24,108 research outputs found
Adsorption of Self-Assembled Rigid Rods on Two-Dimensional Lattices
Monte Carlo (MC) simulations have been carried out to study the adsorption on
square and triangular lattices of particles with two bonding sites that, by
decreasing temperature or increasing density, polymerize reversibly into chains
with a discrete number of allowed directions and, at the same time, undergo a
continuous isotropic-nematic (IN) transition. The process has been monitored by
following the behavior of the adsorption isotherms for different values of
lateral interaction energy/temperature. The numerical data were compared with
mean-field analytical predictions and exact functions for noninteracting and 1D
systems. The obtained results revealed the existence of three adsorption
regimes in temperature. (1) At high temperatures, above the critical one
characterizing the IN transition at full coverage Tc(\theta=1), the particles
are distributed at random on the surface and the adlayer behaves as a
noninteracting 2D system. (2) At very low temperatures, the asymmetric monomers
adsorb forming chains over almost the entire range of coverage, and the
adsorption process behaves as a 1D problem. (3) In the intermediate regime, the
system exhibits a mixed regime and the filling of the lattice proceeds
according to two different processes. In the first stage, the monomers adsorb
isotropically on the lattice until the IN transition occurs in the system and,
from this point, particles adsorb forming chains so that the adlayer behaves as
a 1D fluid. The two adsorption processes are present in the adsorption
isotherms, and a marked singularity can be observed that separates both
regimes. Thus, the adsorption isotherms appear as sensitive quantities with
respect to the IN phase transition, allowing us (i) to reproduce the phase
diagram of the system for square lattices and (ii) to obtain an accurate
determination of the phase diagram for triangular lattices.Comment: Langmuir, 201
Forecasting Agricultural Commodity Prices with Asymmetric-Error GARCH Models
The performance of a proposed asymmetric-error GARCH model is evaluated in comparison to the normal-error- and Student-t-GARCH models through three applications involving forecasts of U.S. soybean, sorghum, and wheat prices. The applications illustrate the relative advantages of the proposed model specification when the error term is asymmetrically distributed, and provide improved probabilistic forecasts for the prices of these commodities.GARCH, nonnormality, skewness, time-series forecasting, U.S. commodity prices, Demand and Price Analysis,
Diamagnetic Interactions in Disordered Suspensions of Metastable Superconducting Granules
The simulation of the transition sequence of superheated Type I
superconducting granules (SSG) in disordered suspensions when an external
magnetic field is slowly increased from zero has been studied. Simulation takes
into account diamagnetic interactions and the presence of surface defects.
Results have been obtained for the transition sequence and surface fields
distribution covering a wide range of densities. These results are compared
with previous analytical perturbative theory, which provides qualitative
information on transitions and surface magnetic fields during transitions, but
with a range of validity apparently limited to extremely dilute samples.
Simulations taking into account the complete diamagnetic interactions between
spheres appear to be a promising tool in interpreting SSG experiments, in
applications such as particle detectors, and in some fundamental calculations
of Solid State Physics.Comment: 25 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in European Physics
Journal
Mathematical Models for Estimating the Risk of vCJD Transmission
We present two different simple models for vCJD transmission by blood transfusion. Both models indicate that transfusions alone are unlikely to cause more than a few infections, unless the number of primary cases increases.
To improve our models, future work should pursue data collection, empirical estimation of the model parameters, and examination of the underlying assumptions of our frameworks.
Further improvements could also include examining susceptibility to vCJD infection by age group and iatrogenic infections introduced through surgical instruments. Regarding the latter, it may be worthwhile to conduct experiments to quantify the transmission of prions from an infected surgical instrument after repeated sterilization procedures
Semiclassical ordering in the large-N pyrochlore antiferromagnet
We study the semiclassical limit of the generalization of the
pyrochlore lattice Heisenberg antiferromagnet by expanding about the saddlepoint in powers of a generalized inverse spin. To leading order,
we write down an effective Hamiltonian as a series in loops on the lattice.
Using this as a formula for calculating the energy of any classical ground
state, we perform Monte-Carlo simulations and find a unique collinear ground
state. This state is not a ground state of linear spin-wave theory, and can
therefore not be a physical (N=1) semiclassical ground state.Comment: 4 pages, 4 eps figures; published versio
PAH Formation in O-rich Planetary Nebulae
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) have been observed in O-rich
planetary nebulae towards the Galactic Bulge. This combination of oxygen-rich
and carbon-rich material, known as dual-dust or mixed chemistry, is not
expected to be seen around such objects. We recently proposed that PAHs could
be formed from the photodissociation of CO in dense tori. In this work, using
VISIR/VLT, we spatially resolved the emission of the PAH bands and ionised
emission from the [SIV] line, confirming the presence of dense central tori in
all the observed O-rich objects. Furthermore, we show that for most of the
objects, PAHs are located at the outer edge of these dense/compact tori, while
the ionised material is mostly present in the inner parts of these tori,
consistent with our hypothesis for the formation of PAHs in these systems. The
presence of a dense torus has been strongly associated with the action of a
central binary star and, as such, the rich chemistry seen in these regions may
also be related to the formation of exoplanets in post-common-envelope binary
systems.Comment: 14, accepted for publication in the MNRAS Journa
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