189 research outputs found
Three-dimensional topological lattice models with surface anyons
We study a class of three dimensional exactly solvable models of topological
matter first put forward by Walker and Wang [arXiv:1104.2632v2]. While these
are not models of interacting fermions, they may well capture the topological
behavior of some strongly correlated systems. In this work we give a full
pedagogical treatment of a special simple case of these models, which we call
the 3D semion model: We calculate its ground state degeneracies for a variety
of boundary conditions, and classify its low-lying excitations. While point
defects in the bulk are confined in pairs connected by energetic strings, the
surface excitations are more interesting: the model has deconfined point
defects pinned to the boundary of the lattice, and these exhibit semionic
braiding statistics. The surface physics is reminiscent of a bosonic
fractional quantum Hall effect in its topological limit, and these
considerations help motivate an effective field theoretic description for the
lattice models as variants of theories. Our special example of the 3D
semion model captures much of the behavior of more general `confined
Walker-Wang models'. We contrast the 3D semion model with the closely related
3D version of the toric code (a lattice gauge theory) which has deconfined
point excitations in the bulk and we discuss how more general models may have
some confined and some deconfined excitations. Having seen that there exist
lattice models whose surfaces have the same topological order as a bosonic
fractional quantum Hall effect on a confining bulk, we construct a lattice
model whose surface has similar topological order to a fermionic quantum hall
effect. We find that in these models a fermion is always deconfined in the
three dimensional bulk
Effect of pen size, group size, and stocking density on activity in freestall-housed dairy cows
The purpose was to determine the effects of the physical dimensions of the pen and group size and stocking density on cow activity. Cows (randomly assigned to 4 groups of 6 animals each) were tested in pens with 24 or 12 lying places and in groups with 12 or 6 cows. All groups were tested in each of the 4 treatments with treatment order allocated using a 4 × 4 Latin square. The distance moved and the number of movements were calculated using 5-min scan sampling of video recordings over a 48-h period. Time spent lying down, number of lying bouts, and the duration of each lying bout were recorded using activity sensors. Displacements at the feed bunk were assessed by continuous analysis of video for 3 h after the delivery of the fresh feed in the afternoon. Cows moved greater distances when kept in a large versus small pens (330.2 vs. 270.1 ± 11.6 m/d; mean ± SE), irrespective of group size. Cows moved more often when kept in the larger pen (21.3 vs. 19.2 ± 0.63% of scans). The time spent lying down decreased when density increased (59.1 vs. 55.8 ± 2.3% of scans at 25% and 100% stocking, respectively). Treatment had no effect on the number of displacements at the feed bunk. Physical dimensions of the pen play an important role in how much cows move, and stocking density affects lying time.The purpose was to determine the effects of the physical dimensions of the pen and group size and stocking density on cow activity. Cows (randomly assigned to 4 groups of 6 animals each) were tested in pens with 24 or 12 lying places and in groups with 12 or 6 cows. All groups were tested in each of the 4 treatments with treatment order allocated using a 4 × 4 Latin square. The distance moved and the number of movements were calculated using 5-min scan sampling of video recordings over a 48-h period. Time spent lying down, number of lying bouts, and the duration of each lying bout were recorded using activity sensors. Displacements at the feed bunk were assessed by continuous analysis of video for 3 h after the delivery of the fresh feed in the afternoon. Cows moved greater distances when kept in a large versus small pens (330.2 vs. 270.1 ± 11.6 m/d; mean ± SE), irrespective of group size. Cows moved more often when kept in the larger pen (21.3 vs. 19.2 ± 0.63% of scans). The time spent lying down decreased when density increased (59.1 vs. 55.8 ± 2.3% of scans at 25% and 100% stocking, respectively). Treatment had no effect on the number of displacements at the feed bunk. Physical dimensions of the pen play an important role in how much cows move, and stocking density affects lying time
Benchmarking cow comfort on North American freestall dairies: Lameness, leg injuries, lying time, facility design, and management for high-producing Holstein dairy cows
In this paper, we describe a novel approach to corporate involvement in on-farm assessment, driven by the desire to provide a service for dairy producers and to create a vehicle for engagement on issues of dairy cow welfare. This program provides producers with feedback on animal-based (including gait score, leg injuries, and lying time) and facility-based (including freestall design, bedding practices, feed bunk design and management, and stocking density) measures that can be used to better address their management goals. The aim of this paper is to describe variation in the prevalence of lameness and leg injuries, lying behavior, facility design, and management practices for high-producing cows on freestall dairy farms in 3 regions of North America: British Columbia (BC; n = 42); California (CA; n = 39); and the northeastern United States (NE-US; n = 40). Prevalence of clinical lameness averaged (mean ± SD) 27.9 ± 14.1% in BC, 30.8 ± 15.5% in CA, and 54.8 ± 16.7% in NE-US; prevalence of severe lameness averaged 7.1 ± 5.4% in BC, 3.6 ± 4.2% in CA, and 8.2 ± 5.6% in NE-US. Overall prevalence of hock injuries was 42.3 ± 26.2% in BC, 56.2 ± 21.6% in CA, and 81.2 ± 22.5% in NE-US; prevalence of severe injuries was 3.7 ± 5.2% in BC, 1.8 ± 3.1% in CA, 5.4 ± 5.9% in NE-US. Prevalence of swollen knees was minimal in CA (0.3 ± 0.6%) but high (23.1 ± 16.3%) in NE-US (not scored in BC). Lying times were similar across regions (11.0 ± 0.7 h/d in BC, 10.4 ± 0.8 h/d in CA, 10.6 ± 0.9 h/d in NE-US), but individual lying times among cows assessed varied (4.2 to 19.5 h/d, 3.7 to 17.5 h/d, and 2.8 to 20.5 h/d in BC, CA, and NE-US, respectively). These results showed considerable variation in lameness and leg injury prevalence as well as facility design and management among freestall farms in North America. Each of the 3 regions had farms with a very low prevalence of lameness and injuries, suggesting great opportunities for improvement on other farms within the region
Мониторинг зданий методом акустической эмиссии
В работе рассмотрены современные методы неразрушающего контроля, используемые при мониторинге зданий. Предложено устройства мониторинга зданий методом акустической эмиссии. Предложены различные варианты методов обработки получаемой информации. Проведено моделирование схемы, поставлен эксперимент для получения сигналов акустической эмиссии.In this work the modern methods of non-destructive testing used to monitor buildings. Proposed buildings monitoring devices of acoustic emission method. Offered various options for methods of processing of the information received. The simulation scheme, put an experiment to obtain acoustic emission signals
Dichromatic state sum models for four-manifolds from pivotal functors
A family of invariants of smooth, oriented four-dimensional manifolds is defined via handle decompositions and the Kirby calculus of framed link diagrams. The invariants are parametrised by a pivotal functor from a spherical fusion category into a ribbon fusion category.
A state sum formula for the invariant is constructed via the chain-mail procedure, so a large class of topological state sum models can be expressed as link invariants. Most prominently, the Crane-Yetter state sum over an arbitrary ribbon fusion category is recovered, including the nonmodular case. It is shown that the Crane-Yetter invariant for nonmodular categories is stronger than signature and Euler invariant.
A special case is the four-dimensional untwisted Dijkgraaf-Witten model. Derivations of state space dimensions of TQFTs arising from the state sum model agree with recent calculations of ground state degeneracies in Walker-Wang models.
Relations to different approaches to quantum gravity such as Cartan geometry and teleparallel gravity are also discussed
Recycling manure as cow bedding: potential benefits and risks for UK dairy farms
Material obtained from physical separation of slurry (recycled manure solids; RMS) has been used as bedding for dairy cows in dry climates in the US since the 1970s. Relatively recently, the technical ability to produce drier material has led to adoption of the practice in Europe under different climatic conditions. This review collates the evidence available on benefits and risks of using RMS bedding on dairy farms, with a European context in mind. There was less evidence than expected for anecdotal claims of improved cow comfort. Among animal health risks, only udder health has received appreciable attention. There are some circumstantial reports of difficulties of maintaining udder health on RMS, but no large scale or long term studies of effects on clinical and subclinical mastitis have been published. Existing reports do not give consistent evidence of inevitable problems, nor is there any information on clinical implications for other diseases. The scientific basis for guidelines on management of RMS bedding is limited. Decisions on optimum treatment and management may present conflicts between control of different groups of organisms. There is no information on the influence that such 'recycling' of manure may have on pathogen virulence. The possibility of influence on genetic material conveying antimicrobial resistance is a concern, but little understood. Should UK or other non-US farmers adopt RMS, they are advised to do so with caution, apply the required strategies for risk mitigation, maintain strict hygiene of bed management and milking practices and closely monitor the effects on herd health
Repulsive polarons and itinerant ferromagnetism in strongly polarized Fermi gases
We analyze the properties of a single impurity immersed in a Fermi sea. At
positive energy and scattering lengths, we show that the system possesses a
well-defined but metastable excitation, the repulsive polaron, and we calculate
its energy, quasiparticle residue and effective mass. From a thermodynamic
argument we obtain the number of particles in the dressing cloud, illustrating
the repulsive character of the polaron. Identifying the important 2- and 3-body
decay channels, we furthermore calculate the lifetime of the repulsive polaron.
The stability conditions for the formation of fully spin polarized
(ferromagnetic) domains are then examined for a binary mixture of atoms with a
general mass ratio. Our results indicate that mass imbalance lowers the
critical interaction strength for phase-separation, but that very short
quasiparticle decay times will complicate the experimental observation of
itinerant ferromagnetism. Finally, we present the spectral function of the
impurity for various coupling strengths and momenta.Comment: Substantial improvements to the section describing quasiparticle
decays (included a discussion of two-body and three-body processes), and to
the criteria for the stability of the itinerant ferromagnetic phas
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