1,976 research outputs found
Acute ankle and knee injuries: To x-ray or not?
The Ottawa ankle and knee rules are validated clinical decision tools that guide clinicians in targeting radiology to those patients who are likely to have an ankle or knee fracture, thus minimizing x-ray exposure of patients and reducing costs
Spectral functions and optical conductivity of spinless fermions on a checkerboard lattice
We study the dynamical properties of spinless fermions on the checkerboard
lattice. Our main interest is the limit of large nearest-neighbor repulsion
as compared with hopping . The spectral functions show broad low-energy
excitation which are due to the dynamics of fractionally charged excitations.
Furthermore, it is shown that the fractional charges contribute to the
electrical current density.Comment: 9 Pages, 9 Figure
Dealing with the exponential wall in electronic structure calculations
An alternative to Density Functional Theory are wavefunction based electronic
structure calculations for solids. In order to perform them the Exponential
Wall (EW) problem has to be resolved. It is caused by an exponential increase
of the number of configurations with increasing electron number N. There are
different routes one may follow. One is to characterize a many-electron
wavefunction by a vector in Liouville space with a cumulant metric rather than
in Hilbert space. This removes the EW problem. Another is to model the solid by
an {\it impurity} or {\it fragment} embedded in a {\it bath} which is treated
at a much lower level than the former. This is the case in Density Matrix
Embedding Theory (DMET) or Density Embedding Theory (DET). The latter are
closely related to a Schmidt decomposition of a system and to the determination
of the associated entanglement. We show here the connection between the two
approaches. It turns out that the DMET (or DET) has an identical active space
as a previously used Local Ansatz, based on a projection and partitioning
approach. Yet, the EW problem is resolved differently in the two cases. By
studying a ring these differences are analyzed with the help of the
method of increments.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure
Marginal Fermi Liquid Theory in the Hubbard Model
We find Marginal Fermi Liquid (MFL) like behavior in the Hubbard model on a
square lattice for a range of hole doping and on-site interaction parameter U.
Thereby we use a self-consistent projection operator method. It enables us to
compute the momentum and frequency dependence of the single-particle
excitations with high resolution. The Fermi surface is found to be hole-like in
the underdoped and electron-like in the overdoped regime. When a comparison is
possible we find consistency with finite temperature quantum Monte Carlo
results. We also find a discontinuous change with doping concentration from a
MFL to Fermi liquid behavior resulting from a collapse of the lower Hubbard
band. This renders Luttinger's theorem inapplicable in the underdoped regime.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Meningitis or septicaemia in a backpacker?
Negative blood test results for meningitis but positive for Staphylococcus aureus in a young patient with suspected meningitis and a recent joint injury led to a diagnosis of staphylococcal septicaemia with septic arthritis as the source of the infection
Superconductivity in a magnetically ordered background
Borocarbide compounds with the formula RNi2B2C show interesting
superconducting and magnetic properties and the coexistence of the two
phenomena. BCS theory is extended to systems with underlying commensurate
magnetic order. In the case of helical phases the technique may be extended to
any Q-vector and there exists a well defined limit for incommensurate values.
The way magnetic order influences superconductivity depends crucially on the
details of both the magnetic structure and the electron bands, but some
qualitative criteria may be given. As an example we give a brief analysis of
the compound HoNi2B2C.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure, proceedings to the conference "Anomalous Complex
Superconductors", Crete 199
Correlated electrons in Fe-As compounds: a quantum chemical perspective
State-of-the-art quantum chemical methods are applied to the study of the
multiorbital correlated electronic structure of a Fe-As compound, the recently
discovered LiFeAs. Our calculations predict a high-spin, S=2, ground-state
configuration for the Fe ions, which shows that the on-site Coulomb
interactions are substantial. Also, orbital degeneracy in the (xz,yz) sector
and a three-quarter filling of these levels suggest the presence of strong
fluctuations and are compatible with a low metallic conductivity in the normal
state. The lowest electron-removal states have As 4p character, in analogy to
the ligand hole states in p-type cuprate superconductors
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