879 research outputs found
Frequency scaling of photo-induced tunneling
The DC current-voltage characteristics, induced by a driving electric field
with frequency Omega, of a one dimensional electron channel with a tunnel
barrier is calculated. Electron-electron interaction of finite-range is taken
into account. For intermediate interaction strengths, the non-linear
differential conductance shows cusp-like minima at bias voltages integer
multiples of hbar Omega / e that are a consequence of the finite non-zero range
of the interaction but are independent of the shape of the driving electric
field. However, the frequency-scaling of the photo-induced current shows a
cross-over between Omega^{-1} and Omega^{-2}, and depends on the spatial shape
of the driving field and the range of the interaction.Comment: 7 pages, EURO-TeX, 3 figures, to appear in Europhysics Letter
American Women\u27s Intellectual History in the Revolutionary and New Republican Era: Charting a Shift in Feminist Theory
This paper is a study of American women\u27s intellectual history in the period 1770-1815. My aim is to develop a coherent conception of women\u27s moral point of view as it is presented in prescriptive literature, political tracts, and women\u27s own writing. Because of the nature of my goal, I will attempt to glean women\u27s ideas out of the extant primary source material of this period. As the aim of this study implies the existence of a prescribed point of view which women were to share, I will use numerous examples from the genre of prescriptive literature.
Unlike our world of today in which men and women are generally considered more alike than different, men and women of the late eighteenth century were thought to be different and complementary. I will use arguments about women\u27s and men\u27s education and economic lives to demonstrate the existence of large discrepancies between their roles in the last half of the eighteenth century in addition to the large differences which the authors of prescriptive literature described.
My basic premise is that women\u27s and men\u27s intellectual and moral points of view were shaped by their daily lives and by society\u27s expectations of them, and, therefore, by their own expectations of themselves. I do not claim to be able to address the question of a male point of view. It is a fact, especially in these years of revolution and change,that men\u27s lives were much more varied than women\u27s lives. Because the sphere of women\u27s role was more narrowly defined, it is possible to discover within this sphere outlines of a prescribed and coherent woman moral point of view. Further, I will address the question of the division between what women were instructed to think and feel and what they actually felt and thought
Toward an Expanded Conception of Law Reform: Sexual Harassment Law and the Reconstruction of Facts
This Note uses feminist reform of sexual harassment law to show how the reconstruction of factual descriptions can lead to change in the law. Part I describes the feminist methodology of consciousness raising and analyzes Catharine MacKinnon\u27s Sexual Harassment of Working Women as an example of a successful consciousness-raising tool. Part II discusses sexual harassment doctrine and presents a case study illustrating how changing the way legal decision makers think about facts can lead to law reform. Part III discusses how social construction theory aids understanding of changes in sexual harassment law
Exact Ground-State Energy of the Ising Spin Glass on Strips
We propose a new method for exact analytical calculation of the ground-state
energy of the Ising spin glass on strips. An outstanding advantage of this
method over the numerical transfer matrix technique is that the energy is
obtained for complex values of the probability describing quenched randomness.
We study the and the site-random models using this method for strips of
various sizes up to . The ground-state energy of these models is
found to have singular points in the complex-probability plane, reminiscent of
Lee-Yang zeros in the complex-field plane for the Ising ferromagnet. The Ising model has a series of singularities which may approach a limiting
point around on the real axis in the limit of infinite width.Comment: 10 pages, 12 Postscript figures, LaTeX, uses subeqn.sty, minor
changes in tex-fil
Pump frequency resonances for light-induced incipient superconductivity in YBaCuO
Optical excitation in the cuprates has been shown to induce transient
superconducting correlations above the thermodynamic transition temperature,
, as evidenced by the terahertz frequency optical properties in the
non-equilibrium state. In YBaCuO this phenomenon has so far
been associated with the nonlinear excitation of certain lattice modes and the
creation of new crystal structures. In other compounds, like
LaBaCuO, similar effects were reported also for excitation at
near infrared frequencies, and were interpreted as a signature of the melting
of competing orders. However, to date it has not been possible to
systematically tune the pump frequency widely in any one compound, to
comprehensively compare the frequency dependent photo-susceptibility for this
phenomenon. Here, we make use of a newly developed optical parametric
amplifier, which generates widely tunable high intensity femtosecond pulses, to
excite YBaCuO throughout the entire optical spectrum (3 - 750
THz). In the far-infrared region (3 - 25 THz), signatures of non-equilibrium
superconductivity are induced only for excitation of the 16.4 THz and 19.2 THz
vibrational modes that drive -axis apical oxygen atomic positions. For
higher driving frequencies (25 - 750 THz), a second resonance is observed
around the charge transfer band edge at ~350 THz. These observations highlight
the importance of coupling to the electronic structure of the CuO planes,
either mediated by a phonon or by charge transfer.Comment: 47 pages, 21 figures, 2 table
An HST/COS legacy survey of intervening SiIII absorption in the extended gaseous halos of low-redshift galaxies
Doubly ionized silicon (SiIII) is a powerful tracer of diffuse ionized gas
inside and outside of galaxies. It can be observed in the local Universe in
ultraviolet (UV) absorption against bright extragalactic background sources. We
here present an extensive study of intervening SiIII-selected absorbers and
their relation to the circumgalactic medium (CGM) of galaxies at low redshift
(z<=0.1), based on the analysis of UV absorption spectra along 303
extragalactic lines of sight obtained with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph
(COS) on board the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). Along a total redshift path of
Dz=24 we identify 69 intervening SiIII systems that all show associated
absorption from other low and high ions. We derive a bias-corrected number
density of dN/dz(SiIII)=2.5 for absorbers with column densities log
N(SiIII)>12.2. We develop a geometrical model for the absorption-cross section
of the CGM around the local galaxy population and find excellent agreement
between the model predictions and the observations. We further compare
redshifts and positions of the absorbers with that of ~64,000 galaxies using
archival galaxy-survey data. For the majority of the absorbers we identify
possible host galaxies within 300 km/s of the absorbers and derive impact
parameters rho<200 kpc, demonstrating that the spatial distributions of SiIII
absorbers and galaxies are highly correlated. Our study indicates that the
majority of SiIII-selected absorbers in our sample trace the CGM of nearby
galaxies within their virial radii at a typical covering fraction of ~70 per
cent. From a detailed ionization model we estimate that diffuse gas in the CGM
around galaxies, as traced by SiIII, contains substantially more baryonic mass
than their neutral interstellar medium.Comment: 32 pages, 17 figures; final version accepted for publication in A&
Conditions of the Development of Logistic Centers in Poland in the Context of European States Experiences
The article is, for the most part, the aftermath of his own examinations carried out in years 2007-2010 and concerning logistic centers development conditioning.Artykuł jest w znacznej mierze pokłosiem badań własnych autora przeprowadzonych w latach: 2007-2010 dotyczących uwarunkowań rozwoju centrów logistycznych
Dynamics of photo-induced ferromagnetism in oxides with orbital degeneracy
By using intense coherent electromagnetic radiation, it may be possible to
manipulate the properties of quantum materials very quickly, or even induce new
and potentially useful phases that are absent in equilibrium. For instance,
ultrafast control of magnetic dynamics is crucial for a number of proposed
spintronic devices and can also shed light on the possible dynamics of
correlated phases out of equilibrium. Inspired by recent experiments on
spin-orbital ferromagnet YTiO we consider the nonequilibrium dynamics of
Heisenberg ferromagnetic insulator with low-lying orbital excitations. We model
the dynamics of the magnon excitations in this system following an optical
pulse which resonantly excites infrared-active phonon modes. As the phonons
ring down they can dynamically couple the orbitals with the low-lying magnons,
leading to a dramatically modified effective bath for the magnons. We show this
transient coupling can lead to a dynamical acceleration of the magnetization
dynamics, which is otherwise bottlenecked by small anisotropy. Exploring the
parameter space more we find that the magnon dynamics can also even completely
reverse, leading to a negative relaxation rate when the pump is blue-detuned
with respect to the orbital bath resonance. We therefore show that by using
specially targeted optical pulses, one can exert a much greater degree of
control over the magnetization dynamics, allowing one to optically steer
magnetic order in this system. We conclude by discussing interesting parallels
between the magnetization dynamics we find here and recent experiments on
photo-induced superconductivity, where it is similarly observed that depending
on the initial pump frequency, an apparent metastable superconducting phase
emerges.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures + 5 pages, no figure
Evaluation of antibacterial activity of Australian basidiomycetous macrofungi using a high-throughput 96-well plate assay
Context: The production of antimicrobial compounds by macrofungi is not unexpected because they have to compete with other organisms for survival in their natural hostile environment. Previous studies have indicated that macrofungi contain secondary metabolites with a range of pharmacological activities including antimicrobial agents
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