9,914 research outputs found
From an insulating to a superfluid pair-bond liquid
We study an exchange coupled system of itinerant electrons and localized
fermion pairs resulting in a resonant pairing formation. This system inherently
contains resonating fermion pairs on bonds which lead to a superconducting
phase provided that long range phase coherence between their constituents can
be established. The prerequisite is that the resonating fermion pairs can
become itinerant. This is rendered possible through the emergence of two kinds
of bond-fermions: individual and composite fermions made of one individual
electron attached to a bound pair on a bond. If the strength of the exchange
coupling exceeds a certain value, the superconducting ground state undergoes a
quantum phase transition into an insulating pair-bond liquid state. The gap of
the superfluid phase thereby goes over continuously into a charge gap of the
insulator. The change-over from the superconducting to the insulating phase is
accompanied by a corresponding qualitative modification of the dispersion of
the two kinds of fermionic excitations. Using a bond operator formalism, we
derive the phase diagram of such a scenario together with the elementary
excitations characterizing the various phases as a function of the exchange
coupling and the temperature.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Heuristic Refinement Method for the Derivation of Protein Solution Structures: Validation on Cytochrome B562
A method is described for determining the family of protein structures compatible with solution data obtained primarily from nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Starting with all possible conformations, the method systematically excludes conformations until the remaining structures are only those compatible with the data. The apparent computational intractability of this approach is reduced by assembling the protein in pieces, by considering the protein at several levels of abstraction, by utilizing constraint satisfaction methods to consider only a few atoms at a time, and by utilizing artificial intelligence methods of heuristic control to decide which actions will exclude the most conformations. Example results are presented for simulated NMR data from the known crystal structure of cytochrome b562 (103 residues). For 10 sample backbones an average root-mean-square deviation from the crystal of 4.1 A was found for all alpha-carbon atoms and 2.8 A for helix alpha-carbons alone. The 10 backbones define the family of all structures compatible with the data and provide nearly correct starting structures for adjustment by any of the current structure determination methods
Backpropagation training in adaptive quantum networks
We introduce a robust, error-tolerant adaptive training algorithm for
generalized learning paradigms in high-dimensional superposed quantum networks,
or \emph{adaptive quantum networks}. The formalized procedure applies standard
backpropagation training across a coherent ensemble of discrete topological
configurations of individual neural networks, each of which is formally merged
into appropriate linear superposition within a predefined, decoherence-free
subspace. Quantum parallelism facilitates simultaneous training and revision of
the system within this coherent state space, resulting in accelerated
convergence to a stable network attractor under consequent iteration of the
implemented backpropagation algorithm. Parallel evolution of linear superposed
networks incorporating backpropagation training provides quantitative,
numerical indications for optimization of both single-neuron activation
functions and optimal reconfiguration of whole-network quantum structure.Comment: Talk presented at "Quantum Structures - 2008", Gdansk, Polan
Singing Actors and Dancing Singers
This article looks at two recent and widely recognized productions of Henry Purcell's Dido and Aeneas (by choreographer Sasha Waltz, Berlin 2005, and theatre director Sebastian NĂŒbling, Basel 2006) and discusses three main aspects: 1. Genre: coming from a Tanztheater (Waltz) and a Sprechtheater (NĂŒbling) background, each director renegotiates conventions of the operatic genre and consciously evades expectations in pursuit of a new and challenging experience for both the performers and their audience. 2. Physicality: both productions place the performers' bodies at the forefront of the mise-en-scne they remap the singing, dancing, acting body by questioning conventions and expectations commonly found in the production and reception process. 3. Adaptation: both productions take unconventional liberties by adapting in a domain where notions of Werktreue (fidelity to the original work or score) still reign. Adopting ideas from Nicholas Cook and Mikhail Bakhtin, I will argue that the conceptual, musical and theatrical implications of both productions indicate a renegotiation of the social and performative relevance of operatic performance
Superconductivity and antiferromagnetism in a hard-core boson spin-1 model in two dimensions
A model of hard-core bosons and spin-1 sites with single-ion anisotropy is
proposed to approximately describe hole pairs moving in a background of
singlets and triplets with the aim of exploring the relationship between
superconductivity and antiferromagnetism. The properties of this model at zero
temperature were investigated using quantum Monte Carlo techniques. The most
important feature found is the suppression of superconductivity, as long range
coherence of preformed pairs, due to the presence of both antiferromagnetism
and excitations. Indications of charge ordered and other phases are
also discussed.Comment: One figure, one reference, adde
Survey of the quality of experimental design, statistical analysis and reporting of research using animals
For scientific, ethical and economic reasons, experiments involving animals should be appropriately designed, correctly analysed and transparently reported. This increases the scientific validity of the results, and maximises the knowledge gained from each experiment. A minimum amount of relevant information must be included in scientific publications to ensure that the methods and results of a study can be reviewed, analysed and repeated. Omitting essential information can raise scientific and ethical concerns. We report the findings of a systematic survey of reporting, experimental design and statistical analysis in published biomedical research using laboratory animals. Medline and EMBASE were searched for studies reporting research on live rats, mice and non-human primates carried out in UK and US publicly funded research establishments. Detailed information was collected from 271 publications, about the objective or hypothesis of the study, the number, sex, age and/or weight of animals used, and experimental and statistical methods. Only 59% of the studies stated the hypothesis or objective of the study and the number and characteristics of the animals used. Appropriate and efficient experimental design is a critical component of high-quality science. Most of the papers surveyed did not use randomisation (87%) or blinding (86%), to reduce bias in animal selection and outcome assessment. Only 70% of the publications that used statistical methods described their methods and presented the results with a measure of error or variability. This survey has identified a number of issues that need to be addressed in order to improve experimental design and reporting in publications describing research using animals. Scientific publication is a powerful and important source of information; the authors of scientific publications therefore have a responsibility to describe their methods and results comprehensively, accurately and transparently, and peer reviewers and journal editors share the responsibility to ensure that published studies fulfil these criteria
Differential expression of factor XIIIa and CD34 in cutaneous mesenchymal tumors
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73629/1/j.1600-0560.1993.tb00233.x.pd
SO(4) Theory of Competition between Triplet Superconductivity and Antiferromagnetism in Bechgaard Salts
Motivated by recent experiments with Bechgaard salts, we investigate the
competition between antiferromagnetism and triplet superconductivity in quasi
one-dimensional electron systems. We unify the two orders in an SO(4) symmetric
framework, and demonstrate the existence of such symmetry in one-dimensional
Luttinger liquids. SO(4) symmetry, which strongly constrains the phase diagram,
can explain coexistence regions between antiferromagnetic, superconducting, and
normal phases, as observed in (TMTSF)PF. We predict a sharp neutron
scattering resonance in superconducting samples.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; Added discussion of applicability of SO(4)
symmetry for strongly anisotropic Fermi liquids; Added reference
Superconducting charge-ordered states in cuprates
Motivated by recent neutron scattering and scanning tunneling microscopy
(STM) experiments on cuprate superconductors, we discuss charge-ordered states,
in particular with two-dimensional charge modulation patterns, co-existing with
superconductivity. We extend previous studies of a large-N mean-field
formulation of the t-J model. In addition to bond-centered superconducting
stripe states at low doping, we find checkerboard-modulated superconducting
states which are favorable in an intermediate doping interval. We also analyze
the energy dependence of the Fourier component of the local density of states
at the ordering wavevector for several possible modulation patterns, and
compare with STM results.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figs; (v2) extended discussion; final version as publishe
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