1,494 research outputs found
Proton NMR measurements of the local magnetic field in the paramagnetic metal and antiferromagnetic insulator phases of -(BETS)FeCl
Measurements of the H-NMR spectrum of a small ( 4 g) single
crystal of the organic conductor -(BETS)FeCl are reported
with an applied magnetic field = 9 T parallel to the a-axis in
the -plane over a temperature range 2.0 180 K. They provide the
distribution of the static local magnetic field at the proton sites in the
paramagnetic metal (PM) and antiferromagnetic insulator (AFI) phases, along
with the changes that occur at the PMAFI phase transition. The spectra have
six main peaks that are significantly broadened and shifted at low . The
origin of these features is attributed to the large dipolar field from the 3d
Fe ion moments (spin = 5/2). Their amplitude and
dependence are modeled using a modified Brillouin function that includes a
mean field approximation for the total exchange interaction () between
one Fe ion and its two nearest neighbors. A good fit is obtained using
= 1.7 K. At temperatures below the PMAFI transition temperature
= 3.5 K, an extra peak appears on the high frequency side of the
spectrum and the details of the spectrum become smeared. Also, the rms
linewidth and the frequency shift of the spectral distribution are
discontinuous, consistent with the transition being first-order. These
measurements verify that the dominant local magnetic field contribution is from
the Fe ions and indicate that there is a significant change in the
static local magnetic field distribution at the proton sites on traversing the
PM to AFI phase transition.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures. Revised version of cond-mat/0605044 resubmitted
to Phys. Rev. B in response to comments of Editor and reviewer
Ionic Liquid-Based Microemulsions in Catalysis
The design and properties of surface-active
ionic liquids that
are able to form stable microemulsions with heptane and water are
presented, and their promise as reaction media for thermomorphic palladium-catalyzed
cross-coupling reactions is demonstrated
The Error and Repair Catastrophes: A Two-Dimensional Phase Diagram in the Quasispecies Model
This paper develops a two gene, single fitness peak model for determining the
equilibrium distribution of genotypes in a unicellular population which is
capable of genetic damage repair. The first gene, denoted by ,
yields a viable organism with first order growth rate constant if it
is equal to some target ``master'' sequence . The second
gene, denoted by , yields an organism capable of genetic repair
if it is equal to some target ``master'' sequence . This
model is analytically solvable in the limit of infinite sequence length, and
gives an equilibrium distribution which depends on \mu \equiv L\eps , the
product of sequence length and per base pair replication error probability, and
\eps_r , the probability of repair failure per base pair. The equilibrium
distribution is shown to exist in one of three possible ``phases.'' In the
first phase, the population is localized about the viability and repairing
master sequences. As \eps_r exceeds the fraction of deleterious mutations,
the population undergoes a ``repair'' catastrophe, in which the equilibrium
distribution is still localized about the viability master sequence, but is
spread ergodically over the sequence subspace defined by the repair gene. Below
the repair catastrophe, the distribution undergoes the error catastrophe when exceeds \ln k/\eps_r , while above the repair catastrophe, the
distribution undergoes the error catastrophe when exceeds , where denotes the fraction of deleterious mutations.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to Physical Review
Versatile Coordination of Cyclopentadienyl-Arene Ligands and Its Role in Titanium-Catalyzed Ethylene Trimerization
Cationic titanium(IV) complexes with ansa-(η5-cyclopentadienyl,η6-arene) ligands were synthesized and characterized by X-ray crystallography. The strength of the metal-arene interaction in these systems was studied by variable-temperature NMR spectroscopy. Complexes with a C1 bridge between the cyclopentadienyl and arene moieties feature hemilabile coordination behavior of the ligand and consequently are active ethylene trimerization catalysts. Reaction of the titanium(IV) dimethyl cations with CO results in conversion to the analogous cationic titanium(II) dicarbonyl species. Metal-to-ligand backdonation in these formally low-valent complexes gives rise to a strongly bonded, partially reduced arene moiety. In contrast to the η6-arene coordination mode observed for titanium, the more electron-rich vanadium(V) cations [cyclopentadienyl-arene]V(NiPr2)(NC6H4-4-Me)+ feature η1-arene binding, as determined by a crystallographic study. The three different metal-arene coordination modes that we experimentally observed model intermediates in the cycle for titanium-catalyzed ethylene trimerization. The nature of the metal-arene interaction in these systems was studied by DFT calculations.
Lymph node metastasis in grossly apparent clinical stage Ia epithelial ovarian cancer: Hacettepe experience and review of literature
Background Lymphadenectomy is an integral part of the staging system of epithelial ovarian cancer. However, the extent of lymphadenectomy in the early stages of ovarian cancer is controversial. The objective of this study was to identify the lymph node involvement in unilateral epithelial ovarian cancer apparently confined to the one ovary (clinical stage Ia). Methods A prospective study of clinical stage I ovarian cancer patients is presented. Patient's characteristics and tumor histopathology were the variables evaluated. Results Thirty three ovarian cancer patients with intact ovarian capsule were evaluated. Intraoperatively, neither of the patients had surface involvement, adhesions, ascites or palpable lymph nodes (supposed to be clinical stage Ia). The mean age of the study group was 55.3 ± 11.8. All patients were surgically staged and have undergone a systematic pelvic and paraaortic lymphadenectomy. Final surgicopathologic reports revealed capsular involvement in seven patients (21.2%), contralateral ovarian involvement in two (6%) and omental metastasis in one (3%) patient. There were two patients (6%) with lymph node involvement. One of the two lymph node metastasis was solely in paraaortic node and the other metastasis was in ipsilateral pelvic lymph node. Ovarian capsule was intact in all of the patients with lymph node involvement and the tumor was grade 3. Conclusion In clinical stage Ia ovarian cancer patients, there may be a risk of paraaortic and pelvic lymph node metastasis. Further studies with larger sample size are needed for an exact conclusion.PubMedWoSScopu
Search for a massive invisible particle in and decays
We present a search for a non-Standard-Model invisible particle in the
mass range in and
decays. The results are obtained from a data sample that corresponds to pairs,
collected at the resonance with the Belle detector at the KEKB
collider. One meson is fully reconstructed in a hadronic mode to
determine the momentum of the lepton of the signal decay in the rest frame of
the recoiling partner meson. We find no evidence of a signal and set upper
limits on the order of .Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, 3 table
Energy scan of the cross sections and evidence for decays into charged bottomonium-like states
Using data collected with the Belle detector at the KEKB asymmetric-energy
collider, we measure the energy dependence of the cross sections from thresholds up to GeV.
We find clear and peaks with little or no
continuum contribution. We study the resonant substructure of the
transitions and find evidence that they
proceed entirely via the intermediate isovector states and
. The relative fraction of these states is loosely constrained by
the current data: the hypothesis that only is produced is excluded
at the level of 3.3 standard deviations, while the hypothesis that only
is produced is not excluded at a significant level.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letter
First Observation of Doubly Cabibbo-Suppressed Decay of a Charmed Baryon:
We report the first observation of the decay using a 980 data sample collected by the
Belle detector at the KEKB asymmetric-energy collider. This is the
first doubly Cabibbo-suppressed decay of a charmed baryon to be observed. We
measure the branching ratio of this decay with respect to its Cabibbo-favored
counterpart to be , where the uncertainties are
statistical and systematic, respectively.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Study of Excited States Decaying into and Baryons
Using a data sample of 980 of annihilation data
taken with the Belle detector operating at the KEKB asymmetric-energy
collider, we report the results of a study of excited states that
decay, via the emission of photons and/or charged pions, into or
ground state charmed-strange baryons. We present new measurements of
the masses of all members of the , ,
, , and isodoublets, measurements of
the intrinsic widths of those that decay strongly, and evidence of previously
unknown transitions.Comment: Submitted to PR
Search for the decay followed by
We report a study of the decay followed by
, where indicates or . We
reconstruct the state in a phase space corresponding to . The CP-violating angle affects its decay rate via the
interference between and transitions. The
result is obtained from a 711 data sample that contains 772
pairs collected at the resonance with the
Belle detector at the KEKB asymmetric-energy collider. We measure the
ratio to be , and set an upper limit of at the 95% confidence level
- …