ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
In a two-dimensional arrangement of closely spaced elliptical nanomagnets with in-plane magnetic anisotropy, whose major axes are aligned along columns and minor axes along rows, dipole coupling will make the magnetic ordering ferromagnetic along the columns and anti-ferromagnetic along the rows. Noise and other perturbations can drive the system out of this ground state configuration and pin it in a metastable state where the magnetization orientations will not follow this pattern. Internal energy barriers, sufficiently larger than the thermal energy kT, will prevent the system from leaving the metastable state and decaying spontaneously to the ground state. These barriers can be temporarily eroded by globally straining the nanomagnets with time-varying strain if the nanomagnets are magnetostrictive, which will allow the system to return to ground state after strain is removed. This is a hardware emulation of simulated annealing in an interacting many body system. Here, we demonstrate this function experimentally.
The desire to perform information processing, computation, communication, signal generation and related tasks, while dissipating as little energy as possible, has inspired many ideas and paradigms. One of the most powerful among them is the notion of
The feasibility of reservoir computing based on dipole-coupled nanomagnets is demonstrated using micro-magnetic simulations. The reservoir consists of an 2x10 array of nanomagnets. The static-magnetization directions of the nanomagnets are used as re
Probabilistic (p-) bits implemented with low energy barrier nanomagnets (LBMs) have recently gained attention because they can be leveraged to perform some computational tasks very efficiently. Although more error-resilient than Boolean computing, p-
Context: Combinatorial interaction testing is known to be an efficient testing strategy for computing and information systems. Locating arrays are mathematical objects that are useful for this testing strategy, as they can be used as a test suite tha
We have demonstrated optical excitation and detection of collective precessional dynamics in arrays of coupled Ni80Fe20 (permalloy) nanoelements with systematically varying areal density by an all-optical time-resolved Kerr microscope. We have applie