation of crystallized topological defects
via the combining effects of fast rotation and rapid thermal quench on the
spin-1 Bose-Einstein condensates. By solving the stochastic projected
Gross-Pitaevskii equation, we show that, when the system reaches equilibrium, a
hexagonal lattice of skyrmions, and a square lattice of half-quantized vortices
can be formed in a ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic spinor BEC, respetively,
which can be imaged by using the polarization-dependent phase-contrast method
Hybridization Mechanism for Cohesion of Cd-based Quasicrystals
Cohesion mechanism of cubic approximant crystals of newly discovered binary
quasicrystals, CdM (M=Yb and Ca), are studied theoretically. It is found
that stabilization due to alloying is obtained if M is an element with
low-lying unoccupied states. This leads to conclusion that the cohesion of
the Cd-based compounds is due to the hybridization of the states of Yb and
Ca with a wide band. %unlike known stable quasicrystals without transition
elements %such as Al-Li-Cu and Zn-Mg-RE (RE:rare earth). Although a diameter of
the Fermi sphere coincides with the strong Bragg peaks for Cd-Yb and Cd-Ca, the
Hume-Rothery mechanism does not play a principal role in the stability because
neither distinct pseudogap nor stabilization due to alloying is obtained for
isostructural Cd-Mg. In addition to the electronic origin, matching of the
atomic size is very crucial for the quasicrystal formation of the Cd-based
compounds. It is suggested that the glue atoms, which do not participate in the
icosahedral cluster, play an important role in stabilization of the compound.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Many-Body Effects on Tunneling of Electrons in Magnetic-Field-Induced Quasi One-Dimensional Electron Systems in Semiconductor Nanowhiskers
Effects of the electron-electron interaction on tunneling in a semiconductor
nanowhisker are studied in a magnetic quantum limit. We consider the system
with which bulk and edge states coexist. In bulk states, the temperature
dependence of the transmission probability is qualitatively similar to that of
a one-dimensional electron system. We investigate contributions of edge states
on transmission probability in bulk states. Those contributions can be
neglected within our approximation which takes into account only most divergent
terms at low temperatures.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Suppression of core polarization in halo nuclei
We present a microscopic study of halo nuclei, starting from the Paris and
Bonn potentials and employing a two-frequency shell model approach. It is found
that the core-polarization effect is dramatically suppressed in such nuclei.
Consequently the effective interaction for halo nucleons is almost entirely
given by the bare G-matrix alone, which presently can be evaluated with a high
degree of accuracy. The experimental pairing energies between the two halo
neutrons in He and Li nuclei are satisfactorily reproduced by our
calculation. It is suggested that the fundamental nucleon-nucleon interaction
can be probed in a clearer and more direct way in halo nuclei than in ordinary
nuclei.Comment: 11 pages, RevTex, 2 postscript figures; major revisions, matches
version to appear in Phys. Rev. Letter
Stable directions for small nonlinear Dirac standing waves
We prove that for a Dirac operator with no resonance at thresholds nor
eigenvalue at thresholds the propagator satisfies propagation and dispersive
estimates. When this linear operator has only two simple eigenvalues close
enough, we study an associated class of nonlinear Dirac equations which have
stationary solutions. As an application of our decay estimates, we show that
these solutions have stable directions which are tangent to the subspaces
associated with the continuous spectrum of the Dirac operator. This result is
the analogue, in the Dirac case, of a theorem by Tsai and Yau about the
Schr\"{o}dinger equation. To our knowledge, the present work is the first
mathematical study of the stability problem for a nonlinear Dirac equation.Comment: 62 page
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