2,409 research outputs found
Quantum critical point in the spin glass-antiferromagnetism competition in Kondo-lattice systems
A theory is proposed to describe the competition among antiferromagnetism
(AF), spin glass (SG) and Kondo effect. The model describes two Kondo
sublattices with an intrasite Kondo interaction strength and an
interlattice quantum Ising interaction in the presence of a transverse field
. The interlattice coupling is a random Gaussian distributed variable
(with average and variance ) while the field is
introduced as a quantum mechanism to produce spin flipping. The path integral
formalism is used to study this fermionic problem where the spin operators are
represented by bilinear combinations of Grassmann fields. The disorder is
treated within the framework of the replica trick. The free energy and the
order parameters of the problem are obtained by using the static ansatz and by
choosing both and to allow, as previously,
a better comparison with the experimental findings.
The results indicate the presence of a SG solution at low and for
temperature ( is the freezing temperature). When is
increased, a mixed phase AF+SG appears, then an AF solution and finally a Kondo
state is obtained for high values of . Moreover, the behaviors of the
freezing and Neel temperatures are also affected by the relationship between
and the transverse field . The first one presents a slight
decrease while the second one decreases towards a Quantum Critical Point (QCP).
The obtained phase diagram has the same sequence as the experimental one for
, if is assumed to increase with , and
in addition, it also shows a qualitative agreement concerning the behavior of
the freezing and the Neel temperatures.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in J. Phys.
Measurement of the Permanent Electric Dipole Moment of the Xe Atom
We report on a new measurement of the CP-violating permanent Electric Dipole
Moment (EDM) of the neutral Xe atom. Our experimental approach is based
on the detection of the free precession of co-located nuclear spin-polarized
He and Xe samples. The EDM measurement sensitivity benefits
strongly from long spin coherence times of several hours achieved in diluted
gases and homogeneous weak magnetic fields of about 400~nT. A finite EDM is
indicated by a change in the precession frequency, as an electric field is
periodically reversed with respect to the magnetic guiding field. Our result,
ecm, is consistent with zero and is
used to place a new upper limit on the Xe EDM: ecm (95% C.L.). We also discuss the implications of this result for
various CP-violating observables as they relate to theories of physics beyond
the standard model
The Biot-Savart operator and electrodynamics on subdomains of the three-sphere
We study steady-state magnetic fields in the geometric setting of positive
curvature on subdomains of the three-dimensional sphere. By generalizing the
Biot-Savart law to an integral operator BS acting on all vector fields, we show
that electrodynamics in such a setting behaves rather similarly to Euclidean
electrodynamics. For instance, for current J and magnetic field BS(J), we show
that Maxwell's equations naturally hold. In all instances, the formulas we give
are geometrically meaningful: they are preserved by orientation-preserving
isometries of the three-sphere.
This article describes several properties of BS: we show it is self-adjoint,
bounded, and extends to a compact operator on a Hilbert space. For vector
fields that act like currents, we prove the curl operator is a left inverse to
BS; thus the Biot-Savart operator is important in the study of curl
eigenvalues, with applications to energy-minimization problems in geometry and
physics. We conclude with two examples, which indicate our bounds are typically
within an order of magnitude of being sharp.Comment: 24 pages (was 28 pages) Revised to include a new introduction, a
detailed example, and results about helicity; other changes for readabilit
High transport currents in mechanically reinforced MgB2 wires
We prepared and characterized monofilamentary MgB2 wires with a mechanically
reinforced composite sheath of Ta(Nb)/Cu/steel, which leads to dense filaments
and correspondingly high transport currents up to Jc = 10^5 A/cm^2 at 4.2 K,
self field. The reproducibility of the measured transport currents was
excellent and not depending on the wire diameter. Using different precursors,
commercial reacted powder or an unreacted Mg/B powder mixture, a strong
influence on the pinning behaviour and the irreversibility field was observed.
The critical transport current density showed a nearly linear temperature
dependency for all wires being still 52 kA/cm^2 at 20 K and 23 kA/cm^2 at 30 K.
Detailed data for Jc(B,T) and Tc(B) were measured.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures, revised version, to be published in Supercond.
Sci. Techno
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Chronic nicotine administration restores brain region specific upregulation of oxytocin receptor binding levels in a G72 mouse model of schizophrenia.
Nicotine dependence and schizophrenia are two mental health disorders with remarkably high comorbidity. Cigarette smoking is particularly prevalent among schizophrenic patients and it is hypothesized to comprise a form of self-medication for relieving cognitive deficits in these patients. Emerging evidence suggests a role of the neurohypophysial peptide oxytocin in the modulation of drug addiction, as well as schizophrenia symptomology; however, the underlying mechanism remains unclear. Therefore, we sought to investigate the effects of chronic nicotine administration on oxytocin receptor (OTR) binding in the brain of a transgenic mouse model of schizophrenia that carries a bacterial artificial chromosome of the human G72/G30 locus (G72Tg). Female wild-type (WT) and heterozygous G72 transgenic CD-1 mice were treated with a chronic nicotine regimen (24 mg/kg/day, osmotic minipumps for 14 days) and quantitative autoradiographic mapping of oxytocin receptors was carried out in brains of these animals. OTR binding levels were higher in the cingulate cortex (CgCx), nucleus accumbens (Acb) and central amygdala (CeA) of saline treated G72Tg mice compared with WT control mice. Chronic nicotine administration reversed this upregulation in the CgCx and CeA. Interestingly, chronic nicotine administration induced an increase in OTR binding in the CeA of solely WT mice. These results indicate that nicotine administration normalizes the dysregulated central oxytocinergic system of this mouse model of schizophrenia and may contribute towards nicotine's ability to modulate cognitive deficits which are common symptoms of schizophrenia. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved
Thermoelectric properties of the bismuth telluride nanowires in the constant-relaxation-time approximation
Electronic structure of bismuth telluride nanowires with the growth
directions [110] and [015] is studied in the framework of anisotropic effective
mass method using the parabolic band approximation. The components of the
electron and hole effective mass tensor for six valleys are calculated for both
growth directions. For a square nanowire, in the temperature range from 77 K to
500 K, the dependence of the Seebeck coefficient, the electron thermal and
electrical conductivity as well as the figure of merit ZT on the nanowire
thickness and on the excess hole concentration are investigated in the
constant-relaxation-time approximation. The carrier confinement is shown to
play essential role for square nanowires with thickness less than 30 nm. The
confinement decreases both the carrier concentration and the thermal
conductivity but increases the maximum value of Seebeck coefficient in contrast
to the excess holes (impurities). The confinement effect is stronger for the
direction [015] than for the direction [110] due to the carrier mass difference
for these directions. The carrier confinement increases maximum value of ZT and
shifts it towards high temperatures. For the p-type bismuth telluride nanowires
with growth direction [110], the maximum value of the figure of merit is equal
to 1.3, 1.6, and 2.8, correspondingly, at temperatures 310 K, 390 K, 480 K and
the nanowire thicknesses 30 nm, 15 nm, and 7 nm. At the room temperature, the
figure of merit equals 1.2, 1.3, and 1.7, respectively.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables, typos added, added references for
sections 2-
Validity of self-reported weight: a study of urban brazilian adults
Para avaliar a validade do peso auto-referido em inquĂ©ritos de prevalĂȘncia de obesidade, o mesmo foi comparado com o peso medido de 659 adultos, residentes em Porto Alegre, RS, Brasil, em 1986-87. Ambos os pesos foram obtidos por entrevistador, na casa do participante, na mesma ocasiĂŁo. A mĂ©dia das diferenças entre peso auto-referido e peso medido foi pequena (-0,06 +/-3,16 kg; mĂ©dia +/- desvio padrĂŁo) e a correlação entre eles alta (r=0,97). Sessenta e dois por cento dos participantes referiram seu peso com erro < 2 kg, 87% com erro menor do que 4 kg e 95% com erro < 6 kg. IndivĂduos de baixo peso hiperestimaram seu peso, o oposto ocorrendo com indivĂduos obesos (p; 30) por peso referido, foi de 10% e a por peso medido, de 11%. Concluindo, a validade do peso auto-referido Ă© aceitĂĄvel para inquĂ©ritos de prevalĂȘncia realizados em contextos similares.In order to evaluate the validity of self-reported weight for use in obesity prevalence surveys, self-reported weight was compared to measured weight for 659 adults living in the Porto Alegre county, RS Brazil in 1986-87, both weights being obtained by a technician in the individual's home on the same visit. The mean difference between self-reported and measured weight was small (-0.06 +/- 3.16 kg; mean +/- standard deviation), and the correlation between reported and measured weight was high (r=0.97). Sixty-two percent of participants reported their weight with an error of < 2 kg, 87% with an error of < 4 kg, and 95% with an error of < 6 kg. Underweight individuals overestimated their weight, while obese individuals underestimated theirs (p; 30) by reported weight was 10%, by measured weight 11%. Thus, the validity of reported weight is acceptable for surveys of the prevalence of ponderosity in similar settings
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