800 research outputs found
Quasiparticles and Energy Scaling in BiSrCaCuO (=1-3): Angle-Resolved Photoemission Spectroscopy
Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) has been performed on the
single- to triple-layered Bi-family high-{\it T} superconductors
(BiSrCaCuO, =1-3). We found a sharp
quasiparticle peak as well as a pseudogap at the Fermi level in the
triple-layered compound. Comparison among three compounds has revealed a
universal rule that the characteristic energies of superconducting and
pseudogap behaviors are scaled with the maximum {\it T}.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Unusual electronic ground state of a prototype cuprate: band splitting of single CuO_2-plane Bi_2 Sr_(2-x) La_x CuO_(6+delta)
By in-situ change of polarization a small splitting of the Zhang-Rice singlet
state band near the Fermi level has been resolved for optimum doped (x=0.4)
BiSrLaCuO at the (pi,0)-point (R.Manzke et al.
PRB 63, R100504 (2001). Here we treat the momentum dependence and lineshape of
the split band by photoemission in the EDC-mode with very high angular and
energy resolution. The splitting into two destinct emissions could also be
observed over a large portion of the major symmetry line M, giving the
dispersion for the individual contributions. Since bi-layer effects can not be
present in this single-layer material the results have to be discussed in the
context of one-particle removal spectral functions derived from current
theoretical models. The most prominent are microscopic phase separation
including striped phase formation, coexisting antiferromagnetic and
incommensurate charge-density-wave critical fluctuations coupled to electrons
(hot spots) or even spin charge separation within the Luttinger liquid picture,
all leading to non-Fermi liquid like behavior in the normal state and having
severe consequences on the way the superconducting state forms. Especially the
possibilty of observing spinon and holon excitations is discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Domestic Queensware in Kensington-Fishtown: Excavating Philadelphia\u27s Waterfront Neighborhoods
Ongoing archaeological excavation undertaken by URS/AECOM along the I-95 corridor in Kensington-Fishtown in Philadelphia have brought to light 18th and 19th century domestic and industrial life along a three-mile section of the Delaware River waterfront. Excavation has revealed over 400 shaft features, yard deposits, and industrial foundations yielding over one million artifacts from a three mile section of the Delaware River waterfront. A small quantity of domestic queensware has been recovered from barrel and wood-lined box privies and from an early 19th century drain feature. The recovery of domestic queensware in Kensington-Fishtown has revealed that this ware had become part of the domestic fabric of early 19th century consumers in this part of the city
The Rise and Fall of American Queensware 1807-1822
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This article examines the history of several manufacturers of American queensware in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and beyond. Our research reveals that efforts to produce queensware were more extensive and widespread than previously thought. This survey expanded as we discovered references to contemporary queensware potteries in other parts of the United States during the first two decades of the 19th century. In all, 14 queensware-manufacturing ventures are identified and described from Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Ohio, what is now West Virginia, Vermont, and New Hampshire. Much of this research is drawn from period newspaper notices, advertisements, and surviving personal correspondence. The period sources provide a view of the experimental nature of this industry, document the search for raw materials, and describe various aspects of the manufacturing process
Cross-sectional analysis of data from the U.S. clinical trials database reveals poor translational clinical trial effort for traumatic brain injury, compared with stroke
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is an important public health problem, comparable to stroke in incidence and prevalence. Few interventions have proven efficacy in TBI, and clinical trials are, therefore, necessary to advance management in TBI. We describe the current clinical trial landscape in traumatic brain injury and compare it with the trial efforts for stroke. For this, we analysed all stroke and TBI studies registered on the US Clinical Trials (www.clinicaltrials.gov) database over a 10-year period (01/01/2000 to 01/31/2013). This methodology has been previously used to analyse clinical trial efforts in other specialties. We describe the research profile in each area: total number of studies, total number of participants and change in number of research studies over time. We also analysed key study characteristics, such as enrolment number and scope of recruitment. We found a mismatch between relative public health burden and relative research effort in each disease. Despite TBI having comparable prevalence and higher incidence than stroke, it has around one fifth of the number of clinical trials and participant recruitment. Both stroke and TBI have experienced an increase in the number of studies over the examined time period, but the rate of growth for TBI is one third that for stroke. Small-scale (<1000 participants per trial) and single centre studies form the majority of clinical trials in both stroke and TBI, with TBI having significantly fewer studies with international recruitment. We discuss the consequences of these findings and how the situation might be improved. A sustained research effort, entailing increased international collaboration and rethinking the methodology of running clinical trials, is required in order to improve outcomes after traumatic brain injury
Strong spin triplet contribution of the first removal state in the insulating regime of Bi2Sr2Ca1-xYxCu2O8+delta
The experimental dispersion of the first removal state in the insulating
regime of Bi2Sr2Ca1-xYxCu2O8+delta is found to differ significantly from that
of other parent materials: oxyclorides and La2CuO4 . For Y-contents of 0.92 > x
> 0.55 due to nonstoichiometric effects in the Bi-O layers, the hole
concentration in the CuO2 -layers is almost constant and on the contrary the
crystal lattice parameters a,b,c change very strongly. This (a,b) parameter
increase and c parameter decrease results in an unconventional three peak
structure at (0,0);(pi/2, pi/2);(pi,pi) for x=0.92. We can describe the
experimental data only beyond the framework of the 3-band pd-model involving
the representations of a new triplet counterpart for the Zhang-Rice singlet
state.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure
A Topological Study of Contextuality and Modality in Quantum Mechanics
Kochen-Specker theorem rules out the non-contextual assignment of values to
physical magnitudes. Here we enrich the usual orthomodular structure of quantum
mechanical propositions with modal operators. This enlargement allows to refer
consistently to actual and possible properties of the system. By means of a
topological argument, more precisely in terms of the existence of sections of
sheaves, we give an extended version of Kochen-Specker theorem over this new
structure. This allows us to prove that contextuality remains a central feature
even in the enriched propositional system.Comment: 10 pages, no figures, submitted to I. J. Th. Phy
Novel Fine-Structure in the Low-Energy Excitation Spectrum of a High-Tc Superconductor by Polarization Dependent Photoemission
Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy is performed on single crystals of
the single-layer high-Tc superconductor Bi(2)Sr(2-x)La(x)CuO(6+d) at optimal
doping (x=0.4) in order to study in great detail the Zhang-Rice (ZR) singlet
band at the Fermi level. Besides the high crystal quality the advantages of a
single-layer material are the absence of bilayer effects and the distinct
reduction of thermal broadening. Due to the high energy and angle resolution
and, most important, due to the controlled variation of the polarization vector
of the synchrotron radiation the emission from the ZR singlet band reveals a
distinct fine-structure. It consists of two maxima, the first showing only weak
and the second at EF extremely strong polarization dependence. However, our
observation has enormous consequences for line shape analyses and the
determination of pseudo gaps by photoemission.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures. to appear in PRB (Rapid Comm.
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