3,081 research outputs found
Diagrammatic perturbation theory and the pseudogap
We study a model of quasiparticles on a two-dimensional square lattice
coupled to Gaussian distributed dynamical fields. The model describes
quasiparticles coupled to spin or charge fluctuations and is solved by a Monte
Carlo sampling of the molecular field distributions. The non-perturbative
solution is compared to various approximations based on diagrammatic
perturbation theory. When the molecular field correlations are sufficiently
weak, the diagrammatic calculations capture the qualitative aspects of the
quasiparticle spectrum. For a range of model parameters near the magnetic
boundary, we find that the quasiparticle spectrum is qualitatively different
from that of a Fermi liquid in that it shows a double peak structure, and that
the diagrammatic approximations we consider fail to reproduce, even
qualitatively, the results of the Monte Carlo calculations. This suggests that
the pseudogap induced by a coupling to antiferromagnetic fluctuations and the
spin-splitting of the quasiparticle peak induced by a coupling to ferromagnetic
spin-fluctuations lie beyond diagrammatic perturbation theory
A technique for automatic real time scoring of several simultaneous sleep electroencephalograms
Automatic real-time scoring of simultaneous sleep electroencephalogram
Variation in Foraging Behavior Among Nesting Stages of Female Red-Faced Warblers
Foraging rates and maneuvers were examined in breeding female Red-faced Warblers (Cardellina rubrifrons) among egg-laying, incubation, and nestling stages. All measures varied among nesting stages, with prey attack rate and search speed significantly increasing from egg-laying to incubation through the nestling stage. During egg-laying and incubation, birds gleaned stationary prey from a fixed perch, but shifted to hover-sallying for stationary prey during the nestling period. These dynamic behavioral patterns may reflect responses to variable time constraints and energetic costs associated with different stages of the nesting cycle
LOCV calculations for polarized liquid with the spin-dependent correlation
We have used the lowest order constrained variational (LOCV) method to
calculate some ground state properties of polarized liquid at zero
temperature with the spin-dependent correlation function employing the
Lennard-Jones and Aziz pair potentials. We have seen that the total energy of
polarized liquid increases by increasing polarization. For all
polarizations, it is shown that the total energy in the spin-dependent case is
lower than the spin-independent case. We have seen that the difference between
the energies of spin-dependent and spin-independent cases decreases by
increasing polarization. We have shown that the main contribution of the
potential energy comes from the spin-triplet state.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures. Int. J. Mod. Phys. B (2008) in pres
Vacuum Energy: Myths and Reality
We discuss the main myths related to the vacuum energy and cosmological
constant, such as: ``unbearable lightness of space-time''; the dominating
contribution of zero point energy of quantum fields to the vacuum energy;
non-zero vacuum energy of the false vacuum; dependence of the vacuum energy on
the overall shift of energy; the absolute value of energy only has significance
for gravity; the vacuum energy depends on the vacuum content; cosmological
constant changes after the phase transition; zero-point energy of the vacuum
between the plates in Casimir effect must gravitate, that is why the zero-point
energy in the vacuum outside the plates must also gravitate; etc. All these and
some other conjectures appear to be wrong when one considers the thermodynamics
of the ground state of the quantum many-body system, which mimics macroscopic
thermodynamics of quantum vacuum. In particular, in spite of the ultraviolet
divergence of the zero-point energy, the natural value of the vacuum energy is
comparable with the observed dark energy. That is why the vacuum energy is the
plausible candidate for the dark energy.Comment: 24 pages, 2 figures, submitted to the special issue of Int. J. Mod.
Phys. devoted to dark energy and dark matter, IJMP styl
Spin Model for Inverse Melting and Inverse Glass Transition
A spin model that displays inverse melting and inverse glass transition is
presented and analyzed. Strong degeneracy of the interacting states of an
individual spin leads to entropic preference of the "ferromagnetic" phase,
while lower energy associated with the non-interacting states yields a
"paramagnetic" phase as temperature decreases. An infinite range model is
solved analytically for constant paramagnetic exchange interaction, while for
its random exchange, analogous results based on the replica symmetric solution
are presented. The qualitative features of this model are shown to resemble a
large class of inverse melting phenomena. First and second order transition
regimes are identified
Simulations of the flocculent spiral M33: what drives the spiral structure?
We perform simulations of isolated galaxies in order to investigate the
likely origin of the spiral structure in M33. In our models, we find that
gravitational instabilities in the stars and gas are able to reproduce the
observed spiral pattern and velocity field of M33, as seen in HI, and no
interaction is required. We also find that the optimum models have high levels
of stellar feedback which create large holes similar to those observed in M33,
whilst lower levels of feedback tend to produce a large amount of small scale
structure, and undisturbed long filaments of high surface density gas, hardly
detected in the M33 disc. The gas component appears to have a significant role
in producing the structure, so if there is little feedback, both the gas and
stars organise into clear spiral arms, likely due to a lower combined
(using gas and stars), and the ready ability of cold gas to undergo spiral
shocks. By contrast models with higher feedback have weaker spiral structure,
especially in the stellar component, compared to grand design galaxies. We did
not see a large difference in the behaviour of with most of these
models, however, because stayed relatively constant unless the disc
was more strongly unstable. Our models suggest that although the stars produce
some underlying spiral structure, this is relatively weak, and the gas physics
has a considerable role in producing the large scale structure of the ISM in
flocculent spirals.Comment: 17 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Magneto-Acoustic Spectroscopy in Superfluid 3He-B
We have used the recently discovered acoustic Faraday effect in superfluid
3He to perform high resolution spectroscopy of an excited state of the
superfluid condensate. With acoustic cavity interferometry we measure the
rotation of the plane of polarization of a transverse sound wave propagating in
the direction of magnetic field from which we determine the Zeeman energy of
the excited state. We interpret the Lande g-factor, combined with the
zero-field energies of the state, using the theory of Sauls and Serene to
calculate the strength of f -wave interactions in 3He.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PRL, Aug 30th, 200
A Mechanism Linking Two Known Vulnerability Factors for Alcohol Abuse: Heightened Alcohol Stimulation and Low Striatal Dopamine D2 Receptors
Alcohol produces both stimulant and sedative effects in humans and rodents. In humans, alcohol abuse disorder is associated with a higher stimulant and lower sedative responses to alcohol. Here, we show that this association is conserved in mice and demonstrate a causal link with another liability factor: low expression of striatal dopamine D2 receptors (D2Rs). Using transgenic mouse lines, we find that the selective loss of D2Rs on striatal medium spiny neurons enhances sensitivity to ethanol stimulation and generates resilience to ethanol sedation. These mice also display higher preference and escalation of ethanol drinking, which continues despite adverse outcomes. We find that striatal D1R activation is required for ethanol stimulation and that this signaling is enhanced in mice with low striatal D2Rs. These data demonstrate a link between two vulnerability factors for alcohol abuse and offer evidence for a mechanism in which low striatal D2Rs trigger D1R hypersensitivity, ultimately leading to compulsive-like drinkingFil: Bocarsly, Miriam E.. National Institutes of Health; Estados UnidosFil: da Silva e Silva, Daniel. National Institutes of Health; Estados UnidosFil: Kolb, Vanessa. National Institutes of Health; Estados UnidosFil: Luderman, Kathryn D.. National Institutes of Health; Estados UnidosFil: Shashikiran, Sannidhi. National Institutes of Health; Estados UnidosFil: Rubinstein, Marcelo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Instituto de Investigaciones en Ingeniería Genética y Biología Molecular "Dr. Héctor N. Torres"; Argentina. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; ArgentinaFil: Sibley, David R.. National Institutes of Health; Estados UnidosFil: Dobbs, Lauren K.. National Institutes of Health; Estados Unidos. University of Texas at Austin; Estados UnidosFil: Álvarez, Verónica Alicia. National Institutes of Health; Estados Unido
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