6,680 research outputs found
Q-Dependent Susceptibilities in Ferromagnetic Quasiperiodic Z-Invariant Ising Models
We study the q-dependent susceptibility chi(q) of a series of quasiperiodic
Ising models on the square lattice. Several different kinds of aperiodic
sequences of couplings are studied, including the Fibonacci and silver-mean
sequences. Some identities and theorems are generalized and simpler derivations
are presented. We find that the q-dependent susceptibilities are periodic, with
the commensurate peaks of chi(q) located at the same positions as for the
regular Ising models. Hence, incommensurate everywhere-dense peaks can only
occur in cases with mixed ferromagnetic-antiferromagnetic interactions or if
the underlying lattice is aperiodic. For mixed-interaction models the positions
of the peaks depend strongly on the aperiodic sequence chosen.Comment: LaTeX2e, 26 pages, 9 figures (27 eps files). v2: Misprints correcte
Tidal Dynamics in Cosmological Spacetimes
We study the relative motion of nearby free test particles in cosmological
spacetimes, such as the FLRW and LTB models. In particular, the influence of
spatial inhomogeneities on local tidal accelerations is investigated. The
implications of our results for the dynamics of the solar system are briefly
discussed. That is, on the basis of the models studied in this paper, we
estimate the tidal influence of the cosmic gravitational field on the orbit of
the Earth around the Sun and show that the corresponding temporal rate of
variation of the astronomical unit is negligibly small.Comment: 12 pages, no figures, REVTeX 4.0; appendix added, new references, and
minor changes throughout; to appear in Classical and Quantum Gravity; v4:
error in (A24) of Appendix A corrected, results and conclusions unchanged. We
thank L. Iorio for pointing out the erro
Anomalous Dimension and Spatial Correlations in a Point-Island Model
We examine the island size distribution function and spatial correlation
function of a model for island growth in the submonolayer regime in both 1 and
2 dimensions. In our model the islands do not grow in shape, and a fixed number
of adatoms are added, nucleate, and are trapped at islands as they diffuse.
We study the cases of various critical island sizes for nucleation as a
function of initial coverage. We found anomalous scaling of the island size
distribution for large . Using scaling, random walk theory, a version of
mean-field theory we obtain a closed form for the spatial correlation function.
Our analytic results are verified by Monte Carlo simulations
Mean field and corrections for the Euclidean Minimum Matching problem
Consider the length of the minimum matching of N points in
d-dimensional Euclidean space. Using numerical simulations and the finite size
scaling law , we obtain
precise estimates of for . We then consider
the approximation where distance correlations are neglected. This model is
solvable and gives at an excellent ``random link'' approximation to
. Incorporation of three-link correlations further improves
the accuracy, leading to a relative error of 0.4% at d=2 and 3. Finally, the
large d behavior of this expansion in link correlations is discussed.Comment: source and one figure. Submitted to PR
Magnetic properties of NaV2O5, a one-dimensional spin 1/2 antiferromagnet with finite chains
We have performed measurements of the magnetic susceptibility of NaVO
between 2 and 400 K. The high temperature part is typical of spin 1/2 chains
with a nearest--neighbour antiferromagnetic exchange integral of 529 K. We
develop a model for the susceptibility of a system with finite chains to
account for the low temperature part of the data, which cannot be fitted by a
standard Curie-Weiss term. These results suggest that the next
nearest--neighbour exchange integral in CaVO should be of the
order of 500 K because, like in NaVO, it corresponds to corner
sharing VO square pyramids.Comment: An early version of the manuscript was mistakenly submitted. Although
relatively minor, the changes concern the list of authors, the main text, the
references and the figure captions. 10 pages of latex, 2 figure
High energy gamma ray balloon instrument
The High Energy Gamma Ray Balloon Instrument was built in part to verify certain subsystems' performance for the Energetic Gamma Ray Experiment Telescope (EGRET) instrument, the high energy telescope to be carried on the Gamma Ray Observatory. This paper describes the instrument, the performance of some subsystems, and some relevant results
East Asia and the global/transatlantic/Western crisis
This paper introduces the special collection on East Asia and the Global Crisis. After justifying why a focus on East Asia is appropriate, it draws out the main themes that run through the individual contributions. These are the extent to which the region is decoupling from the global economy (or the West), the increasing legitimacy of statist alternatives to neoliberal development strategies, and the impact of crises on the definition of âregionâ and the functioning of regional institutions and governance mechanisms
The Impact of Free Health Screenings at Community Pharmacies on Diabetes
Diabetes is a prevalent issue in the United States, with an estimated 8.1 million people un-diagnosed as of 2012. Health screenings have been proven to identify diseases earlier, thereby resulting in earlier and more satisfactory treatment. Community pharmacies can offer many of the same screenings as those in doctor offices. The objective of this study was to assess the impact of free health screenings in community pharmacies on patient follow-up, perceptions, and knowledge of diabetes through blood glucose screenings and patient education. The study design was a pre-post observational study using surveys, blood sugar screenings, and patient education on diabetes. Participants were voluntary patients from four REM Corporation pharmacies in Ohio who were 18 or older, not recently tested for diabetes, non-diabetic, not pregnant, and without disorders that could hinder survey responses and education. Pre- and post-surveys assessed both patient perceptions on free health screenings in community pharmacies and on diabetes knowledge. Results among the 26 participants showed there was no statistically significant difference between patient perception pre- and post-surveys (all p-values â„ 0.05), however there was a statistically significant difference between pre and post diabetes knowledge surveys (p \u3c 0.001). Limitations of this study were the small sample size due to the relatively small pharmacies utilized and short length of study time. Future directions should focus on using more demographically diverse pharmacies and a longer study time. Due to patients already having highly positive perceptions of health screenings in community pharmacies, future research should assess patient knowledge of diseases and the impact of patient education on overall health outcomes. Results of the study showed patients had positive opinions on free health screenings in community pharmacies and these screenings can help patients understand disease states and be more aware of their health
Carnot cycle for an oscillator
Carnot established in 1824 that the efficiency of cyclic engines operating
between a hot bath at absolute temperature and a bath at a lower
temperature cannot exceed . We show that linear
oscillators alternately in contact with hot and cold baths obey this principle
in the quantum as well as in the classical regime. The expression of the work
performed is derived from a simple prescription. Reversible and non-reversible
cycles are illustrated. The paper begins with historical considerations and is
essentially self-contained.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures, sumitted to European Journal of Physics Changed
content: Fluctuations are considere
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