576 research outputs found
Assessment of the application of advanced technologies to subsonic CTOL transport aircraft
Design studies of the application of advanced technologies to future transport aircraft were conducted. These studies were reviewed from the perspective of an air carrier. A fundamental study of the elements of airplane operating cost was performed, and the advanced technologies were ranked in order of potential profit impact. Recommendations for future study areas are given
Thermodynamic Comparison and the Ideal Glass Transition of A Monatomic Systems Modeled as an Antiferromagnetic Ising Model on Husimi and Cubic Recursive Lattices of the Same Coordination Number
Two kinds of recursive lattices with the same coordination number but
different unit cells (2-D square and 3-D cube) are constructed and the
antiferromagnetic Ising model is solved exactly on them to study the stable and
metastable states. The Ising model with multi-particle interactions is designed
to represent a monatomic system or an alloy. Two solutions of the model exhibit
the crystallization of liquid, and the ideal glass transition of supercooled
liquid respectively. Based on the solutions, the thermodynamics on both
lattices was examined. In particular, the free energy, energy, and entropy of
the ideal glass, supercooled liquid, crystal, and liquid state of the model on
each lattice were calculated and compared with each other. Interactions between
particles farther away than the nearest neighbor distance are taken into
consideration. The two lattices show comparable properties on the transition
temperatures and the thermodynamic behaviors, which proves that both of them
are practical to describe the regular 3-D case, while the different effects of
the unit types are still obvious.Comment: 27 pages, 13 figure
Opposing synaptic regulation of amyloid-β metabolism by NMDA receptors in vivo
The concentration of amyloid-β (Aβ) within the brain extracellular space is one determinant of whether the peptide will aggregate into toxic species that are important in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pathogenesis. Some types of synaptic activity can regulate Aβ levels. Here we demonstrate two distinct mechanisms that are simultaneously activated by NMDA receptors and regulate brain interstitial fluid (ISF) Aβ levels in opposite directions in the living mouse. Depending on the dose of NMDA administered locally to the brain, ISF Aβ levels either increase or decrease. Low doses of NMDA increase action potentials and synaptic transmission which leads to an elevation in synaptic Aβ generation. In contrast, high doses of NMDA activate signaling pathways that lead to ERK (extracellular-regulated kinase) activation, which reduces processing of APP into Aβ. This depression in Aβ via APP processing occurs despite dramatically elevated synaptic activity. Both of these synaptic mechanisms are simultaneously active, with the balance between them determining whether ISF Aβ levels will increase or decrease. NMDA receptor antagonists increase ISF Aβ levels, suggesting that basal activity at these receptors normally suppresses Aβ levels in vivo. This has implications for understanding normal Aβ metabolism as well as AD pathogenesis
Partially gapped fermions in 2D
We compute mean field phase diagrams of two closely related interacting
fermion models in two spatial dimensions (2D). The first is the so-called 2D
t-t'-V model describing spinless fermions on a square lattice with local
hopping and density-density interactions. The second is the so-called 2D
Luttinger model that provides an effective description of the 2D t-t'-V model
and in which parts of the fermion degrees of freedom are treated exactly by
bosonization. In mean field theory, both models have a charge-density-wave
(CDW) instability making them gapped at half-filling. The 2D t-t'-V model has a
significant parameter regime away from half-filling where neither the CDW nor
the normal state are thermodynamically stable. We show that the 2D Luttinger
model allows to obtain more detailed information about this mixed region. In
particular, we find in the 2D Luttinger model a partially gapped phase that, as
we argue, can be described by an exactly solvable model.Comment: v1: 36 pages, 10 figures, v2: minor corrections; equation references
to arXiv:0903.0055 updated
Fault-controlled and stratabound dolostones in the Late Aptian-earliest Albian Benassal Formation (Maestrat Basin, E Spain) : petrology and geochemistry constrains
This study was developed under the ExxonMobil FC2 Alliance (Fundamental Controls on Flow in Carbonates). The authors wish to thank ExxonMobil Production Company and ExxonMobil Upstream Research Company for providing funding. The views in this article by Sherry L. Stafford are her own and not necessarily those of ExxonMobil. This research was supported by the Sedimentary Geology Research Group of the Generalitat de Catalunya (2014SGR251). We would like to thank Andrea Ceriani and Paola Ronchi for their critical and valuable reviews, and Associated Editor Piero Gianolla for the editorial work.Peer reviewedPostprin
Implications of Charge Ordering for Single-Particle Properties of High-Tc Superconductors
The consequences of disordered charge stripes and antiphase spin domains for
the properties of the high-temperature superconductors are studied. We focus on
angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and optical conductivity, and show
that the many unusual features of the experimentally observed spectra can be
understood naturally in this way. This interpretation of the data, when
combined with evidence from neutron scattering and NMR, suggests that
disordered and fluctuating stripe phases are a common feature of
high-temperature superconductors.Comment: 4 pages, figures by fax or mai
Phase diagrams of the 2D t-t'-U Hubbard model from an extended mean field method
It is well-known from unrestricted Hartree-Fock computations that the 2D
Hubbard model does not have homogeneous mean field states in significant
regions of parameter space away from half filling. This is incompatible with
standard mean field theory. We present a simple extension of the mean field
method that avoids this problem. As in standard mean field theory, we restrict
Hartree-Fock theory to simple translation invariant states describing
antiferromagnetism (AF), ferromagnetism (F) and paramagnetism (P), but we use
an improved method to implement the doping constraint allowing us to detect
when a phase separated state is energetically preferred, e.g. AF and F
coexisting at the same time. We find that such mixed phases occur in
significant parts of the phase diagrams, making them much richer than the ones
from standard mean field theory. Our results for the 2D t-t'-U Hubbard model
demonstrate the importance of band structure effects.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Propagation of social representations
Based on a minimal formalism of social representations as a set of associated cognems, a simple model of propagation of representations is presented. Assuming that subjects share the constitutive cognems, the model proposes that mere focused attention on the set of cognems in the field of common conscience may replicate the pattern of representation from context into subjects, or, from subject to subject, through actualization by language, where cognems are represented by verbal signs. Limits of the model are discussed, and evolutionist perspectives are presented with the support of field data
Structural Disorder Induced Polaron Formation and Magnetic Scattering in the Disordered Holstein-Double Exchange Model
In this paper we present results on the disordered Holstein-Double Exchange
model, explicitly in three dimension and `metallic' densities, obtained by
using a recently developed Monte Carlo approach. Following up on our earlier
paper, cond-mat/0406085, here we provide a detailed microscopic picture of the
thermally driven metal-insulator transition (MIT) that arises close to the
ferromagnet to paramagnet transition in this problem. This paper is focused
mainly on the `diagnostics', clarifying the origin of the effective disorder
that drives the MIT in this system. To that effect, we provide results on the
thermal evolution of the distributions of (i) lattice distortions, (ii) the net
`structural disorder' and (iii) the `hopping disorder' arising from spin
randomness feeding back through the Hunds coupling. We suggest a phenomenology
for the thermally driven MIT, viewing it as an `Anderson-Holstein' transition.Comment: 6 pages, latex, JPSJ style, 7 eps figs. Style files included.
Proceedings of the SPQS Meeting at Sendai, Japan, 2004. To appear in JPS
The interplay between double exchange, super-exchange, and Lifshitz localization in doped manganites
Considering the disorder caused in manganites by the substitution of Mn by Fe
or Ga, we accomplish a systematic study of doped manganites begun in previous
papers. To this end, a disordered model is formulated and solved using the
Variational Mean Field technique. The subtle interplay between double exchange,
super-exchange, and disorder causes similar effects on the dependence of T_C on
the percentage of Mn substitution in the cases considered. Yet, in
LaCaMnGaO our results suggest a quantum
critical point (QCP) for , associated to the localization of
the electronic states of the conduction band. In the case of
LaCaMnFeO (with ) no such QCP is expected.Comment: 6 pages + 3 postscript figures. Largely extended discussio
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