Search results for "Domain"

showing 10 items of 2485 documents

Fundamental Noise Limits and Sensitivity of Piezoelectrically Driven Magnetoelastic Cantilevers

2020

International audience; Magnetoelastic sensors for the detection of low-frequency and low-amplitude magnetic fields are in the focus of research for more than 30 years. In order to minimize the limit of detection (LOD) of such sensor systems, it is of high importance to understand and to be able to quantify the relevant noise sources. In this contribution, cantilever-type electromechanical and magnetoelastic resonators, respectively, are comprehensively investigated and mathematically described not only with regard to their phase sensitivity but especially to the extent of the sensor-intrinsic phase noise. Both measurements and calculations reveal that the fundamental LOD is limited by addi…

010302 applied physicsPhysics[SPI.OTHER]Engineering Sciences [physics]/OtherCantileverMagnetic domainMechanical EngineeringAcousticsMagnetostriction02 engineering and technology021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesMagnetic fieldVibrationResonatorMagnet0103 physical sciencesPhase noiseElectrical and Electronic Engineering0210 nano-technology
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Localized domain wall nucleation dynamics in asymmetric ferromagnetic rings revealed by direct time-resolved magnetic imaging

2016

We report time-resolved observations of field-induced domain wall nucleation in asymmetric ferromagnetic rings using single direction field pulses and rotating fields. We show that the asymmetric geometry of a ring allows for controlling the position of nucleation events, when a domain wall is nucleated by a rotating magnetic field. Direct observation by scanning transmission x-ray microscopy (STXM) reveals that the nucleation of domain walls occurs through the creation of transient ripplelike structures. This magnetization state is found to exhibit a surprisingly high reproducibility even at room temperature and we determine the combinations of field strengths and field directions that all…

010302 applied physicsRotating magnetic fieldMaterials scienceField (physics)SpintronicsCondensed matter physicsNucleation01 natural sciencesMagnetizationDomain wall (magnetism)Ferromagnetism0103 physical sciencesDomain (ring theory)010306 general physicsPhysical Review B
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Addressing Manufacturing Challenges with Cost-Efficient Fault Tolerant Routing

2010

The high-performance computing domain is enriching with the inclusion of Networks-on-chip (NoCs) as a key component of many-core (CMPs or MPSoCs) architectures. NoCs face the communication scalability challenge while meeting tight power, area and latency constraints. Designers must address new challenges that were not present before. Defective components, the enhancement of application-level parallelism or power-aware techniques may break topology regularity, thus, efficient routing becomes a challenge.In this paper, uLBDR (Universal Logic-Based Distributed Routing) is proposed as an efficient logic-based mechanism that adapts to any irregular topology derived from 2D meshes, being an alter…

010302 applied physicsStatic routingDynamic Source Routingnetwork on chip; routing; manufacturing faultComputer sciencebusiness.industryRouting tableDistributed computingPolicy-based routing02 engineering and technology01 natural sciences020202 computer hardware & architecturenetwork on chipRouting domainLink-state routing protocolrouting0103 physical sciencesMultipath routing0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringmanufacturing faultbusinessHierarchical routingComputer network
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Diagrammatic Expansion for Positive Spectral Functions in the Steady-State Limit

2019

Recently, a method was presented for constructing self-energies within many-body perturbation theory that are guaranteed to produce a positive spectral function for equilibrium systems, by representing the self-energy as a product of half-diagrams on the forward and backward branches of the Keldysh contour. We derive an alternative half-diagram representation that is based on products of retarded diagrams. Our approach extends the method to systems out of equilibrium. When a steady-state limit exists, we show that our approach yields a positive definite spectral function in the frequency domain.

010302 applied physicsSteady state (electronics)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)non-equilibrium Green's functionsFOS: Physical sciences02 engineering and technologyPositive-definite matrix021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCondensed Matter Physics01 natural sciencesElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsDiagrammatic reasoningspectral propertiesFrequency domainProduct (mathematics)0103 physical sciencesApplied mathematicsLimit (mathematics)Perturbation theory (quantum mechanics)0210 nano-technologyRepresentation (mathematics)kvanttifysiikkaCondensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsMathematicsperturbation theory
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Effect of surface disorder on the domain structure of PLZT ceramics

2017

ABSTRACTPb1-xLax(Zr0.65Ti0.35)1-x/4O3 (PLZT x/65/35) ceramics were studied by Piezoresponse Force Microscopy in order to understand the origin of domain structure as a function of La content. We show that the domain topology is mainly determined by the composition and grain size. The characteristic correlation length decreases with increasing La content, being sensitive also to the synthesis method. The behavior of the correlation length is linked to the macroscopic properties, showing a strong increase of disorder with La doping. The roughness exponent for the domain wall in PLZT 9/65/35 is close to 2/3 indicating 1D character of domain walls in relaxors.

010302 applied physicsSurface (mathematics)Materials scienceCondensed matter physicsDoping02 engineering and technology021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCondensed Matter Physics01 natural sciencesGrain sizeElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsDomain wall (magnetism)Piezoresponse force microscopyvisual_art0103 physical sciencesDomain (ring theory)Roughness exponentvisual_art.visual_art_mediumCeramic0210 nano-technologyFerroelectrics
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Heavy enzymes and the rational redesign of protein catalysts

2019

Abstract An unsolved mystery in biology concerns the link between enzyme catalysis and protein motions. Comparison between isotopically labelled “heavy” dihydrofolate reductases and their natural‐abundance counterparts has suggested that the coupling of protein motions to the chemistry of the catalysed reaction is minimised in the case of hydride transfer. In alcohol dehydrogenases, unnatural, bulky substrates that induce additional electrostatic rearrangements of the active site enhance coupled motions. This finding could provide a new route to engineering enzymes with altered substrate specificity, because amino acid residues responsible for dynamic coupling with a given substrate present…

010402 general chemistryProtein Engineering01 natural sciencesBiochemistryCatalysisEnzyme catalysisisotope effectsCatalytic DomainDihydrofolate reductaseMolecular BiologyAlcohol dehydrogenasechemistry.chemical_classificationalcohol dehydrogenasesCarbon Isotopesdihydrofolate reductasesbiologyBacteriaNitrogen Isotopes010405 organic chemistryConceptOrganic ChemistryAlcohol DehydrogenaseActive siteSubstrate (chemistry)Protein engineeringDeuteriumCombinatorial chemistrymolecular dynamics0104 chemical sciencesKineticsTetrahydrofolate Dehydrogenaseenzyme engineeringEnzymechemistrybiology.proteinBiocatalysisMolecular MedicineConcepts
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Controlled time integration for the numerical simulation of meteor radar reflections

2016

We model meteoroids entering the Earth[U+05F3]s atmosphere as objects surrounded by non-magnetized plasma, and consider efficient numerical simulation of radar reflections from meteors in the time domain. Instead of the widely used finite difference time domain method (FDTD), we use more generalized finite differences by applying the discrete exterior calculus (DEC) and non-uniform leapfrog-style time discretization. The computational domain is presented by convex polyhedral elements. The convergence of the time integration is accelerated by the exact controllability method. The numerical experiments show that our code is efficiently parallelized. The DEC approach is compared to the volume …

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesComputer scienceMETEORPLASMATIC OBJECTSRADAR REFLECTIONS01 natural sciencesplasmatic objectslaw.inventionINTEGRAL EQUATIONSlawRadar010303 astronomy & astrophysicsSpectroscopyEARTH ATMOSPHEREvolume integral equationRadiationPLASMANUMERICAL MODELSMathematical analysisFinite differenceNUMERICAL METHODMETEORSAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsCALCULATIONSControllabilityDISCRETE EXTERIOR CALCULUSAstrophysics::Earth and Planetary AstrophysicsMAGNETOPLASMADiscretizationRADAR REFLECTIONTIME DOMAIN ANALYSISVOLUME INTEGRAL EQUATIONdiscrete exterior calculusELECTROMAGNETIC SCATTERINGOpticsFINITE DIFFERENCE TIME DOMAIN METHOD0103 physical sciencesSCATTERINGTime domainmeteorsNUMERICAL METHODS0105 earth and related environmental sciencesta113ta114Computer simulationbusiness.industryta111Finite-difference time-domain methodRADARDiscrete exterior calculuselectromagnetic scatteringradar reflectionsELECTROMAGNETIC METHODmeteoritbusinessJournal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer
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Environmental change during the Early Cretaceous in the Purbeck-type Durlston Bay section (Dorset, Southern England): a biomarker approach.

2007

20 pages; International audience; The Purbeck-type section (Durlston Bay, Dorset, UK) exhibits littoral lagoonal to lacustrine facies. It shows a gradual climatic/environmental change from semi-arid conditions associated with evaporites at the Jurassic–Cretaceous transition, to a more humid climate at the end of the Berriasian. Though generally organic-poor (total organic carbon, TOC, <1.3%), the Durlston Bay section shows an organic-rich episode (TOC up to 8.5%) located at the transition from evaporitic to more humid facies. A biomarker study was performed in order to determine the origin of the organic matter (OM) in the section and see if changes in organic sources accompanied the genera…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesEnvironmental change[SDE.MCG]Environmental Sciences/Global ChangesBotryococcus010502 geochemistry & geophysics[ SDU.STU.ST ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Stratigraphy01 natural sciences[ SDE.MCG.CPE ] Environmental Sciences/Global Changes/domain_sde.mcg.cpeBottom waterSteranechemistry.chemical_compoundGeochemistry and Petrology[SDU.STU.GC]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Geochemistry0105 earth and related environmental sciencesTotal organic carbonbiologyEcology15. Life on landbiology.organism_classification[SDE.MCG.CPE]Environmental Sciences/Global Changes/domain_sde.mcg.cpe[ SDU.STU.GC ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Geochemistry6. Clean waterCretaceousPalynofacies[ SDE.MCG ] Environmental Sciences/Global Changeschemistry13. Climate action[SDU.STU.ST]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/StratigraphyBayGeology
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Validation of SMAP surface soil moisture products with core validation sites

2017

Abstract The NASA Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) mission has utilized a set of core validation sites as the primary methodology in assessing the soil moisture retrieval algorithm performance. Those sites provide well-calibrated in situ soil moisture measurements within SMAP product grid pixels for diverse conditions and locations. The estimation of the average soil moisture within the SMAP product grid pixels based on in situ measurements is more reliable when location specific calibration of the sensors has been performed and there is adequate replication over the spatial domain, with an up-scaling function based on analysis using independent estimates of the soil moisture distributio…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesMean squared error0211 other engineering and technologiesSoil Science02 engineering and technology01 natural scienceslaw.inventionlawValidationCalibrationComputers in Earth SciencesRadarSpatial domainWater content021101 geological & geomatics engineering0105 earth and related environmental sciencesRemote sensingRadiometerPixelGeologySMAP22/4 OA procedureITC-ISI-JOURNAL-ARTICLEEnvironmental scienceSatelliteSoil moisture
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Phanerozoic geological evolution of Northern and Central Africa: An overview.

2005

61 pages; International audience; The principal paleogeographic characteristics of North and Central Africa during the Paleozoic were the permanency of large exposed lands over central Africa, surrounded by northerly and northwesterly dipping pediplanes episodically flooded by epicontinental seas related to the Paleotethys Ocean. The intra-continental Congo–Zaire Basin was also a long-lived feature, as well as the Somali Basin from Late Carboniferous times, in conjunction with the development of the Karoo basins of southern Africa. This configuration, in combination with eustatic sea-level fluctuations, had a strong influence on facies distributions. Significant transgressions occurred duri…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesPaleozoicPhanerozoicInversion (geology)Northeastern Africa010502 geochemistry & geophysics[ SDU.STU.ST ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Stratigraphy01 natural sciencesDevonianPaleontologyPassive margin[ SDE.MCG.CG ] Environmental Sciences/Global Changes/domain_sde.mcg.cg14. Life underwaterNorthern AfricaWestern Africa0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface Processes[SDU.STU.TE]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/TectonicsgeographyNeotethysgeography.geographical_feature_categoryRiftCentral AfricaRiftingArabiaTectonicsInversionMagmatismGeologyOrogeny[ SDU.STU.TE ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/TectonicsCraton13. Climate action[SDU.STU.ST]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/StratigraphyPaleogeographyOrdovicianPaleotethysGeology
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