695 research outputs found
Crystal field states of Kondo lattice heavy fermions CeRuSn3 and CeRhSn3
Inelastic neutron scattering experiments have been carried out to determine
the crystal field states of the Kondo lattice heavy fermions CeRuSn3 and
CeRhSn3. Both the compounds crystallize in LaRuSn3-type cubic structure (space
group Pm-3n) in which the Ce atoms occupy two distinct crystallographic sites
with cubic (m-3) and tetragonal (-4m.2) point symmetries. The INS data of
CeRuSn3 reveal the presence of a broad excitation centered around 6-8 meV which
is accounted by a model based on crystal electric field (CEF) excitations. On
the other hand, the INS data of isostructural CeRhSn3 reveal three CEF
excitations around 7.0, 12.2 and 37.2 meV. The neutron intensity sum rule
indicates that the Ce ions at both cubic and tetragonal Ce sites are in Ce3+
state in both CeRuSn3 and CeRhSn3. The CEF level schemes for both the compounds
are deduced. We estimate the Kondo temperature T_K = 3.1(2) K for CeRuSn3 from
neutron quasielastic linewidth in excellent agreement with that determined from
the scaling of magnetoresistance which gives T_K = 3.2(1) K. For CeRhSn3 the
neutron quasielastic linewidth gives T_K = 4.6 K. For both CeRuSn3 and CeRhSn3,
the ground state of Ce3+ turns out to be a quartet for the cubic site and a
doublet for the tetragonal site.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures, 2 tables, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Physical properties of noncentrosymmetric superconductor LaIrSi3: A {\mu}SR study
The results of heat capacity C_p(T, H) and electrical resistivity \rho(T,H)
measurements down to 0.35 K as well as muon spin relaxation and rotation
(\muSR) measurements on a noncentrosymmetric superconductor LaIrSi3 are
presented. Powder neutron diffraction confirmed the reported noncentrosymmetric
body-centered tetragonal BaNiSn3-type structure (space group I4\,mm) of
LaIrSi3. The bulk superconductivity is observed below T_c = 0.72(1) K. The
intrinsic \Delta C_e/\gamma_n T_c = 1.09(3) is significantly smaller than the
BCS value of 1.43, and this reduction is accounted by the \alpha-model of BCS
superconductivity. The analysis of the superconducting state C_e(T) data by the
single-band \alpha-model indicates a moderately anisotropic order parameter
with the s-wave gap \Delta(0)/k_B T_c = 1.54(2) which is lower than the BCS
value of 1.764. Our estimates of various normal and superconducting state
parameters indicate a weakly coupled electron-phonon driven type-I s-wave
superconductivity in LaIrSi3. The \muSR results also confirm the conventional
type-I superconductivity in LaIrSi3 with a preserved time reversal symmetry and
hence a singlet pairing superconducting ground state.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 2 table
MacWilliams Identities for -tuple Weight Enumerators
Since MacWilliams proved the original identity relating the Hamming weight
enumerator of a linear code to the weight enumerator of its dual code there
have been many different generalizations, leading to the development of
-tuple support enumerators. We prove a generalization of theorems of Britz
and of Ray-Chaudhuri and Siap, which build on earlier work of Kl{\o}ve,
Shiromoto, Wan, and others. We then give illustrations of these -tuple
weight enumerators.Comment: 17 pages. Accepted to SIAM Journal on Discrete Mathematic
Hamming weights and Betti numbers of Stanley-Reisner rings associated to matroids
To each linear code over a finite field we associate the matroid of its
parity check matrix. We show to what extent one can determine the generalized
Hamming weights of the code (or defined for a matroid in general) from various
sets of Betti numbers of Stanley-Reisner rings of simplicial complexes
associated to the matroid
A deep learning approach for complex microstructure inference
Automated, reliable, and objective microstructure inference from micrographs is essential for a comprehensive understanding of process-microstructure-property relations and tailored materials development. However, such inference, with the increasing complexity of microstructures, requires advanced segmentation methodologies. While deep learning offers new opportunities, an intuition about the required data quality/quantity and a methodological guideline for microstructure quantification is still missing. This, along with deep learning’s seemingly intransparent decision-making process, hampers its breakthrough in this field. We apply a multidisciplinary deep learning approach, devoting equal attention to specimen preparation and imaging, and train distinct U-Net architectures with 30–50 micrographs of different imaging modalities and electron backscatter diffraction-informed annotations. On the challenging task of lath-bainite segmentation in complex-phase steel, we achieve accuracies of 90% rivaling expert segmentations. Further, we discuss the impact of image context, pre-training with domain-extrinsic data, and data augmentation. Network visualization techniques demonstrate plausible model decisions based on grain boundary morphology
Towards a fullerene-based quantum computer
Molecular structures appear to be natural candidates for a quantum
technology: individual atoms can support quantum superpositions for long
periods, and such atoms can in principle be embedded in a permanent molecular
scaffolding to form an array. This would be true nanotechnology, with
dimensions of order of a nanometre. However, the challenges of realising such a
vision are immense. One must identify a suitable elementary unit and
demonstrate its merits for qubit storage and manipulation, including input /
output. These units must then be formed into large arrays corresponding to an
functional quantum architecture, including a mechanism for gate operations.
Here we report our efforts, both experimental and theoretical, to create such a
technology based on endohedral fullerenes or 'buckyballs'. We describe our
successes with respect to these criteria, along with the obstacles we are
currently facing and the questions that remain to be addressed.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figs, single column forma
Calculated corrections to superallowed Fermi beta decay: New evaluation of the nuclear-structure-dependent terms
The measured -values for superallowed nuclear
-decay can be used to obtain the value of the vector coupling constant
and thus to test the unitarity of the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa matrix. An
essential requirement for this test is accurate calculations for the radiative
and isospin symmetry-breaking corrections that must be applied to the
experimental data. We present a new and consistent set of calculations for the
nuclear-structure-dependent components of these corrections. These new results
do not alter the current status of the unitarity test -- it still fails by more
than two standard deviations -- but they provide calculated corrections for
eleven new superallowed transitions that are likely to become accessible to
precise measurements in the future. The reliability of all calculated
corrections is explored and an experimental method indicated by which the
structure-dependent corrections can be tested and, if necessary, improved.Comment: Revtex4, one figur
Properties of an acid-tolerant, persistent Cheddar cheese isolate, Lacticaseibacillus paracasei GCRL163
The distinctive flavours in hard cheeses are attributed largely to the activity of nonstarter lactic acid bacteria (NSLAB) which dominate the cheese matrix during maturation after lactose is consumed. Understanding how different strains of NSLAB survive, compete, and scavenge available nutrients is fundamental to selecting strains as potential adjunct starters which may influence product traits. Three Lacticaseibacillus paracasei isolates which dominated at different stages over 63-week maturation periods of Australian Cheddar cheeses had the same molecular biotype. They shared many phenotypic traits, including salt tolerance, optimum growth temperature, growth on N-acetylglucosamine and N-acetylgalactosamine plus delayed growth on D-ribose, carbon sources likely present in cheese due to bacterial autolysis. However, strains 124 and 163 (later named GCRL163) survived longer at low pH and grew on D-tagatose and D-mannitol, differentiating this phenotype from strain 122. When cultured on growth-limiting lactose (0.2%, wt/vol) in the presence of high concentrations of L-leucine and other amino acids, GCRL163 produced, and subsequently consumed lactate, forming acetic and formic acids, and demonstrated temporal accumulation of intermediates in pyruvate metabolism in long-term cultures. Strain GCRL163 grew in Tween 80-tryptone broths, a trait not shared by all L. casei-group dairy isolates screened in this study. Including citrate in this medium stimulated growth of GCRL163 above citrate alone, suggesting cometabolism of citrate and Tween 80. Proteomic analysis of cytosolic proteins indicated that growth in Tween 80 produced a higher stress state and increased relative abundance of three cell envelope proteinases (CEPs) (including PrtP and Dumpy), amongst over 230 differentially expressed proteins
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