2,273 research outputs found
Origin of strange metallic phase in cuprate superconductors
The origin of strange metallic phase is shown to exist due to these two
conditions---(i) the electrons are strongly interacting such that there are no
band and Mott-Hubbard gaps, and (ii) the electronic energy levels are crossed
in such a way that there is an electronic energy gap between two energy levels
associated to two different wave functions. The theory is also exploited to
explain (i) the upward- and downward-shifts in the -linear resistivity
curves, and (ii) the spectral weight transfer observed in the soft X-ray
absorption spectroscopic measurements of the La-Sr-Cu-O Mott insulator.Comment: To be published in J. Supercond. Nov. Mag
Transverse electrokinetic and microfluidic effects in micro-patterned channels: lubrication analysis for slab geometries
Off-diagonal (transverse) effects in micro-patterned geometries are predicted
and analyzed within the general frame of linear response theory, relating
applied presure gradient and electric field to flow and electric current. These
effects could contribute to the design of pumps, mixers or flow detectors.
Shape and charge density modulations are proposed as a means to obtain sizeable
transverse effects, as demonstrated by focusing on simple geometries and using
the lubrication approximation.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Towards the Theory of Cosmological Phase Transitions
We discuss recent progress (and controversies) in the theory of finite
temperature phase transitions. This includes the structure of the effective
potential at a finite temperature, the infrared problem in quantum statistics
of gauge fields, the theory of formation of critical and subcritical bubbles
and the theory of bubble wall propagation.Comment: 50 p
CamouflageFS: Increasing the Effective Key Length in Cryptographic Filesystems on the Cheap
One of the few quantitative metrics used to evaluate the security of a cryptographic file system is the key length of the encryption algorithm; larger key lengths correspond to higher resistance to brute force and other types of attacks. Since accepted cryptographic design principles dictate that larger key lengths also impose higher processing costs, increasing the security of a cryptographic file system also increases the overhead of the underlying cipher. We present a general approach to effectively extend the key length without imposing the concomitant processing overhead. Our scheme is to spread the ciphertext inside an artificially large file that is seemingly filled with random bits according to a key-driven spreading sequence. Our prototype implementation, CamouflageFS, offers improved performance relative to a cipher with a larger key-schedule, while providing the same security properties. We discuss our implementation (based on the Linux Ext2 file system) and present some preliminary performance results. While CamouflageFS is implemented as a stand-alone file system, its primary mechanisms can easily be integrated into existing cryptographic file systems
The (p,t) Reaction at Higher Energy
This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grant PHY 76-84033 and Indiana Universit
On the hyperbolicity and causality of the relativistic Euler system under the kinetic equation of state
We show that a pair of conjectures raised in [11] concerning the construction
of normal solutions to the relativistic Boltzmann equation are valid. This
ensures that the results in [11] hold for any range of positive temperatures
and that the relativistic Euler system under the kinetic equation of state is
hyperbolic and the speed of sound cannot overcome .Comment: 6 pages. Abridged version; full version to appear in Commun. Pure
Appl. Ana
On the asymptotic spectrum of the reduced volume in cosmological solutions of the Einstein equations
Say S is a compact three-manifold with non-positive Yamabe invariant. We
prove that in any long time constant mean curvature Einstein flow over S,
having bounded C^{\alpha} space-time curvature at the cosmological scale, the
reduced volume (-k/3)^{3}Vol(g(k)) (g(k) is the evolving spatial three-metric
and k the mean curvature) decays monotonically towards the volume value of the
geometrization in which the cosmologically normalized flow decays. In more
basic terms, under the given assumptions, there is volume collapse in the
regions where the injectivity radius collapses (i.e. tends to zero) in the long
time. We conjecture that under the curvature assumption above the Thurston
geometrization is the unique global attractor. We validate it in some special
cases.Comment: 25 pages, 2 figure
Operator-Algebraic Approach to the Yrast Spectrum of Weakly Interacting Trapped Bosons
We present an operator-algebraic approach to deriving the low-lying
quasi-degenerate spectrum of weakly interacting trapped N bosons with total
angular momentum \hbar L for the case of small L/N, demonstrating that the
lowest-lying excitation spectrum is given by 27 g n_3(n_3-1)/34, where g is the
strength of the repulsive contact interaction and n_3 the number of excited
octupole quanta. Our method provides constraints for these quasi-degenerate
many-body states and gives higher excitation energies that depend linearly on
N.Comment: 7 pages, one figur
Measuring glucose cerebral metabolism in the healthy mouse using hyperpolarized <sup>13</sup>C magnetic resonance.
The mammalian brain relies primarily on glucose as a fuel to meet its high metabolic demand. Among the various techniques used to study cerebral metabolism, <sup>13</sup> C magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) allows following the fate of <sup>13</sup> C-enriched substrates through metabolic pathways. We herein demonstrate that it is possible to measure cerebral glucose metabolism in vivo with sub-second time resolution using hyperpolarized <sup>13</sup> C MRS. In particular, the dynamic <sup>13</sup> C-labeling of pyruvate and lactate formed from <sup>13</sup> C-glucose was observed in real time. An ad-hoc synthesis to produce [2,3,4,6,6- <sup>2</sup> H <sub>5</sub> , 3,4- <sup>13</sup> C <sub>2</sub> ]-D-glucose was developed to improve the <sup>13</sup> C signal-to-noise ratio as compared to experiments performed following [U- <sup>2</sup> H <sub>7</sub> , U- <sup>13</sup> C]-D-glucose injections. The main advantage of only labeling C3 and C4 positions is the absence of <sup>13</sup> C- <sup>13</sup> C coupling in all downstream metabolic products after glucose is split into 3-carbon intermediates by aldolase. This unique method allows direct detection of glycolysis in vivo in the healthy brain in a noninvasive manner
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