2,009 research outputs found
The formation of planetary disks and winds: an ultraviolet view
Planetary systems are angular momentum reservoirs generated during star
formation. This accretion process produces very powerful engines able to drive
the optical jets and the molecular outflows. A fraction of the engine energy is
released into heating thus the temperature of the engine ranges from the 3000K
of the inner disk material to the 10MK in the areas where magnetic reconnection
occurs. There are important unsolved problems concerning the nature of the
engine, its evolution and the impact of the engine in the chemical evolution of
the inner disk. Of special relevance is the understanding of the shear layer
between the stellar photosphere and the disk; this layer controls a significant
fraction of the magnetic field building up and the subsequent dissipative
processes ougth to be studied in the UV.
This contribution focus on describing the connections between 1 Myr old suns
and the Sun and the requirements for new UV instrumentation to address their
evolution during this period. Two types of observations are shown to be needed:
monitoring programmes and high resolution imaging down to, at least,
milliarsecond scales.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysics and Space Science 9 figure
Guidelines on the treatment of anemia of chronic renal failure using recombinant human erythropoietin: associação brasileira de hematologia, hemoterapia e terapia celular guidelines project: Associação médica brasileira - 2014
The guidelines project is a joint initiative of the Associação Médica Brasileira and the Conselho Federal de Medicina. It aims to collect information to standardize decisions and help create strategies during diagnosis and treatment. These data were prepa366450453sem informaçãosem informaçã
An Artificial Immune System for Misbehavior Detection in Mobile Ad-Hoc Networks with Virtual Thymus, Clustering, Danger Signal and Memory Detectors
In mobile ad-hoc networks, nodes act both as terminals and information relays, and participate in a common routing protocol, such as Dynamic Source Routing (DSR). The network is vulnerable to routing misbehavior, due to faulty or malicious nodes. Misbehavior detection systems aim at removing this vulnerability. For this purpose, we use an Artificial Immune System (AIS), a system inspired by the human immune system (HIS). Our goal is to build a system that, like its natural counterpart, automatically learns and detects new misbehavior. In this paper we build on our previous work and investigate the use of four concepts: (1
Holons on a meandering stripe: quantum numbers
We attempt to access the regime of strong coupling between charge carriers
and transverse dynamics of an isolated conducting ``stripe'', such as those
found in cuprate superconductors. A stripe is modeled as a partially doped
domain wall in an antiferromagnet (AF), introduced in the context of two
different models: the t-J model with strong Ising anisotropy, and the Hubbard
model in the Hartree-Fock approximation. The domain walls with a given linear
charge density are supported artificially by boundary conditions. In both
models we find a regime of parameters where doped holes lose their spin and
become holons (charge Q=1, spin S_z=0), which can move along the stripe without
frustrating AF environment. One aspect in which the holons on the AF domain
wall differ from those in an ordinary one-dimensional electron gas is their
transverse degree of freedom: a mobile holon always resides on a transverse
kink (or antikink) of the domain wall. This gives rise to two holon flavors and
to a strong coupling between doped charges and transverse fluctuations of a
stripe.Comment: Minor revisions: references update
Crossovers and Phase Coherence in Cuprate Superconductors
High temperature superconductivity is a property of doped antiferromagnetic
insulators. The electronic structure is inhomogeneous on short length and time
scales, and, as the temperature decreases, it evolves via two crossovers,
before long range superconducting order is achieved. Except for overdoped
materials, pairing and phase coherence occur at different temperatures, and
phase fluctuations determine both T and the temperature dependence of the
superfluid density for a wide range of doping. A mechanism for obtaining a high
pairing scale in a short coherence length material with a strong
poorly-screened Coulomb interaction is described.Comment: 5 pages, Latex, Revte
Condensed matter and AdS/CFT
I review two classes of strong coupling problems in condensed matter physics,
and describe insights gained by application of the AdS/CFT correspondence. The
first class concerns non-zero temperature dynamics and transport in the
vicinity of quantum critical points described by relativistic field theories. I
describe how relativistic structures arise in models of physical interest,
present results for their quantum critical crossover functions and
magneto-thermoelectric hydrodynamics. The second class concerns symmetry
breaking transitions of two-dimensional systems in the presence of gapless
electronic excitations at isolated points or along lines (i.e. Fermi surfaces)
in the Brillouin zone. I describe the scaling structure of a recent theory of
the Ising-nematic transition in metals, and discuss its possible connection to
theories of Fermi surfaces obtained from simple AdS duals.Comment: 39 pages, 12 figures; Lectures at the 5th Aegean summer school, "From
gravity to thermal gauge theories: the AdS/CFT correspondence", and the De
Sitter Lecture Series in Theoretical Physics 2009, University of Groninge
Pairing and Density Correlations of Stripe Electrons in a Two-Dimensional Antiferromagnet
We study a one-dimensional electron liquid embedded in a 2D antiferromagnetic
insulator, and coupled to it via a weak antiferromagnetic spin exchange
interaction. We argue that this model may qualitatively capture the physics of
a single charge stripe in the cuprates on length- and time scales shorter than
those set by its fluctuation dynamics. Using a local mean-field approach we
identify the low-energy effective theory that describes the electronic spin
sector of the stripe as that of a sine-Gordon model. We determine its phases
via a perturbative renormalization group analysis. For realistic values of the
model parameters we obtain a phase characterized by enhanced spin density and
composite charge density wave correlations, coexisting with subleading triplet
and composite singlet pairing correlations. This result is shown to be
independent of the spatial orientation of the stripe on the square lattice.
Slow transverse fluctuations of the stripes tend to suppress the density
correlations, thus promoting the pairing instabilities. The largest amplitudes
for the composite instabilities appear when the stripe forms an antiphase
domain wall in the antiferromagnet. For twisted spin alignments the amplitudes
decrease and leave room for a new type of composite pairing correlation,
breaking parity but preserving time reversal symmetry.Comment: Revtex, 28 pages incl. 5 figure
Topological doping and the stability of stripe phases
We analyze the properties of a general Ginzburg-Landau free energy with
competing order parameters, long-range interactions, and global constraints
(e.g., a fixed value of a total ``charge'') to address the physics of stripe
phases in underdoped high-Tc and related materials. For a local free energy
limited to quadratic terms of the gradient expansion, only uniform or
phase-separated configurations are thermodynamically stable. ``Stripe'' or
other non-uniform phases can be stabilized by long-range forces, but can only
have non-topological (in-phase) domain walls where the components of the
antiferromagnetic order parameter never change sign, and the periods of charge
and spin density waves coincide. The antiphase domain walls observed
experimentally require physics on an intermediate lengthscale, and they are
absent from a model that involves only long-distance physics. Dense stripe
phases can be stable even in the absence of long-range forces, but domain walls
always attract at large distances, i.e., there is a ubiquitous tendency to
phase separation at small doping. The implications for the phase diagram of
underdoped cuprates are discussed.Comment: 18 two-column pages, 2 figures, revtex+eps
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