12,270 research outputs found
Current induced distortion of a magnetic domain wall
We consider the spin torque induced by a current flowing ballistically
through a magnetic domain wall. In addition to a global pressure in the
direction of the electronic flow, the torque has an internal structure of
comparable magnitude due to the precession of the electrons' spins at the
"Larmor" frequency. As a result, the profile of the domain wall is expected to
get distorted by the current and acquires a periodic sur-structure.Comment: 5 pages, 3 eps figure
meson transparency in nuclei from resonant interactions
We investigate the meson nuclear transparency using some recent
theoretical developments on the in medium self-energy. The inclusion of
direct resonant -scattering and the kaon decay mechanisms leads to a
width much larger than in most previous theoretical approaches. The
model has been confronted with photoproduction data from CLAS and LEPS and the
recent proton induced production from COSY finding an overall good
agreement. The results support the need of a quite large direct -scattering contribution to the self-energy
Nonlinear spin-polarized transport through a ferromagnetic domain wall
A domain wall separating two oppositely magnetized regions in a ferromagnetic
semiconductor exhibits, under appropriate conditions, strongly nonlinear I-V
characteristics similar to those of a p-n diode. We study these characteristics
as functions of wall width and temperature. As the width increases or the
temperature decreases, direct tunneling between the majority spin bands
decreases the effectiveness of the diode. This has important implications for
the zero-field quenched resistance of magnetic semiconductors and for the
design of a recently proposed spin transistor.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
A spatially-structured PCG method for content diversity in a Physics-based simulation game
This paper presents a spatially-structured evolutionary algorithm (EA) to procedurally generate game maps of di ferent levels of di ficulty to be solved, in Gravityvolve!, a physics-based simulation videogame that we have implemented and which is inspired by the n-
body problem, a classical problem in the fi eld of physics and mathematics. The proposal consists of a steady-state EA whose population is partitioned into three groups according to the di ficulty of the generated content (hard, medium or easy) which can be easily adapted to handle the automatic creation of content of diverse nature in other games. In addition, we present three fitness functions, based on multiple criteria (i.e:, intersections, gravitational acceleration and simulations), that were used experimentally to conduct the search process for creating a database of
maps with di ferent di ficulty in Gravityvolve!.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional AndalucĂa Tech
Sex-specific roles of cellular inflammation and cardiometabolism in obesity-associated depressive symptomatology.
BackgroundObesity and depression are complex conditions with stronger comorbid relationships among women than men. Inflammation and cardiometabolic dysfunction are likely mechanistic candidates for increased depression risk, and their prevalence differs by sex. Whether these relationships extend to depressive symptoms is poorly understood. Therefore, we analyzed sex in associations between inflammation and metabolic syndrome (MetS) criteria on depressive symptomatology. Specifically, we examined whether sex positively moderates the relationship between depressive symptoms and inflammation among women, and whether MetS has parallel effects among men.MethodsDepressive symptoms, MetS, and inflammation were assessed in 129 otherwise healthy adults. Depressive symptoms were assessed using Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-Ia). Monocyte inflammation regulation (BARIC) was quantified using flow cytometry measurement of TNF-α suppression by β-agonist. Moderation effects of sex on associations between BARIC, MetS criteria, and BDI were estimated using two-way ANOVA and linear regression, adjusting for BMI, and by sex subgroup analyses.ResultsObese individuals reported more depressive symptoms. Sex did not formally moderate this relationship, though BDI scores tended to differ by BMI among women, but not men, in subgroup analysis. Poorer inflammation control and higher MetS criteria were correlated with somatic depressive symptoms. Sex moderated associations between MetS criteria and somatic symptoms; among men, MetS criteria predicted somatic symptoms, not among women. Subgroup analysis further indicated that poorer inflammation control tended to be associated with higher somatic symptoms in women.ConclusionsThese results indicate that obesity-related inflammation and MetS factors have sex-specific effects on depressive symptoms in a non-clinical population. Although pathophysiological mechanisms underlying sex differences remain to be elucidated, our findings suggest that distinct vulnerabilities to depressive symptoms exist between women and men, and highlight the need to consider sex as a key biological variable in obesity-depression relationships. Future clinical studies on comorbid obesity and depression should account for sex, which may optimize therapeutic strategies
Crossover of interface growth dynamics during corrosion and passivation
We study a model of corrosion and passivation of a metalic surface in contact
with a solution using scaling arguments and simulation. The passive layer is
porous so that the metal surface is in contact with the solution. The volume
excess of the products may suppress the access of the solution to the metal
surface, but it is then restored by a diffusion mechanism. A metalic site in
contact with the solution or with the porous layer can be passivated with rate
p and volume excess diffuses with rate D. At small times, the corrosion front
linearly grows in time, but the growth velocity shows a t^{-1/2} decrease after
a crossover time of order t_c ~ D/p^2, where the average front height is of
order h_c ~ D/p. A universal scaling relation between h/h_c and t/t_c is
proposed and confirmed by simulation for 0.00005 <= p <= 0.5 in square
lattices. The roughness of the corrosion front shows a crossover from
Kardar-Parisi-Zhang scaling to Laplacian growth (diffusion-limited erosion -
DLE) at t_c. The amplitudes of roughness scaling are obtained by the same kind
of arguments as previously applied to other competitive growth models. The
simulation results confirm their validity. Since the proposed model captures
the essential ingredients of different corrosion processes, we also expect
these universal features to appear in real systems.Comment: 17 pages, including 7 figures; submitted articl
Splitting hairs of the three charge black hole
We construct the large radius limit of the metric of three charge supertubes
and three charge BPS black rings by using the fact that supertubes preserve the
same supersymmetries as their component branes. Our solutions reproduce a few
of the properties of three charge supertubes found recently using the Born
Infeld description. Moreover, we find that these solutions pass a number of
rather nontrivial tests which they should pass if they are to describe some of
the hair of three charge black holes and three charge black rings.Comment: 15 pages, LaTeX, v2 minor correction
Spiral Evolution in a Confined Geometry
Supported nanoscale lead crystallites with a step emerging from a
non-centered screw dislocation on the circular top facet were prepared by rapid
cooling from just above the melting temperature. STM observations of the top
facet show a nonuniform rotation rate and shape of the spiral step as the
crystallite relaxes. These features can be accurately modeled using curvature
driven dynamics, as in classical models of spiral growth, with boundary
conditions fixing the dislocation core and regions of the step lying along the
outer facet edge.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to be published in Physical Review Letter
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