8,040 research outputs found
Analytic continuation by averaging Pad\'e approximants
The ill-posed analytic continuation problem for Green's functions and
self-energies is investigated by revisiting the Pad\'{e} approximants
technique. We propose to remedy the well-known problems of the Pad\'{e}
approximants by performing an average of several continuations, obtained by
varying the number of fitted input points and Pad\'{e} coefficients
independently. The suggested approach is then applied to several test cases,
including Sm and Pr atomic self-energies, the Green's functions of the Hubbard
model for a Bethe lattice and of the Haldane model for a nano-ribbon, as well
as two special test functions. The sensitivity to numerical noise and the
dependence on the precision of the numerical libraries are analysed in detail.
The present approach is compared to a number of other techniques, i.e. the
non-negative least-square method, the non-negative Tikhonov method and the
maximum entropy method, and is shown to perform well for the chosen test cases.
This conclusion holds even when the noise on the input data is increased to
reach values typical for quantum Monte Carlo simulations. The ability of the
algorithm to resolve fine structures is finally illustrated for two relevant
test functions.Comment: 10 figure
Ecosystem properties and principles of living systems as foundation for sustainable agriculture – Critical reviews of environmental assessment tools, key findings and questions from a course process
With increasing demands on limited resources worldwide, there is a growing interest in sustainable patterns of utilisation and production. Ecological agriculture is a response to these concerns.
To assess progress and compliance, standard and comprehensive measures of resource requirements, impacts and agro-ecological health are needed. Assessment tools should also be rapid, standardized, userfriendly, meaningful to public policy and applicable to management. Fully considering these requirements confounds the development of integrated methods.
Currently, there are many methodologies for monitoring performance, each with its own foundations, assumptions, goals, and outcomes, dependent upon agency agenda or academic orientation. Clearly, a concept of sustainability must address biophysical, ecological, economic, and sociocultural foundations.
Assessment indicators and criteria, however, are generally limited, lacking integration, and at times in conflict with one another. A result is that certification criteria, indicators, and assessment methods are not based on a consistent, underlying conceptual framework and often lack a management focus.
Ecosystem properties and principles of living systems, including self-organisation, renewal, embeddedness, emergence and commensurate response provide foundation for sustainability assessments and may be appropriate focal points for critical thinking in an evaluation of current methods and standards. A systems framework may also help facilitate a comprehensive approach and promote a context for meaningful discourse. Without holistic accounts, sustainable progress remains an illdefined concept and an elusive goal.
Our intent, in the work with this report, was to use systems ecology as a pedagogic basis for learning and discussion to:
- Articulate general and common characteristics of living systems.
- Identify principles, properties and patterns inherent in natural ecosystems.
- Use these findings as foci in a dialogue about attributes of sustainability to:
a. develop a model for communicating scientific rationale.
b. critically evaluate environmental assessment tools for application in land-use.
c. propose appropriate criteria for a comprehensive assessment and expanded definition of ecological land use
Microscopic origin of Heisenberg and non-Heisenberg exchange interactions in ferromagnetic bcc Fe
By means of first principles calculations we investigate the nature of
exchange coupling in ferromagnetic bcc Fe on a microscopic level. Analyzing the
basic electronic structure reveals a drastic difference between the
orbitals of and symmetries. The latter ones define the shape of
the Fermi surface, while the former ones form weakly-interacting impurity
levels. We demonstrate that, as a result of this, in Fe the orbitals
participate in exchange interactions, which are only weakly dependent on the
configuration of the spin moments and thus can be classified as
Heisenberg-like. These couplings are shown to be driven by Fermi surface
nesting. In contrast, for the states the Heisenberg picture breaks down,
since the corresponding contribution to the exchange interactions is shown to
strongly depend on the reference state they are extracted from. Our analysis of
the nearest-neighbour coupling indicates that the interactions among
states are mainly proportional to the corresponding hopping integral and thus
can be attributed to be of double-exchange origin.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
A theoretical analysis of the chemical bonding and electronic structure of graphene interacting with Group IA and Group VIIA elements
We propose a new class of materials, which can be viewed as graphene
derivatives involving Group IA or Group VIIA elements, forming what we refer to
as graphXene. We show that in several cases large band gaps can be found to
open up, whereas in other cases a semimetallic behavior is found. Formation
energies indicate that under ambient conditions, sp and mixed sp/sp
systems will form. The results presented allow us to propose that by careful
tuning of the relative concentration of the adsorbed atoms, it should be
possible to tune the band gap of graphXene to take any value between 0 and 6.4
eV.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Transferred to PR
Conserved Matter Superenergy Currents for Orthogonally Transitive Abelian G2 Isometry Groups
In a previous paper we showed that the electromagnetic superenergy tensor,
the Chevreton tensor, gives rise to a conserved current when there is a
hypersurface orthogonal Killing vector present. In addition, the current is
proportional to the Killing vector. The aim of this paper is to extend this
result to the case when we have a two-parameter Abelian isometry group that
acts orthogonally transitive on non-null surfaces. It is shown that for
four-dimensional Einstein-Maxwell theory with a source-free electromagnetic
field, the corresponding superenergy currents lie in the orbits of the group
and are conserved. A similar result is also shown to hold for the trace of the
Chevreton tensor and for the Bach tensor, and also in Einstein-Klein-Gordon
theory for the superenergy of the scalar field. This links up well with the
fact that the Bel tensor has these properties and the possibility of
constructing conserved mixed currents between the gravitational field and the
matter fields.Comment: 15 page
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