58,179 research outputs found
Low-energy modes of spin-imbalanced Fermi gases in BCS phase
The low-energy modes of a spin-imbalanced superfluid Fermi gas in the
Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) side are studied. The gas is assumed to be
sufficiently dilute so that the pairing of atoms can be considered effective
only in s-wave between fermions of different internal state. The order
parameter at equilibrium is determined by the mean-field approximation, while
the properties of the collective modes are calculated within a Gaussian
approximation for the fluctuations of the order parameter. In particular we
investigate the effects of asymmetry between the populations of the two
different components and of temperature on the frequency and damping of
collective modes. It is found that the temperature does not much affect the
frequency and the damping of the modes, whereas an increase of the imbalance
shifts the frequency toward lower values and enhances the damping sensitively.
Besides the Bogoliubov-Anderson phonons, we observe modes at zero frequency for
finite values of the wave-number. These modes indicate that an instability
develops driving the system toward two separate phases, normal and superfluid.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, submitted to European Physical Journal D for
publicatio
Errors in Hellmann-Feynman Forces due to occupation number broadening, and how they can be corrected
In ab initio calculations of electronic structures, total energies, and
forces, it is convenient and often even necessary to employ a broadening of the
occupation numbers. If done carefully, this improves the accuracy of the
calculated electron densities and total energies and stabilizes the convergence
of the iterative approach towards self-consistency. However, such a boardening
may lead to an error in the calculation of the forces. Accurate forces are
needed for an efficient geometry optimization of polyatomic systems and for ab
initio molecular dynamics (MD) calculations. The relevance of this error and
possible ways to correct it will be discussed in this paper. The first approach
is computationally very simple and in fact exact for small MD time steps. This
is demonstrated for the example of the vibration of a carbon dimer and for the
relaxation of the top layer of the (111)-surfaces of aluminium and platinum.
The second, more general, scheme employs linear-response theory and is applied
to the calculation of the surface relaxation of Al(111). We will show that the
quadratic dependence of the forces on the broadening width enables an efficient
extrapolation to the correct result. Finally the results of these correction
methods will be compared to the forces obtained by using the smearing scheme,
which has been proposed by Methfessel and Paxton.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, Scheduled tentatively for the issue of Phys. Rev.
B 15 15 Dec 97 Other related publications can be found at
http://www.rz-berlin.mpg.de/th/paper.htm
Design and testing of liquid hydrogen-cooled, ultrahigh-speed ball bearings
Large-bore, liquid hydrogen-cooled, ultrahigh-speed, rolling contact bearings of an optimum design allow optimization of large rocket engine turbopumps in which bearing speed is a limiting factor. Optimum design for the bearings resulted from an application of liquid hydrogen used as a coolant
Probing Pauli Blocking Factors in Quantum Pumps with Broken Time-Reversal Symmetry
A recently demonstrated quantum electron pump is discussed within the
framework of photon-assisted tunneling. Due to lack of time-reversal symmetry,
different results are obtained for the pump current depending on whether or not
final-state Pauli blocking factors are used when describing the tunneling
process. Whilst in both cases the current depends quadratically on the driving
amplitude for moderate pumping, a marked difference is predicted for the
temperature dependence. With blocking factors the pump current decreases
roughly linearly with temperature until k_B T ~ \hbar\omega is reached, whereas
without them it is unaffected by temperature, indicating that the entire Fermi
sea participates in the electronic transport.Comment: 4 pages in RevTex4 (beta4), 6 figures; status: to appear in PR
Organs from animals for man
In the following review some of the problems of xenotransplantation shall be discussed, based on the few experimental data available so far and on reports in the literature describing investigations which may be of importance for xenotransplantation. The impact of gravity on the upright posture of man versus almost all other mammals, the dysfunction between enzymes and hormones in different species and the lack of interactions between interleukins, cytokines and vasoactive substances will be taken into consideration. The question must be asked whether different levels of carrier molecules or serum proteins play a role in the physiological network. Even though the development of transgenic animals or other imaginative manipulations may lead to the acceptance of any type of xenografted organ, it has to be established for how long the products of the xenografts are able to act in the multifactorial orchestra. We are far from understanding xenogeneic molecular mechanisms involved in toxicity, necrosis and apoptosis or even reperfusion injury and ischemia in addition to the immediate mechanisms of the hyperacute xenogeneic rejection. Here, cell adhesion, blood clotting and vasomotion collide and bring micro-and macrocirculation to a standstill. All types of xenogeneic immunological mechanisms studied so far were found to have a more serious impact than those seen in allogeneic transplantation. In addition we are now only beginning to understand that so-called immunological parameters in allogeneic mechanisms act also in a true physiological manner in the xenogeneic situation. These molecular mechanisms occur behind the curtain of hyperacute, accelerated, acute or chronic xenograft rejection of which only some folds have been lifted to allow glimpses of part of the total scene. Other obstacles are likely to arise when long-term survival is achieved. These obstacles include retroviral infections, transfer of prions and severe side effects of the massive immunosuppression which will be needed. Moral, ethical and religious concerns are under debate and the species-specific production of proteins of the foreign donor species developed for clinical use suddenly appears to be a greater problem than anticipated
A foam model highlights the differences of the macro- and microrheology of respiratory horse mucus
Native horse mucus is characterized with micro- and macrorheology and
compared to hydroxyethylcellulose (HEC) gel as a model. Both systems show
comparable viscoelastic properties on the microscale and for the HEC the
macrorheology is in good agreement with the microrheology. For the mucus, the
viscoelastic moduli on the macroscale are several orders of magnitude larger
than on the microscale. Large amplitude oscillatory shear experiments show that
the mucus responds nonlinearly at much smaller deformations than HEC. This
behavior fosters the assumption that the mucus has a foam like structure on the
microscale compared to the typical mesh like structure of the HEC, a model that
is supported by cryogenic-scanning-electron-microscopy (CSEM) images. These
images allow also to determine the relative amount of volume that is occupied
by the pores and the scaffold. Consequently, we can estimate the elastic
modulus of the scaffold. We conclude that this particular foam like
microstructure should be considered as a key factor for the transport of
particulate matter which plays a central role in mucus function with respect to
particle penetration. The mesh properties composed of very different components
are responsible for macroscopic and microscopic behavior being part of
particles fate after landing.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of
Biomedical Material
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