98 research outputs found
Magnetic properties of colloidal suspensions of interacting magnetic particles
We review equilibrium thermodynamic properties of systems of magnetic
particles like ferrofluids in which dipolar interactions play an important
role. The review is focussed on two subjects: ({\em i}) the magnetization with
the initial magnetic susceptibility as a special case and ({\em ii}) the phase
transition behavior. Here the condensation ("gas/liquid") transition in the
subsystem of the suspended particles is treated as well as the
isotropic/ferromagnetic transition to a state with spontaneously generated
long--range magnetic order.Comment: Review. 62 pages, 4 figure
Variation of quadrupole splitting in modified oxyhemoglobin: A Mössbauer effect study
Human adult hemoglobin modified by both pyridoxal-5′-phosphate and glutaraldehyde in the oxy-form was studied by Mössbauer spectroscopy. Mössbauer spectra were measured at 87 and 295 K (hemoglobin in lyophilized form) and at 87 K (hemoglobin in frozen solution). The values of the quadrupole splitting for modified oxyhemoglobin were found to be lower then those of oxyhemoglobin without modifications in lyophilized form and frozen solution, respectively. The Mössbauer spectra of modified oxyhemoglobin were also analyzed in terms of the heme iron inequivalence in α- and β-subunits of the tetramer. Differences of the tendencies of temperature dependencies of quadrupole splitting for modified and non-modified oxyhemoglobin in lyophilized form were shown. Key words: Hemoglobin; Mössbauer Spectroscopy; Quadrupole Spitting.This work was supported in part by the Russian Foundation for Basic Research (grant # 97-04-49482)
Magnetization of polydisperse colloidal ferrofluids: Effect of magnetostriction
We exploit magnetostriction in polydisperse ferrofluids in order to generate
nonlinear responses, and apply a thermodynamical method to derive the desired
nonlinear magnetic susceptibility. For an ideal gas, this method has been
demonstrated to be in excellent agreement with a statistical method. In the
presence of a sinusoidal ac magnetic field, the magnetization of the
polydisperse ferrofluid contains higher-order harmonics, which can be extracted
analytically by using a perturbation approach. We find that the harmonics are
sensitive to the particle distribution and the degree of field-induced
anisotropy of the system. In addition, we find that the magnetization is higher
in the polydisperse system than in the monodisperse one, as also found by a
recent Monte Carlo simulation. Thus, it seems possible to detect the size
distribution in a polydisperse ferrofluid by measuring the harmonics of the
magnetization under the influence of magnetostriction.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures. To be accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Alleviating the new user problem in collaborative filtering by exploiting personality information
The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11257-016-9172-zThe new user problem in recommender systems is still challenging, and there is not yet a unique solution that can be applied in any domain or situation. In this paper we analyze viable solutions to the new user problem in collaborative filtering (CF) that are based on the exploitation of user personality information: (a) personality-based CF, which directly improves the recommendation prediction model by incorporating user personality information, (b) personality-based active learning, which utilizes personality information for identifying additional useful preference data in the target recommendation domain to be elicited from the user, and (c) personality-based cross-domain recommendation, which exploits personality information to better use user preference data from auxiliary domains which can be used to compensate the lack of user preference data in the target domain. We benchmark the effectiveness of these methods on large datasets that span several domains, namely movies, music and books. Our results show that personality-aware methods achieve performance improvements that range from 6 to 94 % for users completely new to the system, while increasing the novelty of the recommended items by 3-40 % with respect to the non-personalized popularity baseline. We also discuss the limitations of our approach and the situations in which the proposed methods can be better applied, hence providing guidelines for researchers and practitioners in the field.This work was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and
Competitiveness (TIN2013-47090-C3). We thank Michal Kosinski and David Stillwell for
their attention regarding the dataset
Numerical study of problems on high-intensive free convection
The methods to build a difference scheme of higher order of approximation are presented for multi-dimensional convection equations. The scheme is recommended to solve the problems on high-rate convection. The scheme obtained is tested on the problem for free convection in a vertical finite layer. Operating parameters vary in the ranges:Pr<=10^5, Ra<=10^10, 1<=H/L<=10. Specific features of development of thermoconvective processes at high Rayleigh numbers are discussed. Critical relations Nu=f(Pr,Ra,H/L) are built. A good agreement between known numerical and experimental data is foun
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