878 research outputs found
Bound states in weakly disordered spin ladders
We study the appearance of bound states in the spin gap of spin-1/2 ladders
induced by weak bond disorder. Starting from the strong-coupling limit, i.e.,
the limit of weakly coupled dimers, we perform a projection on the
single-triplet subspace and derive the position of bound states for the single
impurity problem of one modified coupling as well as for small impurity
clusters. The case of a finite concentration of impurities is treated with the
coherent-potential approximation in the strong-coupling limit and compared with
numerical results. Furthermore, we analyze the details in the structure of the
density of states and relate their origin to the influence of impurity
clusters.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure. Proceedings of SCES'04, to appear in Physica
Breeding and larval rearing of the milkfish Chanos chanos (Pisces: Chanidae)
Contribution No. 11 of the Aquaculture Department, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, P.O. Box 256, Iloilo City 5901, Philippines.Two sexually maturing female milkfish were captured in April 1977 and induced to spawn by means of acetone-dried Pacific salmon pituitary powder. The eggs were fertilized and incubated and the resultant young reared to 74-day old, 11 cm long fingerlings. Newly fertilized eggs averaged 1.16 mm in diameter and each had a narrow perivitelline space containing several cortical granules which disappeared within a few minutes. The yolk was slightly yellowish, devoid of oil globules and very finely granulated. Embryonic development was very similar to that of other pelagic fish eggs and hatching occurred between 35 to 36 hr at a salinity of 32 ppt and a temperature range of 28.4-29.2°C.This study was partially supported through a grant to the SEAFDEC Aquaculture Department by the International Development Research Centre of Canada, under Project No. 3-P-74-0146
The biomechanics of tree frogs climbing curved surfaces: a gripping problem
The adhesive mechanisms of climbing animals have become an important research topic because of their biomimetic implications. We examined the climbing abilities of hylid tree frogs on vertical cylinders of differing diameter and surface roughness to investigate the relative roles of adduction forces (gripping) and adhesion. Tree frogs adhere using their toe pads and subarticular tubercles, the adhesive joint being fluid-filled. Our hypothesis was that, on an effectively flat surface (adduction forces on the largest 120 mm diameter cylinder were insufficient to allow climbing), adhesion would effectively be the only means by which tree frogs could climb, but on the two smaller diameter cylinders (44 mm and 13 mm), frogs could additionally utilise adduction forces by gripping the cylinder either with their limbs outstretched or by grasping around the cylinder with their digits, respectively. The frogs' performance would also depend on whether the surfaces were smooth (easy to adhere to) or rough (relatively non-adhesive). Our findings showed that climbing performance was highest on the narrowest smooth cylinder. Frogs climbed faster, frequently using a 'walking trot' gait rather than the 'lateral sequence walk' used on other cylinders. Using an optical technique to visualize substrate contact during climbing on smooth surfaces, we also observed an increasing engagement of the subarticular tubercles on the narrower cylinders. Finally, on the rough substrate, frogs were unable to climb the largest diameter cylinder, but were able to climb the narrowest one slowly. These results support our hypotheses and have relevance for the design of climbing robots
Inelastic Neutron Scattering from the Spin Ladder Compound (VO)2P2O7
We present results from an inelastic neutron scattering experiment on the
candidate Heisenberg spin ladder vanadyl pyrophosphate, (VO)2P2O7. We find
evidence for a spin-wave excitation gap of meV, at a
band minimum near . This is consistent with expectations for
triplet spin waves in (VO)2P2O7 in the spin-ladder model, and is to our
knowledge the first confirmation in nature of a Heisenberg antiferromagnetic
spin ladder.Comment: 11 pages and 2 figures (available as hard copy or postscript files
from the authors, send request to [email protected] or
[email protected]), TEX using jnl, reforder and eqnorder, ORNL-CCIP-94-05
/ RAL-94-04
Non-perturbative effective field theory for two-leg antiferromagnetic spin ladders
We study the long wavelength limit of a spin 1/2 Heisenberg antiferromagnetic
two-leg ladder, treating the interchain coupling in a non-perturbative way. We
perform a mean field analysis and then include exactly the fluctuations. This
allows for a discussion of the phase diagram of the system and provides an
effective field theory for the low energy excitations. The coset fermionic
Lagrangian obtained corresponds to a perturbed SU(4)_1/U(1) Conformal Field
Theory (CFT). This effective theory is naturally embedded in a SU(2)_2 x Z_2
CFT, where perturbations are easily identified in terms of conformal operators
in the two sectors. Crossed and zig-zag ladders are also discussed using the
same approach.Comment: 14 pages LaTeX, 5 PostScript figures included using epsfig.sty; minor
corrections and a few references adde
Dynamical Properties of Two Coupled Hubbard Chains at Half-filling
Using grand canonical Quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) simulations combined with
Maximum Entropy analytic continuation, as well as analytical methods, we
examine the one- and two-particle dynamical properties of the Hubbard model on
two coupled chains at half-filling. The one-particle spectral weight function,
, undergoes a qualitative change with interchain hopping
associated with a transition from a four-band insulator to a two-band
insulator. A simple analytical model based on the propagation of exact rung
singlet states gives a good description of the features at large . For
smaller , is similar to that of the
one-dimensional model, with a coherent band of width the effective
antiferromagnetic exchange reasonably well-described by renormalized
spin-wave theory. The coherent band rides on a broad background of width
several times the parallel hopping integral , an incoherent structure
similar to that found in calculations on both the one- and two-dimensional
models. We also present QMC results for the two-particle spin and charge
excitation spectra, and relate their behavior to the rung singlet picture for
large and to the results of spin-wave theory for small .Comment: 9 pages + 10 postscript figures, submitted to Phys.Rev.B, revised
version with isotropic t_perp=t data include
Thermodynamic Properties of the Dimerised and Frustrated S=1/2 Chain
By high temperature series expansion, exact diagonalisation and temperature
density-matrix renormalisation the magnetic susceptibility and the
specific heat of dimerised and frustrated chains are computed.
All three methods yield reliable results, in particular for not too small
temperatures or not too small gaps. The series expansion results are provided
in the form of polynomials allowing very fast and convenient fits in data
analysis using algebraic programmes. We discuss the difficulty to extract more
than two coupling constants from the temperature dependence of .Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures, 4 table
Coexistence of double alternating antiferromagnetic chains in (VO)_2P_2O_7 : NMR study
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) of 31P and 51V nuclei has been measured in a
spin-1/2 alternating-chain compound (VO)_2P_2O_7. By analyzing the temperature
variation of the 31P NMR spectra, we have found that (VO)_2P_2O_7 has two
independent spin components with different spin-gap energies. The spin gaps are
determined from the temperature dependence of the shifts at 31P and 51V sites
to be 35 K and 68 K, which are in excellent agreement with those observed in
the recent inelastic neutron scattering experiments [A.W. Garrett et al., Phys.
Rev. Lett. 79, 745 (1997)]. This suggests that (VO)_2P_2O_7 is composed of two
magnetic subsystems showing distinct magnetic excitations, which are associated
with the two crystallographically-inequivalent V chains running along the b
axis. The difference of the spin-gap energies between the chains is attributed
to the small differences in the V-V distances, which may result in the
different exchange alternation in each magnetic chain. The exchange
interactions in each alternating chain are estimated and are discussed based on
the empirical relation between the exchange interaction and the interatomic
distance.Comment: 10 pages, 11 embedded eps figures, REVTeX, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
- …