5,538 research outputs found
Diluted Random Fields in Mixed Cyanide Crystals
A percolation argument and a dilute compressible random field Ising model are
used to present a simple model for mixed cyanide crystals. The model reproduces
quantitatively several features of the phase diagrams altough some crude
approximations are made. In particular critical thresholds x_c at which
ferroelastic first order transitions disappear, are calculated. Moreover,
transitions are found to remain first order down to x_c for all mixtures except
for bromine, for which the transition becomes continuous. All the results are
in full agreement with experimental data.Comment: 8 pages, late
Conformity and controversies in the diagnosis, staging and follow-up evaluation of canine nodal lymphoma: a systematic review of the last 15 years of published literature
Diagnostic methods used in the initial and post-treatment evaluation of canine lymphoma are heterogeneous and can vary within countries and institutions. Accurate reporting of clinical stage and response assessment is crucial in determining the treatment efficacy and predicting prognosis. This study comprises a systematic review of all available canine multicentric lymphoma studies published over 15 years. Data concerning diagnosis, clinical stage evaluation and response assessment procedures were extracted and compared. Sixty-three studies met the eligibility criteria. Fifty-five (87.3%) studies were non-randomized prospective or retrospective studies. The survey results also expose variations in diagnostic criteria and treatment response assessment in canine multicentric lymphoma. Variations in staging procedures performed and recorded led to an unquantifiable heterogeneity among patients in and between studies, making it difficult to compare treatment efficacies. Awareness of this inconsistency of procedure and reporting may help in the design of future clinical trials
Spin Splitting Tunable Optical Bandgap in GdN Thin Films for Spin Filtering
Rare-earth nitrides, such as gadolinium nitride (GdN), have great potential
for spintronic devices due to their unique magnetic and electronic properties.
GdN has a large magnetic moment, low coercitivity and strong spin polarization
suitable for spin transistors, magnetic memories and spin-based quantum
computing devices. Its large spin splitting of the optical bandgap functions as
a spin-filter that offers the means for spin-polarized current injection into
metals, superconductors, topological insulators, 2D layers and other novel
materials. As spintronics devices require thin films, a successful
implementation of GdN demands a detailed investigation of the optical and
magnetic properties in very thin films. With this objective, we investigate the
dependence of the direct and indirect optical bandgaps (Eg) of half-metallic
GdN, using the trilayer structure AlN(10 nm)/GdN(t)/AlN(10 nm) for GdN film
thickness t in the ranging from 6 nm to 350 nm, in both paramagnetic (PM) and
ferromagnetic (FM) phases. Our results show a bandgap of 1.6 eV in the PM
state, while in the FM state the bandgap splits for the majority (0.8 eV) and
minority (1.2 eV) spin states. As the GdN film becomes thinner the spin split
magnitude increases by 60%, going from 0.290 eV to 0.460 eV. Our results point
to methods for engineering GdN films for spintronic devices
Deep GMRT radio observations and a multi-wavelength study of the region around HESS J1858+020
Context. There are a number of very high energy sources in the Galaxy that remain unidentified. Multi-wavelength and variability studies, and catalogue searches, are powerful tools to identify the physical counterpart, given the uncertainty in the source location and extension. Aims. This work carries out a thorough multi-wavelength study of the unidentified, very high energy source HESS J1858+020 and its environs. Methods. We have performed Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope observations at 610 MHz and 1.4 GHz to obtain a deep, low-frequency radio image of the region surrounding HESS J1858+020. We analysed archival radio, infrared, and X-ray data as well. This observational information, combined with molecular data, catalogue sources, and a nearby Fermi gamma-ray detection of unidentified origin, are combined to explore possible counterparts to the very high energy source. Results. We provide with a deep radio image of a supernova remnant that might be related to the GeV and TeV emission in the region. We confirm the presence of an H ii region next to the supernova remnant and coincident with molecular emission. A potential region of star formation is also identified. We identify several radio and X-ray sources in the surroundings. Some of these sources are known planetary nebulae, whereas others may be non-thermal extended emitters and embedded young stellar objects. Three old, background Galactic pulsars also neighbour HESS J1858+020 along the line of sight. Conclusions. The region surrounding HESS J1858+020 is rich in molecular structures and non-thermal objects that may potentially be linked to this unidentified very high energy source. In particular, a supernova remnant interacting with nearby molecular clouds may be a good candidate, but a star forming region, or a non-thermal radio source of yet unclear nature, may also be behind the gamma-ray source. The neighbouring pulsars, despite being old and distant, cannot be discarded as candidates. Further observational studies are needed, however, to narrow the search for a counterpart to the HESS source
Direct experimental test of scalar confinement
The concept of Lorentz scalar quark confinement has a long history and is
still widely used despite its well-known theoretical faults. We point out here
that the predictions of scalar confinement also conflict directly with
experiment. We investigate the dependence of heavy-light meson mass differences
on the mass of the light quark. In particular, we examine the strange and
non-strange D mesons. We find that the predictions of scalar confinement are in
considerable conflict with measured values.Comment: REVTeX4, 7 pages, 4 EPS figure
An Exact Calculation of the Energy Density of Cosmological Gravitational Waves
In this paper we calculate the Bogoliubov coefficients and the energy density
of the stochastic gravitational wave background for a universe that undergoes
inflation followed by radiation domination and matter domination, using a
formalism that gives the Bogoliubov coefficients as continous functions of
time. By making a reasonable assumption for the equation of state during
reheating, we obtain in a natural way the expected high frequency cutoff in the
spectral energy density.Comment: 12 pages+5 figures, uuencoded file,DF/IST-2.9
Post-Inflationary Reheating
We study a model for reheating that has been much investigated for parametric
resonance, having a quartic interaction of the scalar inflaton with another
scalar field. Attention is particularly on the quantum excitations of the
inflaton field and the metric perturbation with a smooth transition from
quantum to classical stochastic states, followed through from a specific
inflation model to a state including a relativistic fluid. The scalar fields
enter non-perturbatively but the metric enters perturbatively, and the validity
of this latter is assessed. In this model our work seems to point the large
scale curvature parameter changing.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures. Coding error(misprint) corrected:figures and
some conclusions change
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