2,284 research outputs found
Thermodynamics of the Antiferromagnetic Heisenberg Model on the Checkerboard Lattice
Employing numerical linked-cluster expansions (NLCEs) along with exact
diagonalizations of finite clusters with periodic boundary condition, we study
the energy, specific heat, entropy, and various susceptibilities of the
antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model on the checkerboard lattice. NLCEs, combined
with extrapolation techniques, allow us to access temperatures much lower than
those accessible to exact diagonalization and other series expansions. We find
that the high-temperature peak in specific heat decreases as the frustration
increases, consistent with the large amount of unquenched entropy in the region
around maximum classical frustration, where the nearest-neighbor and
next-nearest neighbor exchange interactions (J and J', respectively) have the
same strength, and with the formation of a second peak at lower temperatures.
The staggered susceptibility shows a change of character when J' increases
beyond 0.75J, implying the disappearance of the long-range antiferromagnetic
order at zero temperature. For J'=4J, in the limit of weakly coupled crossed
chains, we find large susceptibilities for stripe and Neel order with
Q=(pi/2,pi/2) at low temperatures with antiferromagnetic correlations along the
chains. Other magnetic and bond orderings, such as a plaquette valence-bond
solid and a crossed-dimer order suggested by previous studies, have also been
investigated.Comment: 10 pages, 13 figure
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Shear-induced damped oscillations in an epithelium depend on actomyosin contraction and E-cadherin cell adhesion.
Shear forces between cells occur during global changes in multicellular organization during morphogenesis and tissue growth, yet how cells sense shear forces and propagate a response across a tissue is unknown. We found that applying exogenous shear at the midline of an epithelium induced a local, short-term deformation near the shear plane, and a long-term collective oscillatory movement across the epithelium that spread from the shear-plane and gradually dampened. Inhibiting actomyosin contraction or E-cadherin trans-cell adhesion blocked oscillations, whereas stabilizing actin filaments prolonged oscillations. Combining these data with a model of epithelium mechanics supports a mechanism involving the generation of a shear-induced mechanical event at the shear plane which is then relayed across the epithelium by actomyosin contraction linked through E-cadherin. This causes an imbalance of forces in the epithelium, which is gradually dissipated through oscillatory cell movements and actin filament turnover to restore the force balance across the epithelium
H2-Induced Pressure Broadening and Pressure Shift in the P-Branch of the v3 Band of CH4 from 300 to 700 K
For accurate modelling of observations of exoplanet atmospheres,
quantification of the pressure broadening of infrared absorption lines for and
by a variety of gases at elevated temperatures is needed. High-resolution
high-temperature H2-pressure-broadened spectra are recorded for the CH4 v3-band
P-branch. Measured linewidths for 116 transitions between 2840 and 3000 cm^{-1}
with temperature and pressures ranging between 300 and 700 K, and 10 and 933
Torr, respectively, were used to find rotation- and
tetrahedral-symmetry-dependent coefficients for pressure and temperature
broadening and pressure-induced lineshifts. The new pressure-broadening data
will be useful in radiative-transfer models for retrieving the properties of
observed expolanet atmospheres.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures, 7 tables, Resubmitted for 2nd round of
revisions to JQSRT (Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy & Radiative
Transfer). Comments welcome
Futures Contracts in Islamic Finance: an Analytical Approach
Futures contracts provide a useful means of reducing risk because these are highly liquid instruments that can be entered into or liquidated at any time. However, the debate on the legitimacy or otherwise of these contracts in the Islamic commercial law continues to invoke different contentions. The paper accentuates the fact that futures contracts are at bottom a new phenomenon of this age which have no precedent or parallel in the conventional law of transactions (muamalat). Therefore their legality or otherwise should be looked into with the Islamic viewpoint of general permissibility in relation to transactions. The paper examines a number of jurisprudential and legal issues such as non-existence of the subject-matter, sale prior to taking possession, bai al-kali bil-kali, speculation and hedging, and concludes that futures contracts are allowed to benefit from. However, only hedgers can take advantage of them. These instruments can never be used for purely speculative purposes where making or taking delivery is not intended. Although it is not necessary to pay the complete price to the seller at the time of the contract yet some other precautionary measures such as a bank guarantee or a fair amount of money to be given to the seller should be taken to ensure that pure speculation is scrupulously forestalled and the delivery would certainly be made
Short-Range Correlations and Cooling of Ultracold Fermions in the Honeycomb Lattice
We use determinantal quantum Monte Carlo simulations and numerical
linked-cluster expansions to study thermodynamic properties and short-range
spin correlations of fermions in the honeycomb lattice. We find that, at half
filling and finite temperatures, nearest-neighbor spin correlations can be
stronger in this lattice than in the square lattice, even in regimes where the
ground state in the former is a semimetal or a spin liquid. The honeycomb
lattice also exhibits a more pronounced anomalous region in the double
occupancy that leads to stronger adiabatic cooling than in the square lattice.
We discuss the implications of these findings for optical lattice experiments.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Sequestering atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> inorganically:a solution for Malaysia's CO<sub>2</sub> emission
Malaysia is anticipating an increase of 68.86% in CO2 emission in 2020, compared with the 2000 baseline, reaching 285.73 million tonnes. A major contributor to Malaysia's CO2 emissions is coal-fired electricity power plants, responsible for 43.4% of the overall emissions. Malaysia's forest soil offers organic sequestration of 15 tonnes of CO2 ha(-1) year(-1). Unlike organic CO2 sequestration in soil, inorganic sequestration of CO2 through mineral carbonation, once formed, is considered as a permanent sink. Inorganic CO2 sequestration in Malaysia has not been extensively studied, and the country's potential for using the technique for atmospheric CO2 removal is undefined. In addition, Malaysia produces a significant amount of solid waste annually and, of that, demolition concrete waste, basalt quarry fine, and fly and bottom ashes are calcium-rich materials suitable for inorganic CO2 sequestration. This project introduces a potential solution for sequestering atmospheric CO2 inorganically for Malaysia. If lands associated to future developments in Malaysia are designed for inorganic CO2 sequestration using demolition concrete waste, basalt quarry fine, and fly and bottom ashes, 597,465 tonnes of CO2 can be captured annually adding a potential annual economic benefit of (sic)4,700,000.</p
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