31,991 research outputs found
Suppression of the Charge-Density-Wave State in SrCaCuO by External Pressure
The influence of external pressure on the charge-density-wave (CDW) ground
state of the quasi-one-dimensional two-leg ladder compound
SrCaCuO has been studied by optical reflectivity
measurements as a function of temperature (10 - 300~K) and pressure (0.3 -
4.3~GPa) over the spectral range 580 - 6000 cm. With increasing pressure
the CDW transition temperature decreases with the linear pressure
coefficient -70~K/GPa, and above 3~GPa the CDW phase is
suppressed at all temperatures. This behavior is similar to that in compounds
SrCaCuO with increasing Ca content at ambient
pressure, with the simple scaling . The size of the
CDW gap decreases with increasing pressure, whereas the dimensionality of the
high-temperature insulating phase in SrCaCuO within
the ladder plane is hardly affected by external pressure.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
East African pholcid spiders: an overview, with descriptions of eight new species (Araneae, Pholcidae)
This paper summarizes current knowledge about East African pholcids. East Africa is defined as the area from 12°S to 5°N and from 28° to 42°E, including all of Uganda, Kenya, Burundi, Rwanda, and Tanzania. An annotated list of the 15 genera and 87 species recorded from this area is given, together with distribution maps and an identification key to genera. Most East African species (90%) belong to one of only six genera: Buitinga Huber, 2003 (21 species); Smeringopus Simon, 1890 (18); Pholcus Walckenaer, 1805 (17); Spermophora Hentz, 1841 (12); Leptopholcus Simon, 1893 (5) and Quamtana Huber, 2003 (4). Eight species for which DNA sequence data have been published recently are newly described: Buitinga batwa sp. nov., B. wataita sp. nov., Spermophora mau sp. nov., S. maathaiae sp. nov., S. bukusu sp. nov., S. kirinyaga sp. nov., S. kyambura sp. nov. and Quamtana nyahururu sp. nov. Crossopriza johncloudsleyi Deeleman-Reinhold & van Harten, 2001, previously only known from Yemen, is redescribed based on specimens from Kenya. Additional new records are given for 21 previously described species
Block-Transitive Designs in Affine Spaces
This paper deals with block-transitive - designs in affine
spaces for large , with a focus on the important index case. We
prove that there are no non-trivial 5- designs admitting a
block-transitive group of automorphisms that is of affine type. Moreover, we
show that the corresponding non-existence result holds for 4- designs,
except possibly when the group is one-dimensional affine. Our approach involves
a consideration of the finite 2-homogeneous affine permutation groups.Comment: 10 pages; to appear in: "Designs, Codes and Cryptography
WFIRST Ultra-Precise Astrometry II: Asteroseismology
WFIRST microlensing observations will return high-precision parallaxes,
sigma(pi) < 0.3 microarcsec, for the roughly 1 million stars with H<14 in its
2.8 deg^2 field toward the Galactic bulge. Combined with its 40,000 epochs of
high precision photometry (~0.7 mmag at H_vega=14 and ~0.1 mmag at H=8), this
will yield a wealth of asteroseismic data of giant stars, primarily in the
Galactic bulge but including a substantial fraction of disk stars at all
Galactocentric radii interior to the Sun. For brighter stars, the astrometric
data will yield an external check on the radii derived from the two
asteroseismic parameters, and nu_max, while for the fainter ones, it
will enable a mass measurement from the single measurable asteroseismic
parameter nu_max. Simulations based on Kepler data indicate that WFIRST will be
capable of detecting oscillations in stars from slightly less luminous than the
red clump to the tip of the red giant branch, yielding roughly 1 million
detections.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, submitted to JKA
Distribution of Complex and Core Lipids within New Hyperthermophilic Members of the Archaea Domain
Core and complex lipids of several new hyperthermophilic archaeal isolates were analyzed. The organisms belong to the Sulfolobales,Archaeoglobus, Pyrobaculum, and Methanococcus. A detailed structural investigation of complex lipids of Pyrobaculum species is reported. The different lipid structures are of help for
a rapid and simple phylogenetic classification of the new isolates. They are in agreement with the classification based on other features
Probing of valley polarization in graphene via optical second-harmonic generation
Valley polarization in graphene breaks inversion symmetry and therefore leads
to second-harmonic generation. We present a complete theory of this effect
within a single-particle approximation. It is shown that this may be a
sensitive tool to measure the valley polarization created, e.g., by polarized
light and, thus, can be used for a development of ultrafast valleytronics in
graphene.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Future neutrino oscillation facilities
The recent discovery that neutrinos have masses opens a wide new field of
experimentation. Accelerator-made neutrinos are essential in this program.
Ideas for future facilities include high intensity muon neutrino beams from
pion decay (`SuperBeam'), electron neutrino beams from nuclei decays (`Beta
Beam'), or muon and electron neutrino beams from muon decay (`Neutrino
Factory'), each associated with one or several options for detector systems.
Each option offers synergetic possibilities, e.g. some of the detectors can be
used for proton decay searches, while the Neutrino Factory is a first step
towards muon colliders.
A summary of the perceived virtues and shortcomings of the various options,
and a number of open questions are presented.Comment: Originally written for the CERN Strategy Grou
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