2,963 research outputs found

    Replica plating of Coprinus cinereus colonies using asexual spores

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    Asexual spores (oidia) of Coprinus cinereus adhere to surfaces such as metal or velveteen. We used this feature to develop a new method for replica plating and demonstrate its value in screening for auxotrophic mutants and mutants in sporulation

    Quasiparticle spectrum in a nearly antiferromagnetic Fermi liquid: shadow and flat bands

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    We consider a two-dimensional Fermi liquid in the vicinity of a spin-density-wave transition to a phase with commensurate antiferromagnetic long-range order. We assume that near the transition, the Fermi surface is large and crosses the magnetic Brillouin zone boundary. We show that under these conditions, the self-energy corrections to the dynamical spin susceptibility, χ(q,ω)\chi (q, \omega), and to the quasiparticle spectral function function, A(k,ω)A(k, \omega), are divergent near the transition. We identify and sum the series of most singular diagrams, and obtain a solution for χ(q,ω)\chi(q, \omega) and an approximate solution for A(k,ω)A(k, \omega). We show that (i) A(k)A(k) at a given, small ω\omega has an extra peak at k=kF+πk = k_F + \pi (`shadow band'), and (ii) the dispersion near the crossing points is much flatter than for free electrons. The relevance of these results to recent photoemission experiments in YBCOYBCO and Bi2212Bi2212 systems is discussed.Comment: a sign and amplitude of the vertex renormalization and few typos are correcte

    Elementary structural building blocks encountered in silicon surface reconstructions

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    Driven by the reduction of dangling bonds and the minimization of surface stress, reconstruction of silicon surfaces leads to a striking diversity of outcomes. Despite this variety even very elaborate structures are generally comprised of a small number of structural building blocks. We here identify important elementary building blocks and discuss their integration into the structural models as well as their impact on the electronic structure of the surface

    Theory for the excitation spectrum of High-T$_c superconductors : quasiparticle dispersion and shadows of the Fermi surface

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    Using a new method for the solution of the FLEX-equations, which allows the determination of the self energy Σk(ω)\Sigma_{\bf k}(\omega) of the 2D2D Hubbard model on the real frequency axis, we calculate the doping dependence of the quasi-particle excitations of High-Tc_c superconductors. We obtain new results for the shadows of the Fermi surface, their dependence on the deformation of the quasi particle dispersion, an anomalous ω\omega-dependence of ImΣk(ω){\rm Im}\Sigma_{\bf k}(\omega) and a related violation of the Luttinger theorem. This sheds new light on the influence of short range magnetic order on the low energy excitations and its significance for photoemission experiments.Comment: 4 pages (REVTeX) with 3 figure

    Spontaneous exciton condensation in 1T-TiSe2: a BCS-like approach

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    Recently strong evidence has been found in favor of a BCS-like condensation of excitons in 1\textit{T}-TiSe2_2. Theoretical photoemission intensity maps have been generated by the spectral function calculated within the excitonic condensate phase model and set against experimental angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy data. Here, the calculations in the framework of this model are presented in detail. They represent an extension of the original excitonic insulator phase model of J\'erome \textit{et al.} [Phys. Rev. {\bf 158}, 462 (1967)] to three dimensional and anisotropic band dispersions. A detailed analysis of its properties and further comparison with experiment are also discussedComment: Submitted to PRB, 11 pages, 7 figure

    Activity of raltitrexed and gemcitabine in advanced pancreatic cancer

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    Background: Gemcitabine has evolved as standard therapy in advanced pancreatic cancer since the demonstration of a significant clinical benefit. Phase II trials have shown that gemcitabine can be successfully combined with thymidylate synthase (TS) inhibitors such as continuous-infusion 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). However, continuous-infusion 5-FU is inconvenient because of the need for a central venous access. The aim of this study was to assess the efficacy and safety of gemcitabine in combination with raltitrexed (Tomudex), a novel and selective TS inhibitor that has the advantage of a 3-weekly treatment interval and manageable toxicity. Patients and methods: Chemotherapy-naïve patients with measurable advanced pancreatic cancer were treated with raltitrexed 3 mg/m2 as a 15-min infusion on day 1 and gemcitabine 1000 mg/m2 on days 1 and 8, every 21 days. Results: Twenty-five eligible patients (17 male, eight female) with metastatic (21 patients) or locally advanced (four patients) disease entered the study. The median number of courses per patient was four (range 1-14). One patient was not evaluable for response. There were three partial remissions [12%; 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.6% to 31.2%] and nine stable disease situations (36%; 95% CI 18.0% to 57.5%), while the tumours of 12 patients (48%; 95% CI 27.8% to 68.7%) showed progressive disease after three treatment cycles. WHO grade 3/4 toxicity was rare and symptomatic in only one patient, who experienced grade 4 diarrhoea and grade 3 nausea and vomiting. Symptomatic benefit was seen in 12 patients. Median survival was 185 days (95% CI 129-241) with six patients still alive. Conclusions: The efficacy of raltitrexed plus gemcitabine is limited, but compares well with other chemotherapy treatment options in advanced pancreatic cancer. However, this combination is convenient and symptomatic toxicity is rare. Thus, raltitrexed and gemcitabine should be investigated further in combination with drugs interfering with specific molecular target

    Spectral weight function for the half-filled Hubbard model: a singular value decomposition approach

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    The singular value decomposition technique is used to reconstruct the electronic spectral weight function for a half-filled Hubbard model with on-site repulsion U=4tU=4t from Quantum Monte Carlo data. A two-band structure for the single-particle excitation spectrum is found to persist as the lattice size exceeds the spin-spin correlation length. The observed bands are flat in the vicinity of the (0,Ï€),(Ï€,0)(0,\pi),(\pi,0) points in the Brillouin zone, in accordance with experimental data for high-temperature superconducting compounds.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex
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