10,270 research outputs found
Collective quantum phase slips in multiple nanowire junctions
Realization of robust coherent quantum phase slips represents a significant
experimental challenge. Here we propose a new design consisting of multiple
nanowire junctions to realize a phase-slip flux qubit. It admits good
tunability provided by gate voltages applied on superconducting islands
separating nanowire junctions. In addition, the gates and junctions can be
identical or distinct to each other leading to symmetric and asymmetric setups.
We find that the asymmetry can improve the performance of the proposed device,
compared with the symmetric case. In particular, it can enhance the effective
rate of collective quantum phase slips. Furthermore, we demonstrate how to
couple two such devices via a mutual inductance. This is potentially useful for
quantum gate operations. Our investigation on how symmetry in multiple nanowire
junctions affects the device performance should be useful for the application
of phase-slip flux qubits in quantum information processing and quantum
metrology.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
Observation of Exciton-Phonon Sideband in Individual Metallic Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes
Single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) are quasi-one-dimensional systems
with poor Coulomb screening and enhanced electron-phonon interaction, and are
good candidates for excitons and exciton-phonon couplings in metallic state.
Here we report back scattering reflection experiments on individual metallic
SWCNTs. An exciton-phonon sideband separated by 0.19 eV from the first optical
transition peak is observed in a metallic SWCNT of chiral index (13,10), which
provides clear evidences of excitons in metallic SWCNTs. A static dielectric
constant of 10 is estimated from the reflectance spectrum.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; typos corrected, references updated, text
re-arrange
Is hyperuricemia an independent risk factor for new-onset chronic kidney disease?: a systematic review and meta-analysis based on observational cohort studies
This article discusses the role of interrogation in intelligence during the Second World War, and it focuses on the importance of culture in the collection of Human Intelligence in the European theatre of operation. It argues that cultural issues, including but not limited to language knowledge, provided an added value to interrogation, interviewing and questioning during and after the Second World War, for example through the employment of native speakers, in particular former refugees and enemy aliens. The article also highlights some of the flaws involved in this process, which led to bad prisoner handling and therefore bad intelligence collection. It also tries to complement archival sources with personal accounts and oral histories in order to achieve a deeper understanding of the role of the human being in the collection of intelligence through interrogation and questioning
Realization of Zero-Refractive-Index Lens with Ultralow Spherical Aberration
Optical complex materials offer unprecedented opportunity to engineer
fundamental band dispersion which enables novel optoelectronic functionality
and devices. Exploration of photonic Dirac cone at the center of momentum space
has inspired an exceptional characteristic of zero-index, which is similar to
zero effective mass in fermionic Dirac systems. Such all-dielectric zero-index
photonic crystals provide an in-plane mechanism such that the energy of the
propagating waves can be well confined along the chip direction. A
straightforward example is to achieve the anomalous focusing effect without
longitudinal spherical aberration, when the size of zero-index lens is large
enough. Here, we designed and fabricated a prototype of zero-refractive-index
lens by comprising large-area silicon nanopillar array with plane-concave
profile. Near-zero refractive index was quantitatively measured near 1.55 um
through anomalous focusing effect, predictable by effective medium theory. The
zero-index lens was also demonstrated to perform ultralow longitudinal
spherical aberration. Such IC compatible device provides a new route to
integrate all-silicon zero-index materials into optical communication, sensing,
and modulation, and to study fundamental physics on the emergent fields of
topological photonics and valley photonics.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Silicon nitride metalenses for unpolarized high-NA visible imaging
As one of nanoscale planar structures, metasurface has shown excellent
superiorities on manipulating light intensity, phase and/or polarization with
specially designed nanoposts pattern. It allows to miniature a bulky optical
lens into the chip-size metalens with wavelength-order thickness, playing an
unprecedented role in visible imaging systems (e.g. ultrawide-angle lens and
telephoto). However, a CMOS-compatible metalens has yet to be achieved in the
visible region due to the limitation on material properties such as
transmission and compatibility. Here, we experimentally demonstrate a divergent
metalens based on silicon nitride platform with large numerical aperture
(NA~0.98) and high transmission (~0.8) for unpolarized visible light,
fabricated by a 695-nm-thick hexagonal silicon nitride array with a minimum
space of 42 nm between adjacent nanoposts. Nearly diffraction-limit virtual
focus spots are achieved within the visible region. Such metalens enables to
shrink objects into a micro-scale size field of view as small as a single-mode
fiber core. Furthermore, a macroscopic metalens with 1-cm-diameter is also
realized including over half billion nanoposts, showing a potential application
of wide viewing-angle functionality. Thanks to the high-transmission and
CMOS-compatibility of silicon nitride, our findings may open a new door for the
miniaturization of optical lenses in the fields of optical fibers,
microendoscopes, smart phones, aerial cameras, beam shaping, and other
integrated on-chip devices.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figure
Stochastic Fractal Based Multiobjective Fruit Fly Optimization
The fruit fly optimization algorithm (FOA) is a global optimization algorithm inspired by the foraging behavior of a fruit fly swarm. In this study, a novel stochastic fractal model based fruit fly optimization algorithm is proposed for multiobjective optimization. A food source generating method based on a stochastic fractal with an adaptive parameter updating strategy is introduced to improve the convergence performance of the fruit fly optimization algorithm. To deal with multiobjective optimization problems, the Pareto domination concept is integrated into the selection process of fruit fly optimization and a novel multiobjective fruit fly optimization algorithm is then developed. Similarly to most of other multiobjective evolutionary algorithms (MOEAs), an external elitist archive is utilized to preserve the nondominated solutions found so far during the evolution, and a normalized nearest neighbor distance based density estimation strategy is adopted to keep the diversity of the external elitist archive. Eighteen benchmarks are used to test the performance of the stochastic fractal based multiobjective fruit fly optimization algorithm (SFMOFOA). Numerical results show that the SFMOFOA is able to well converge to the Pareto fronts of the test benchmarks with good distributions. Compared with four state-of-the-art methods, namely, the non-dominated sorting generic algorithm (NSGA-II), the strength Pareto evolutionary algorithm (SPEA2), multi-objective particle swarm optimization (MOPSO), and multiobjective self-adaptive differential evolution (MOSADE), the proposed SFMOFOA has better or competitive multiobjective optimization performance
LRRK2 A419V is not associated with Parkinson's disease in different Chinese populations
10.1371/journal.pone.0036123PLoS ONE77
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