346 research outputs found
Field-concentration phase diagram of a quantum spin liquid with bond defects
The magnetic susceptibility of the gapped quantum spin liquid compound
(CHN)CuCl and its chemically disordered derivatives
(CHN)Cu(ClBr) are systematically studied
in magnetic fields of up to 45 T, as a function of Br concentration. The
corresponding field-temperature and field-concentration phase diagrams are
determined. Measurements on the disorder-free parent compound are not fully
consistent with previously published results by other authors [PRL{\bf 96},
257203 (2006)]. The effect of Br/Cl substitution on the magnetic properties is
superficially similar to that of finite temperature. However, important
differences are identified and discussed with reference to the previously
studied magnetic excitation spectra.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures. Submitted to PRB as regular pape
Role of diet in type 2 diabetes incidence: umbrella review of meta-analyses of prospective observational studies
OBJECTIVE: To summarise the evidence of associations between dietary factors and incidence of type 2 diabetes and to evaluate the strength and validity of these associations. DESIGN: Umbrella review of systematic reviews with meta-analyses of prospective observational studies. DATA SOURCES: PubMed, Web of Science, and Embase, searched up to August 2018. ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: Systematic reviews with meta-analyses reporting summary risk estimates for the associations between incidence of type 2 diabetes and dietary behaviours or diet quality indices, food groups, foods, beverages, alcoholic beverages, macronutrients, and micronutrients. RESULTS: 53 publications were included, with 153 adjusted summary hazard ratios on dietary behaviours or diet quality indices (n=12), food groups and foods (n=56), beverages (n=10), alcoholic beverages (n=12), macronutrients (n=32), and micronutrients (n=31), regarding incidence of type 2 diabetes. Methodological quality was high for 75% (n=115) of meta-analyses, moderate for 23% (n=35), and low for 2% (n=3). Quality of evidence was rated high for an inverse association for type 2 diabetes incidence with increased intake of whole grains (for an increment of 30 g/day, adjusted summary hazard ratio 0.87 (95% confidence interval 0.82 to 0.93)) and cereal fibre (for an increment of 10 g/day, 0.75 (0.65 to 0.86)), as well as for moderate intake of total alcohol (for an intake of 12-24 g/day v no consumption, 0.75 (0.67 to 0.83)). Quality of evidence was also high for the association for increased incidence of type 2 diabetes with higher intake of red meat (for an increment of 100 g/day, 1.17 (1.08 to 1.26)), processed meat (for an increment of 50 g/day, 1.37 (1.22 to 1.54)), bacon (per two slices/day, 2.07 (1.40 to 3.05)), and sugar sweetened beverages (for an increase of one serving/day, 1.26 (1.11 to 1.43)). CONCLUSIONS: Overall, the association between dietary factors and type 2 diabetes has been extensively studied, but few of the associations were graded as high quality of evidence. Further factors are likely to be important in type 2 diabetes prevention; thus, more well conducted research, with more detailed assessment of diet, is needed. SYSTEMATIC REVIEW REGISTRATION: PROSPERO CRD42018088106
Experimental study of a liquid Xenon PET prototype module
A detector using liquid Xenon in the scintillation mode is studied for
Positron Emission Tomography (PET). The specific design aims at taking full
advantage of the liquid Xenon properties. It does feature a promising
insensitive to any parallax effect. This work reports on the performances of
the first LXe prototype module, equipped with a position sensitive PMT
operating in the VUV range (178 nm).Comment: Proc. of the 7th International Workshops on Radiation Imaging
Detectors (IWORID-7), Grenoble, France 4-7 July 200
Interplay of magnetism, Fermi surface reconstructions, and hidden-order in the heavy-fermion material URuSi
URuSi is surely one of the most mysterious of the heavy-fermion
compounds. Despite more than twenty years of experimental and theoretical
works, the order parameter of the transition at K is still
unknown. The state below remains called "hidden-order phase" and the
stakes are still to identify the energy scales driving the system to this
phase. We present new magnetoresistivity and magnetization measurements
performed on very-high-quality single crystals in pulsed magnetic fields up to
60 T. We show that the transition to the hidden-order state in URuSi is
initially driven by a high-temperature crossover at around 40-50 K, which is a
fingerprint of inter-site electronic correlations. In a magnetic field
applied along the easy-axis , the vanishing of this
high-temperature scale precedes the polarization of the magnetic moments, as
well as it drives the destabilization of the hidden-order phase. Strongly
impurity-dependent magnetoresistivity confirms that the Fermi surface is
reconstructed below and is strongly modified in a high magnetic field
applied along , i.e. at a sufficiently-high magnetic polarization.
The possibility of a sharp crossover in the hidden-order state controlled by a
field-induced change of the Fermi surface is pointed out.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted in Physical Review
Virtual Compton Scattering off a Spinless Target in AdS/QCD
We study the doubly virtual Compton scattering off a spinless target
within the Anti-de Sitter(AdS)/QCD formalism. We find
that the general structure allowed by the Lorentz invariance and gauge
invariance of the Compton amplitude is not easily reproduced with the standard
recipes of the AdS/QCD correspondence. In the soft-photon regime, where the
semi-classical approximation is supposed to apply best, we show that the
measurements of the electric and magnetic polarizabilities of a target like the
charged pion in real Compton scattering, can already serve as stringent tests.Comment: 21 pages, version to be published in JHEP
Polarized DIS in N=4 SYM: Where is spin at strong coupling?
Using the AdS/CFT correspondence, we calculate the polarized structure
functions in strongly coupled N=4 supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory deformed in
the infrared. We find that the flavor singlet contribution to the g_1 structure
function is vanishingly small, while the flavor non-singlet contribution shows
the Regge behavior at small-x with an intercept slightly less than 1. We
explicitly check that the latter satisfies the moment sum rule. We discuss the
`spin crisis' problem and suggest that at strong coupling the spin of a hadron
entirely comes from the orbital angular momentum.Comment: 24 page
A conical deficit in the AdS4/CFT3 correspondence
Inspired by the AdS/CFT correspondence we propose a new duality that allow
the study of strongly coupled field theories living in a 2+1 conical
space-time. Solving the 4-d Einstein equations in the presence of an infinite
static string and negative cosmological constant we obtain a conical AdS4
space-time whose boundary is identified with the 2+1 cone found by Deser,
Jackiw and 't Hooft. Using the AdS4/CFT3 correspondence we calculate retarded
Green's functions of scalar operators living in the cone.Comment: v3, 14 pages. We reinterpret our results for the Green's functions in
the con
Phase-Induced (In)-Stability in Coupled Parametric Oscillators
We report results on a model of two coupled oscillators that undergo periodic
parametric modulations with a phase difference . Being to a large
extent analytically solvable, the model reveals a rich dependence of
the regions of parametric resonance. In particular, the intuitive notion that
anti-phase modulations are less prone to parametric resonance is confirmed for
sufficiently large coupling and damping. We also compare our results to a
recently reported mean field model of collective parametric instability,
showing that the two-oscillator model can capture much of the qualitative
behavior of the infinite system.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures; a version with better quality figures can be
found in http://hypatia.ucsd.edu/~mauro/English/publications.htm
Shockwaves and deep inelastic scattering within the gauge/gravity duality
Within the gauge/gravity correspondence, we discuss the general formulation
of the shockwave metric which is dual to a 'nucleus' described by the
strongly-coupled N=4 SYM theory in the limit where the number of colors Nc is
arbitrarily large. We emphasize that the 'nucleus' must possess Nc^2 degrees of
freedom per unit volume, so like a finite-temperature plasma, in order for a
supergravity description to exist. We critically reassess previous proposals
for introducing transverse inhomogeneity in the shockwave and formulate a new
proposal in that sense, which involves no external source but requires the
introduction of an 'infrared' cutoff which mimics confinement. This cutoff
however plays no role when the shockwave is probed by a highly virtual
projectile, so like in deep inelastic scattering. We consider two such
projectiles, the dilaton and the R-current, and compute the respective
structure functions including unitarity corrections. We find that there are no
leading-twist contributions to the structure functions at high virtuality,
meaning that there are no point-like constituents in the strongly coupled
'nucleus'. In the black-disk regime at low virtuality, the structure functions
are suggestive of parton saturation with occupation numbers of order one. The
saturation momentum Qs grows with the energy like Qs^2 ~ 1/x (with x the
Bjorken variable), which is the hallmark of graviton exchanges and is also
necessary for the fulfillment of the energy-momentum sum rules.Comment: 43 page
Views of the Chiral Magnetic Effect
My personal views of the Chiral Magnetic Effect are presented, which starts
with a story about how we came up with the electric-current formula and
continues to unsettled subtleties in the formula. There are desirable features
in the formula of the Chiral Magnetic Effect but some considerations would lead
us to even more questions than elucidations. The interpretation of the produced
current is indeed very non-trivial and it involves a lot of confusions that
have not been resolved.Comment: 19 pages, no figure; typos corrected, references significantly
updated, to appear in Lect. Notes Phys. "Strongly interacting matter in
magnetic fields" (Springer), edited by D. Kharzeev, K. Landsteiner, A.
Schmitt, H.-U. Ye
- âŠ