6,508 research outputs found
MS-057: The Papers of Donna O. Schaper, Class of 1969: The Gettysburg Years
This collection consists of correspondence and college papers from Donna Osterhoudt Schaper, who graduated from Gettysburg College in 1969. As a student, she was part of the student protest movement against the Vietnam War, and she interned for the College Chapel before attending the Lutheran Theological Seminary.
Special Collections and College Archives Finding Aids are discovery tools used to describe and provide access to our holdings. Finding aids include historical and biographical information about each collection in addition to inventories of their content. More information about our collections can be found on our website http://www.gettysburg.edu/special_collections/collections/.https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/findingaidsall/1052/thumbnail.jp
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The evolution of rhythmic cognition: New perspectives and technologies in comparative research
Music is a pervasive phenomenon in human culture, and musical rhythm is virtually present in all musical traditions. Research on the evolution and cognitive underpinnings of rhythm can benefit from a number of approaches. We outline key concepts and definitions, allowing fine-grained analysis of rhythmic cognition in experimental studies. We advocate comparative animal research as a useful approach to answer questions about human music cognition and review experimental evidence from different species. Finally, we suggest future directions for research on the cognitive basis of rhythm. Apart from research in semi-natural setups, possibly allowed by “drum set for chimpanzees” prototypes presented here for the first time, mathematical modeling and systematic use of circular statistics may allow promising advances
Anomalous Hall effect in non-collinear antiferromagnetic antiperovskite MnNiCuN
We report the anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in antiperovskite MnNiN with
substantial doping of Cu on the Ni site (i.e. MnNiCuN),
which stabilizes a noncollinear antiferromagnetic (AFM) order compatible with
the AHE. Observed on both sintered polycrystalline pieces and single
crystalline films, the AHE does not scale with the net magnetization, contrary
to the conventional ferromagnetic case. The existence of the AHE is explained
through symmetry analysis based on the AFM order in Cu doped
MnNiN. DFT calculations of the intrinsic contribution to the AHE reveal
the non-vanishing Berry curvature in momentum space due to the noncollinear
magnetic order. Combined with other attractive properties, antiperovskite
MnAN system offers great potential in AFM spintronics.Comment: Supplemental Materials not include
Epitaxial growth and magnetic properties of Sr2CrReO6 thin films
The double perovskite Sr2CrReO6 is an interesting material for spintronics,
showing ferrimagnetism up to 635 K with a predicted high spin polarization of
about 86%. We fabricated Sr2CrReO6 epitaxial films by pulsed laser deposition
on (001)-oriented SrTiO3 substrates. Phase-pure films with optimum
crystallographic and magnetic properties were obtained by growing at a
substrate temperature of 700 degree C in pure O2 of 6.6x10-4 mbar. The films
are c-axis oriented, coherently strained, and show less than 20% anti-site
defects. The magnetization curves reveal high saturation magnetization of 0.8
muB per formula unit and high coercivity of 1.1 T, as well as a strong magnetic
anisotropy.Comment: accepted for publicatio
Probing Rotation of Core-collapse Supernova with Concurrent Analysis of Gravitational Waves and Neutrinos
The next time a core-collapse supernova (SN) explodes in our galaxy, vari-
ous detectors will be ready and waiting to detect its emissions of
gravitational waves (GWs) and neutrinos. Current numerical simulations have
successfully introduced multi-dimensional effects to produce exploding SN
models, but thus far the explosion mechanism is not well understood. In this
paper, we focus on an investigation of progenitor core rotation via comparison
of the start time of GW emission and that of the neutronization burst. The GW
and neutrino de- tectors are assumed to be, respectively, the KAGRA detector
and a co-located gadolinium-loaded water Cherenkov detector, either EGADS or
GADZOOKS!. Our detection simulation studies show that for a nearby supernova
(0.2 kpc) we can confirm the lack of core rotation close to 100% of the time,
and the presence of core rotation about 90% of the time. Using this approach
there is also po- tential to confirm rotation for considerably more distant
Milky Way supernova explosions.Comment: 31pages, 15figures, submit to Ap
Excitation hierarchy of the quantum sine-Gordon spin chain in strong magnetic field
The magnetic excitation spectrum of copper pyrimidine dinitrate, a material
containing S=1/2 antiferromagnetic chains with alternating g-tensor and the
Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction, and exhibiting a field-induced spin gap, is
probed using submillimeter wave electron spin resonance spectroscopy. Ten
excitation modes are resolved in the low-temperature spectrum, and their
frequency-field diagram is systematically studied in magnetic fields up to 25
T. The experimental data are sufficiently detailed to make a very accurate
comparison with predictions based on the quantum sine-Gordon field theory.
Signatures of three breather branches and a soliton, as well as those of
several multi-particle excitation modes are identified.Comment: 4 RevTeX pages, 3 figure
Josephson effect in quasi one-dimensional unconventional superconductors
Josephson effect in junctions of quasi one-dimensional triangular lattice
superconductors is discussed, where the theoretical model corresponds to
organic superconductors (TMTSF)_2PF_6. We assume the quarter-filling electron
band and p, d and f wave like pairing symmetries in organic superconductors. To
realize the electronic structures in organic superconductors, we introduce the
asymmetric hopping integral, (t') among second nearest lattice sites. At t'=0,
the Josephson current in the d wave symmetry saturates in low temperatures,
whereas those in the p and the f wave symmetries show the low-temperature
anomaly due to the zero-energy state at the junction interfaces. The
low-temperature anomaly appears even in the d wave symmetry in the presence of
t', whereas the anomaly is suppressed in the f wave symmetry. The shape of the
Fermi surface is an important factor for the formation of the ZES in the
quarter-filling electron systems.Comment: 10 page
A model of adaptive decision making from representation of information environment by quantum fields
We present the mathematical model of decision making (DM) of agents acting in
a complex and uncertain environment (combining huge variety of economical,
financial, behavioral, and geo-political factors). To describe interaction of
agents with it, we apply the formalism of quantum field theory (QTF). Quantum
fields are of the purely informational nature. The QFT-model can be treated as
a far relative of the expected utility theory, where the role of utility is
played by adaptivity to an environment (bath). However, this sort of
utility-adaptivity cannot be represented simply as a numerical function. The
operator representation in Hilbert space is used and adaptivity is described as
in quantum dynamics. We are especially interested in stabilization of solutions
for sufficiently large time. The outputs of this stabilization process,
probabilities for possible choices, are treated in the framework of classical
DM. To connect classical and quantum DM, we appeal to Quantum Bayesianism
(QBism). We demonstrate the quantum-like interference effect in DM which is
exhibited as a violation of the formula of total probability and hence the
classical Bayesian inference scheme.Comment: in press in Philosophical Transactions
Flat rotation curves in Chern-Simons modified gravity
We investigate the spacetime of a slowly rotating black hole in the
Chern-Simons modified gravity. The long range feature of frame-dragging effect
under the Chern-Simon gravity well explains the flat rotation curves of
galaxies which is a central evidence of dark matter. Our solution provides a
different scenario of rotating space from Goedel's solution.Comment: 4 pages, Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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