13,580 research outputs found
Diaplectic transformation of minerals: Vorotilov drill core, Puchezh-Katunki impact crater, Russia
The Vorotilov core was drilled in the central uplift of the Puchezh-Katunki astrobleme to a depth of 5.1 km. Impactites are revealed in the rocks of the core beginning from a depth of 366 m: suevites (66 m), allogenic breccias (112 m), and autogenic breccias (deeper than 544 m). These rocks are represented by shocked-metamorphic gneisses, schists, amphibolites of Archean age, and magmatic rocks (dolerites, olivines, and peridotites) that lie between them
Vortex Plasma in a Superconducting Film with Magnetic Dots
We consider a superconducting film, placed upon a magnetic dot array.
Magnetic moments of the dots are normal to the film and randomly oriented. We
determine how the concentration of the vortices in the film depends on the
magnetic moment of a dot at low temperatures. The concentration of the
vortices, bound to the dots, is proportional to the density of the dots and
depends on the magnetization of a dot in a step-like way. The concentration of
the unbound vortices oscillates about a value, proportional to the magnetic
moment of the dots. The period of the oscillations is equal to the width of a
step in the concentration of the bound vortices.Comment: RevTeX, 4 page
Lattice dynamics and reduced thermal conductivity of filled skutterudites
The great reduction in thermal conductivity of skutterudites upon filling the
``void'' sites with Rare Earth (RE) ions is key to their favorable
thermoelectric properties but remains to be understood. Using lattice dynamic
models based on first principles calculations, we address the most popular
microscopic mechanism, reduction via rattling ions. The model withstands
inelastic neutron scattering and specific heat measurements, and refutes
hypotheses of an anharmonic RE potential and of two distinct localized RE
vibrations of disparate frequencies. It does indicate a strong hybridization
between bare La vibrations and certain Sb-like phonon branches, suggesting
anharmonic scattering by harmonic RE motions as an important mechanism for
suppression of heat conductivity.Comment: modified version resubmitted to PRB. Results unchanged, text changed
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One-loop renormalization group study of boson-fermion mixtures
A weakly interacting boson-fermion mixture model was investigated using
Wisonian renormalization group analysis. This model includes one boson-boson
interaction term and one boson-fermion interaction term. The scaling dimensions
of the two interaction coupling constants were calculated as 2-D at tree level
and the Gell-Mann-Low equations were derived at one-loop level. We find that in
the Gell-Mann-Low equations the contributions from the fermion loops go to zero
as the length scale approaches infinity. After ignoring the fermion loop
contributions two fixed points were found in 3 dimensional case. One is the
Gaussian fixed point and the other one is Wilson-Fisher fixed point. We find
that the boson-fermion interaction decouples at the Wilson-Fisher fixed point.
We also observe that under RG transformation the boson-fermion interaction
coupling constant runs to negative infinity with a small negative initial
value, which indicates a boson-fermion pairing instability. Furthermore, the
possibility of emergent supersymmetry in this model was discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Extracting predictive models from marked-p free-text documents at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, London
In this paper we explore the combination of text-mining, un-supervised and supervised learning to extract predictive models from a corpus of digitised historical floras. These documents deal with the nomenclature, geographical distribution, ecology and comparative morphology of the species of a region. Here we exploit the fact that portions of text in the floras are marked up as different types of trait and habitat. We infer models from these different texts that can predict different habitat-types based upon the traits of plant species. We also integrate plant taxonomy data in order to assist in the validation of our models. We have shown that by clustering text describing the habitat of different floras we can identify a number of important and distinct habitats that are associated with particular families of species along with statistical significance scores. We have also shown that by using these discovered habitat-types as labels for supervised learning we can predict them based upon a subset of traits, identified using wrapper feature selection
Nonequilibrium quantum phase transition in itinerant electron systems
We study the effect of the voltage bias on the ferromagnetic phase transition
in a one-dimensional itinerant electron system. The applied voltage drives the
system into a nonequilibrium steady state with a non-zero electric current. The
bias changes the universality class of the second order ferromagnetic
transition. While the equilibrium transition belongs to the universality class
of the uniaxial ferroelectric, we find the mean-field behavior near the
nonequilibrium critical point.Comment: Final version as accepted to Phys. Rev. Let
Destruction of bulk ordering by surface randomness
We demonstrate that the arbitrarily weak quenched disorder on the surface of
a system of continuous symmetry destroys long range order in the bulk, and,
instead, quasi-long range order emerges. Correlation functions are calculated
exactly for the two- and three-dimensional XY model with surface randomness via
the functional renormalization group. Even at strong quenched disorder the
three-dimensional XY model possesses topological order. We also determine
roughness of a domain wall in the presence of surface disorder.Comment: 4 pages Revtex; Eq. (12) correcte
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