11,500 research outputs found
On Value and Criteria: Mihail M. Cernea, a Sociologist with Universal Impact
The recent election of members to our National Academy, the Academia Romana, is a good opportunity for our broader scientific community, as well as for the public at large, to get to know more about scholars whom they perhaps know too little, although these scholars occupy an important position in the science both in our country and in the world. This brief essay is about one prominent scholar elected now as full member of our Academy, the sociologist Michael Cernea. But even more, through this essay's "case in point" I want to address a key broader topic that concerns me, and is now discussed frequently
Rotation numbers of invariant manifolds around unstable periodic orbits for the diamagnetic Kepler problem
In this paper, a method to construct topological template in terms of
symbolic dynamics for the diamagnetic Kepler problem is proposed. To confirm
the topological template, rotation numbers of invariant manifolds around
unstable periodic orbits in a phase space are taken as an object of comparison.
The rotation numbers are determined from the definition and connected with
symbolic sequences encoding the periodic orbits in a reduced Poincar\'e
section. Only symbolic codes with inverse ordering in the forward mapping can
contribute to the rotation of invariant manifolds around the periodic orbits.
By using symbolic ordering, the reduced Poincar\'e section is constricted along
stable manifolds and a topological template, which preserves the ordering of
forward sequences and can be used to extract the rotation numbers, is
established. The rotation numbers computed from the topological template are
the same as those computed from their original definition.Comment: 8 figures, 1 tabl
Electrically controllable surface magnetism on the surface of topological insulator
We study theoretically the RKKY interaction between magnetic impurities on
the surface of three-dimensional topological insulators, mediated by the
helical Dirac electrons. Exact analytical expression shows that the RKKY
interaction consists of the Heisenberg-like, Ising-like and DM-like terms. It
provides us a new way to control surface magnetism electrically. The gap opened
by doped magnetic ions can lead to a short-range Bloembergen-Rowland
interaction. The competition among the Heisenberg, Ising and DM terms leads to
rich spin configurations and anomalous Hall effect on different lattices.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Nuclear tunneling effects of charge transport in rubrene, tetracene, and pentacene
The mechanism of charge transport in organic materials is still controversial from both experimental and theoretical perspectives. At room temperature, molecular deformations interact strongly with the charge carrier both through intermolecular and intramolecular phonons, suggesting a thermally activated hopping mechanism as described by the Marcus electron transfer theory. However, several experimental measurements have indicated that the electronic transport behaves in a "bandlike" manner, as indicated by a decrease in mobility with increasing temperature, in contradiction to the Marcus description. Bandlike first-principles calculations based on the Holstein-Peierls model tend to overestimate the charge mobility by about 2 orders of magnitude. Here, a hopping model is derived that not only quantitatively describes the charge mobility but also explains the observed bandlike behavior. This model uses the quantum version of charge-transfer theory coupled with a random-walk simulation of charge diffusion. The results bridge the gap between the two extreme mechanisms. This first-principles method predicts the room-temperature hole mobilities to be 2.4, 2.0, and 0.67 cm(2)/V s, for rubrene, pentacene, and tetracene, respectively, in good agreement with experiment
Spin-polarized transport in a lateral two-dimensional diluted magnetic semiconductor electron gas
The transport property of a lateral two-dimensional diluted magnetic
semiconductor electron gas under a spatially periodic magnetic field is
investigated theoretically. We find that the electron Fermi velocity along the
modulation direction is highly spin-dependent even if the spin polarization of
the carrier population is negligibly small. It turns out that this
spin-polarized Fermi velocity alone can lead to a strong spin polarization of
the current, which is still robust against the energy broadening effect induced
by the impurity scattering.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Appl. Phys. Let
Streamline topology and dilute particle dynamics in a Karman vortex street flow
Three types of streamline topology in a Karman vortex street flow are shown
under the variation of spatial parameters. For the motion of dilute particles
in the K\'arm\'an vortex street flow, there exist a route of bifurcation to a
chaotic orbit and more attractors in a bifurcation diagram for the proportion
of particle density to fluid density. Along with the increase of spatial
parameters in the flow filed, the bifurcation process is suspended, as well as
more and more attractors emerge. In the motion of dilute particles, a drag term
and gravity term dominate and result in the bifurcation phenomenon.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figure
Magnetic coupling properties of rare-earth metals (Gd, Nd) doped ZnO: first-principles calculations
The electronic structure and magnetic coupling properties of rare-earth
metals (Gd, Nd) doped ZnO have been investigated using first-principles
methods. We show that the magnetic coupling between Gd or Nd ions in the
nearest neighbor sites is ferromagnetic. The stability of the ferromagnetic
coupling between Gd ions can be enhanced by appropriate electron doping into
ZnO:Gd system and the room-temperature ferromagnetism can be achieved. However,
for ZnO:Nd system, the ferromagnetism between Nd ions can be enhanced by
appropriate holes doping into the sample. The room-temperature ferromagnetism
can also be achieved in the \emph{n}-conducting ZnO:Nd sample. Our calculated
results are in good agreement with the conclusions of the recent experiments.
The effect of native defects (V, V) on the
ferromagnetism is also discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Superconductivity in iron telluride thin films under tensile stress
By realizing in thin films a tensile stress state, superconductivity of 13 K
was introduced into FeTe, an non-superconducting parent compound of the iron
pnictides and chalcogenides, with transition temperature higher than that of
its superconducting isostructural counterpart FeSe. For these tensile stressed
films, the superconductivity is accompanied by the softening of the first-order
magnetic and structural phase transition; and also, the in-plane extension and
out-of-plane contraction are universal in all FeTe films independent of sign of
lattice mismatch, either positive or negative. Moreover, the correlations were
found exist between the transition temperatures and the tetrahedra bond angles
in these thin films.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted by Physical Review Letter
Electrically-controllable RKKY interaction in semiconductor quantum wires
We demonstrate in theory that it is possible to all-electrically manipulate
the RKKY interaction in a quasi-one-dimensional electron gas embedded in a
semiconductor heterostructure, in the presence of Rashba and Dresselhaus
spin-orbit interaction. In an undoped semiconductor quantum wire where
intermediate excitations are gapped, the interaction becomes the short-ranged
Bloembergen-Rowland super-exchange interaction. Owing to the interplay of
different types of spin-orbit interaction, the interaction can be controlled to
realize various spin models, e.g., isotropic and anisotropic Heisenberg-like
models, Ising-like models with additional Dzyaloshinsky-Moriya terms, by tuning
the external electric field and designing the crystallographic directions. Such
controllable interaction forms a basis for quantum computing with localized
spins and quantum matters in spin lattices.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Population status, threats and conservation of the Yangtze finless porpoise
The Yangtze finless porpoise (Neophocaena phocaenoides asiaeorientalis) is currently limited to the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River from Yichang to Shanghai, China, and the adjoining Poyang and Dongting Lakes. Its population size has decreased remarkably during the last several decades due to the heavy impact of human activities, including overfishing of prey species, water development projects that cause attendant habitat loss and degradation, water pollution, and accidental deaths caused by harmful fishing gear and collisions with motorized vessels. It was estimated that the number of remaining individuals was down to approximately 1800 in 2006, a number that is decreasing at a rate as high as 5% per year. Three conservation measures - in situ and ex situ conservation and captive breeding have been applied to the protection of this unique porpoise since the early 1990s. Seven natural and two "semi-natural" reserves have so far been established. Since 1996, a small group of finless porpoises has been successfully reared in a facility at the Institute of Hydrobiology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences; three babies were born in captivity on July 5, 2005, June 2, 2007 and July 5, 2008. These are the first freshwater cetaceans ever born in captivity in the world. Several groups of these porpoises caught in the main stream of the Yangtze River, or rescued, have been introduced into the Tian'e-Zhou Semi-natural Reserve since 1990. These efforts have proven that, not only can these animals survive in the area, they are also to reproduce naturally and successfully. More than 30 calves had been born in the reserve since then, with one to three born each year. Taking deaths and transfers into account, there were approximately 30 individuals living in the reserve as of the end of 2007. Among eight mature females captured in April 2008, five were confirmed pregnant. This effort represents the first successful attempt at off-site protection of a cetacean species in the world, and establishes a solid base for conservation of the Yangtze finless porpoise. A lesson must be drawn from the tragedy of Chinese River Dolphin (Lipotes vexillifer), which has already been declared likely extinct. Strong, effective and appropriate protective measures must be carried out quickly to prevent the Yangtze finless porpoise from becoming a second Chinese River Dolphin, and save the biodiversity of the Yangtze River as a whole
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