Search results for " gases"

showing 10 items of 941 documents

Trapping cold atoms using surface-grown carbon nanotubes

2008

We present a feasibility study for loading cold atomic clouds into magnetic traps created by single-wall carbon nanotubes grown directly onto dielectric surfaces. We show that atoms may be captured for experimentally sustainable nanotube currents, generating trapped clouds whose densities and lifetimes are sufficient to enable detection by simple imaging methods. This opens the way for a different type of conductor to be used in atomchips, enabling atom trapping at submicron distances, with implications for both fundamental studies and for technological applications.

Surface (mathematics)PhysicsCondensed Matter::Quantum GasesNanotubeFOS: Physical sciencesCarbon nanotubeDielectricTrappingAtomic and Molecular Physics and Opticslaw.inventionConductorCarbon nanotube quantum dotOptical properties of carbon nanotubesCondensed Matter - Other Condensed MatterlawChemical physicsAtomic and Molecular PhysicsPhysics::Atomic PhysicsAtomic physicsand Opticsatomchips carbon nanotubes ultra-cold atoms atom optics magnetic trapping decoherence trap loss Casimir-Polder Gross-PitaevskiiOther Condensed Matter (cond-mat.other)
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Modelling and simulation of several interacting cellular automata

2015

Cellular automata are used for modelling and simulation of many systems. In some applications, the system is formed by a set of subsystems that can be modelled separately, but, in such cases, the existence of interactions between these subsystems requires additional modelling and computer programming. In this paper we propose a modelling methodology for the simulation of a set of cellular automata models that interact with each other. The modelling methodology is described, together with an insight on implementation details. Also, it is applied to a particular cellular automata model, the Sanpile model, to illustrate its use and to obtain some example simulations.

Theoretical computer scienceComputer scienceAbelian sandpile modelbusiness.industryComputer programmingGeneral EngineeringVirtual realityDynamic modellingNonlinear Sciences::Cellular Automata and Lattice GasesCellular automatonComputer Science ApplicationsSet (abstract data type)Stochastic cellular automatonSimulació per ordinadorbusinessRobotsSoftware
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A Tool for Implementing and Exploring SBM Models: Universal 1D Invertible Cellular Automata

2005

The easiest form of designing Cellular Automata rules with features such as invertibility or particle conserving is to rely on a partitioning scheme, the most important of which is the 2D Margolus neighborhood. In this paper we introduce a 1D Margolus-like neighborhood that gives support to a complete set of Cellular Automata models. We present a set of models called Sliding Ball Models based on this neighborhood and capable of universal computation. We show the way of designing logic gates with these models, propose a digital structure to implement them and finally we present SBMTool, a software development system capable of working with the new models.

Theoretical computer scienceComputer sciencebusiness.industryComputationSoftware developmentNonlinear Sciences::Cellular Automata and Lattice GasesCellular automatonMobile automatonlaw.inventionStochastic cellular automatonInvertible matrixlawLogic gateArtificial intelligencebusinessQuantum cellular automaton
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Diagrammatic approach to cellular automata and the emergence of form with inner structure

2018

We present a diagrammatic method to build up sophisticated cellular automata (CAs) as models of complex physical systems. The diagrams complement the mathematical approach to CA modeling, whose details are also presented here, and allow CAs in rule space to be classified according to their hierarchy of layers. Since the method is valid for any discrete operator and only depends on the alphabet size, the resulting conclusions, of general validity, apply to CAs in any dimension or order in time, arbitrary neighborhood ranges and topology. We provide several examples of the method, illustrating how it can be applied to the mathematical modeling of the emergence of order out of disorder. Specif…

Theoretical computer scienceStructure (category theory)Physical systemFOS: Physical sciencesPattern Formation and Solitons (nlin.PS)01 natural sciences010305 fluids & plasmasOperator (computer programming)0103 physical sciences010306 general physicsTopology (chemistry)Mathematical PhysicsMathematicsComplement (set theory)Numerical AnalysisHierarchy (mathematics)Applied MathematicsCellular Automata and Lattice Gases (nlin.CG)Mathematical Physics (math-ph)Nonlinear Sciences - Pattern Formation and SolitonsCellular automatonNonlinear Sciences - Adaptation and Self-Organizing SystemsDiagrammatic reasoningModeling and SimulationAlgorithmAdaptation and Self-Organizing Systems (nlin.AO)Nonlinear Sciences - Cellular Automata and Lattice Gases
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Surface plasmon interference fringes in back-reflection

2010

We report the experimental observation of surface plasmon polariton (SPP) interference fringes with near-unity visibility and half-wavelength periodicity obtained in back reflection on a Bragg mirror. The presented method based on leakage radiation microscopy (LRM) represents an alternative solution to optical near-field analysis and opens new ways for the quantitative analysis of SPP fringes. With LRM we investigate various SPP interference patterns and analyze the high reflectivity of Bragg mirror in comparison with theoretical models.

Theoretical modelsFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and AstronomyPhysics::Optics02 engineering and technology01 natural sciencesOpticsInterference (communication)0103 physical sciencesMicroscopy010306 general physicsPhysicsCondensed Matter::Quantum Gases[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-AO-PH]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics [physics.ao-ph]business.industrySurface plasmon021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyDistributed Bragg reflectorSurface plasmon polariton[ PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-AO-PH ] Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics [physics.ao-ph]Reflection (physics)Optoelectronics0210 nano-technologybusinessPhysics - OpticsOptics (physics.optics)Localized surface plasmon
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Quantum versus Probabilistic One-Way Finite Automata with Counter

2001

The paper adds the one-counter one-way finite automaton [6] to the list of classical computing devices having quantum counterparts more powerful in some cases. Specifically, two languages are considered, the first is not recognizable by deterministic one-counter one-way finite automata, the second is not recognizable with bounded error by probabilistic one-counter one-way finite automata, but each recognizable with bounded error by a quantum one-counter one-way finite automaton. This result contrasts the case of one-way finite automata without counter, where it is known [5] that the quantum device is actually less powerful than its classical counterpart.

TheoryofComputation_COMPUTATIONBYABSTRACTDEVICESNested wordComputer scienceTimed automatonBüchi automatonω-automatonNondeterministic finite automaton with ε-movesTuring machinesymbols.namesakeDFA minimizationDeterministic automatonContinuous spatial automatonQuantum finite automataDeterministic system (philosophy)Two-way deterministic finite automatonNondeterministic finite automatonDiscrete mathematicsFinite-state machineQuantum dot cellular automatonNonlinear Sciences::Cellular Automata and Lattice GasesMobile automatonTheoryofComputation_MATHEMATICALLOGICANDFORMALLANGUAGESDeterministic finite automatonProbabilistic automatonsymbolsAutomata theoryComputer Science::Formal Languages and Automata TheoryQuantum cellular automaton
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Multiple Usage of Random Bits in Finite Automata

2012

Finite automata with random bits written on a separate 2-way readable tape can recognize languages not recognizable by probabilistic finite automata. This shows that repeated reading of random bits by finite automata can have big advantages over one-time reading of random bits.

TheoryofComputation_COMPUTATIONBYABSTRACTDEVICESNested wordFinite-state machineTheoretical computer scienceKolmogorov complexityComputer scienceω-automatonNonlinear Sciences::Cellular Automata and Lattice GasesBit fieldTuring machinesymbols.namesakeTheoryofComputation_MATHEMATICALLOGICANDFORMALLANGUAGESsymbolsQuantum finite automataAutomata theoryArithmeticComputer Science::DatabasesComputer Science::Formal Languages and Automata Theory
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Local automata and completion

1993

The problem of completing a finite automata preserving its properties is here investigated in the case of deterministic local automata. We show a decision procedure and give an algorithm which complete a deterministic local automaton (if the completion exists) with another one, having the same number of states.

TheoryofComputation_COMPUTATIONBYABSTRACTDEVICESNested wordTheoretical computer scienceComputer scienceTimed automatonω-automatonNonlinear Sciences::Cellular Automata and Lattice GasesTheoryofComputation_MATHEMATICALLOGICANDFORMALLANGUAGESDeterministic finite automatonDFA minimizationAutomata theoryQuantum finite automataNondeterministic finite automatonComputer Science::Formal Languages and Automata Theory
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Ultrametric Finite Automata and Turing Machines

2013

We introduce a notion of ultrametric automata and Turing machines using p-adic numbers to describe random branching of the process of computation. These automata have properties similar to the properties of probabilistic automata but complexity of probabilistic automata and complexity of ultrametric automata can differ very much.

TheoryofComputation_COMPUTATIONBYABSTRACTDEVICESTheoretical computer scienceComputer scienceSuper-recursive algorithmProbabilistic Turing machineDescription numberNonlinear Sciences::Cellular Automata and Lattice GasesTuring machinesymbols.namesakeTheoryofComputation_MATHEMATICALLOGICANDFORMALLANGUAGESTuring completenesssymbolsQuantum finite automataAutomata theoryTwo-way deterministic finite automatonComputer Science::Formal Languages and Automata TheoryMathematicsofComputing_DISCRETEMATHEMATICS
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Ultrametric Algorithms and Automata

2015

We introduce a notion of ultrametric automata and Turing machines using p-adic numbers to describe random branching of the process of computation. These automata have properties similar to the properties of probabilistic automata but complexity of probabilistic automata and complexity of ultrametric automata can differ very much.

TheoryofComputation_COMPUTATIONBYABSTRACTDEVICESTheoretical computer scienceFinite-state machineComputer scienceComputationStochastic matrixNonlinear Sciences::Cellular Automata and Lattice GasesAutomatonTuring machinesymbols.namesakeTheoryofComputation_MATHEMATICALLOGICANDFORMALLANGUAGESProbabilistic automatonsymbolsAutomata theoryUltrametric spaceComputer Science::Formal Languages and Automata TheoryMathematicsofComputing_DISCRETEMATHEMATICS
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