6,108 research outputs found
Comment on "Ising model on a small world network"
In the recent study of the Ising model on a small-world network by A.
P\c{e}kalski [Phys. Rev. E {\bf 64}, 057104 (2001)], a surprisingly small value
of the critical exponent has been obtained for the
temperature dependence of the magnetization. We perform extensive Monte Carlo
simulations of the same model and conclude, via the standard finite-size
scaling of various quantities,that the phase transition in the model is of the
mean-field nature, in contrast to the work by A. P\c{e}kalski but in accord
with other existing studies.Comment: to be published in PR
Theoretical search for Chevrel phase based thermoelectric materials
We investigate the thermoelectric properties of some semiconducting Chevrel
phases. Band structure calculations are used to compute thermopowers and to
estimate of the effects of alloying and disorder on carrier mobility. Alloying
on the Mo site with transition metals like Re, Ru or Tc to reach a
semiconducting composition causes large changes in the electronic structure at
the Fermi level. Such alloys are expected to have low carrier mobilities.
Filling with transition metals was also found to be incompatible with high
thermoelectric performance based on the calculated electronic structures.
Filling with Zn, Cu, and especially with Li was found to be favorable. The
calculated electronic structures of these filled Chevrel phases are consistent
with low scattering of carriers by defects associated with the filling. We
expect good mobility and high thermopower in materials with the composition
close to (Li,Cu)MoSe, particularly when Li-rich, and recommend this
system for experimental investigation.Comment: 4 two-column pages, 4 embedded ps figure
Adaptable beam profiles from a dual-cavity Nd:YAG laser
We report a technique to tailor a laser beam profile from a donut to quasi-top-hat intensity distribution, directly from the laser, simply achieved by simultaneous excitation and control of the relative contributions of the fundamental (TEM00) and first order Laguerre-Gaussian (LG01) transverse modes. Exploiting a dual-cavity configuration with a single Nd:YAG gain element, adaptable continuous-wave laser beam profiles from the primary cavity could be obtained by varying the diffraction loss of an acousto-optic modulator in the secondary cavity. We investigated the resultant beam profiles as a function of pump power and the AOM diffraction loss, and discuss the prospects for tunable laser beams profiles
The WTO's Under-Capacity to Deal with Global Over-Capacity
As evidenced by World Trade Organization (hereinafter “WTO”) reform proposals, efforts are underway to revise critical features of International Trade Law at the multilateral level. Such efforts are not in a vacuum. Rather, they are occurring in a global economic environment characterized in part by structural imbalances, that is, of over-capacity and consequent overproduction and trade surpluses and deficits. The European Union (EU) and Canada suggest reforms concerning disciplines on state owned enterprises (hereinafter “SOEs”) and subsidies, and enhanced transparency. But, none of their suggestions has received America’s support in particular, nor garnered a significant consensus among WTO Members.
That failure may be explained by a basic mismatch: proposals fail to address global over-capacity in key manufacturing sectors such as aluminum and steel. Nothing among the reform proposals would alter materially the dearth of disciplines in the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and WTO on SOEs and SOEs are a core cause of structural imbalances. They also would fail to make key changes with respect to constraining subsidies, bolstering transparency, or enhancing notifications. Accordingly, the thesis of this article is the WTO suffers from an under-capacity to deal with over-capacity
Non-linear matter power spectrum from Time Renormalisation Group: efficient computation and comparison with one-loop
We address the issue of computing the non-linear matter power spectrum on
mildly non-linear scales with efficient semi-analytic methods. We implemented
M. Pietroni's Time Renormalization Group (TRG) method and its Dynamical 1-Loop
(D1L) limit in a numerical module for the new Boltzmann code CLASS. Our
publicly released module is valid for LCDM models, and optimized in such a way
to run in less than a minute for D1L, or in one hour (divided by number of
nodes) for TRG. A careful comparison of the D1L, TRG and Standard 1-Loop
approaches reveals that results depend crucially on the assumed initial
bispectrum at high redshift. When starting from a common assumption, the three
methods give roughly the same results, showing that the partial resumation of
diagrams beyond one loop in the TRG method improves one-loop results by a
negligible amount. A comparison with highly accurate simulations by M. Sato &
T. Matsubara shows that all three methods tend to over-predict non-linear
corrections by the same amount on small wavelengths. Percent precision is
achieved until k~0.2 h/Mpc for z>2, or until k~0.14 h/Mpc at z=1.Comment: 24 pages, 7 figures, revised title and conclusions, version accepted
in JCAP, code available at http://class-code.ne
Changes in microarchitectural characteristics at the tibial epiphysis induced by collagen-induced rheumatoid arthritis over time
10.2147/CIA.S35202Clinical Interventions in Aging7373-38
An Ensemble Kalman-Particle Predictor-Corrector Filter for Non-Gaussian Data Assimilation
An Ensemble Kalman Filter (EnKF, the predictor) is used make a large change
in the state, followed by a Particle Filer (PF, the corrector) which assigns
importance weights to describe non-Gaussian distribution. The weights are
obtained by nonparametric density estimation. It is demonstrated on several
numerical examples that the new predictor-corrector filter combines the
advantages of the EnKF and the PF and that it is suitable for high dimensional
states which are discretizations of solutions of partial differential
equations.Comment: ICCS 2009, to appear; 9 pages; minor edit
Competing effects of mass anisotropy and spin Zeeman coupling on the upper critical field of a mixed - and s-wave superconductor
Based on the linearized Eilenberger equations, the upper critical field
of mixed d- and s-wave superconductors has been microscopically
studied with an emphasis on the competing effects of mass anisotropy and spin
Zeeman coupling. We find the mass anisotropy always enhance while the
Zeeman interaction suppresses . As required by the thermodynamics, we
find is saturated at zero temperature. We compare the theoretical
calculations with recent experimental data of
YBaCuO.Comment: To appear in PRB in Feb. 200
Recommended from our members
Evaluation of Non-photorealistic 3D Urban Models for Mobile Device Navigation.
- …