49,408 research outputs found

    Scaling and interaction-assisted transport in graphene with one-dimensional defects

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    We analyze the scattering from one-dimensional defects in intrinsic graphene. The Coulomb repulsion between electrons is found to be able to induce singularities of such scattering at zero temperature as in one-dimensional conductors. In striking contrast to electrons in one space dimension, however, repulsive interactions here can enhance transport. We present explicit calculations for the scattering from vector potentials that appear when strips of the material are under strain. There the predicted effects are exponentially large for strong scatterers.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure

    Coexistence Curve Singularities at Critical End Points

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    We report an extensive Monte Carlo study of critical end point behaviour in a symmetrical binary fluid mixture. On the basis of general scaling arguments, singular behaviour is predicted in the diameter of the liquid-gas coexistence curve as the critical end point is approached. The simulation results show clear evidence for this singularity, as well as confirming a previously predicted singularity in the coexistence chemical potential. Both singularities should be detectable experimentally.Comment: 9 pages Revtex, 3 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev. Let

    Spin-spin Correlation in Some Excited States of Transverse Ising Model

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    We consider the transverse Ising model in one dimension with nearest-neighbour interaction and calculate exactly the longitudinal spin-spin correlation for a class of excited states. These states are known to play an important role in the perturbative treatment of one-dimensional transverse Ising model with frustrated second-neighbour interaction. To calculate the correlation, we follow the earlier procedure of Wu, use Szego's theorem and also use Fisher-Hartwig conjecture. The result is that the correlation decays algebraically with distance (nn) as 1/√n1/\surd n and is oscillatory or non-oscillatory depending on the magnitude of the transverse field.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur

    Central Star Formation in Pseudobulges and Classical Bulges

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    I use Spitzer 3.6-8.0 \mu m color profiles to compare the radial structure of star formation in pseudobulges and classical bulges. Pseudobulges are ``bulges'' which form through secular evolution, rather than mergers. In this study, pseudobulges are identified using the presence of disk-like structure in the center of the galaxy (nuclear spiral, nuclear bar, and/or high ellipticity in bulge); classical bulges are those galaxy bulges with smooth isophotes which are round compared to the outer disk, and show no disky structure in their bulge. I show that galaxies structurally identified as having pseudobulges have higher central star formation rates than those of classical bulges. Further, I also show that galaxies identified as having classical bulges have remarkably regular star formation profiles. The color profiles of galaxies with classical bulges show a star forming outer disk with a sharp change, consistent with a decline in star formation rates, toward the center of the galaxy. Classical bulges have a nearly constant inner profile (r < 1.5 kpc) that is similar to elliptical galaxies. Pseudobulges in general show no such transition in star formation properties from the outer disk to the central pseudobulge. Thus I conclude that pseudobulges and classical bulges do in fact form their stars via different mechanisms. Further, this adds to the evidence that classical bulges form most of their stars in fast episodic bursts, in a similar fashion to elliptical galaxies; whereas, pseudobulges form stars from longer lasting secular processes.Comment: accepted to ApJ Letter

    Maximum-Likelihood Comparisons of Tully-Fisher and Redshift Data: Constraints on Omega and Biasing

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    We compare Tully-Fisher (TF) data for 838 galaxies within cz=3000 km/sec from the Mark III catalog to the peculiar velocity and density fields predicted from the 1.2 Jy IRAS redshift survey. Our goal is to test the relation between the galaxy density and velocity fields predicted by gravitational instability theory and linear biasing, and thereby to estimate βI=Ω0.6/bI,\beta_I = \Omega^{0.6}/b_I, where bIb_I is the linear bias parameter for IRAS galaxies. Adopting the IRAS velocity and density fields as a prior model, we maximize the likelihood of the raw TF observables, taking into account the full range of selection effects and properly treating triple-valued zones in the redshift-distance relation. Extensive tests with realistic simulated galaxy catalogs demonstrate that the method produces unbiased estimates of βI\beta_I and its error. When we apply the method to the real data, we model the presence of a small but significant velocity quadrupole residual (~3.3% of Hubble flow), which we argue is due to density fluctuations incompletely sampled by IRAS. The method then yields a maximum likelihood estimate βI=0.49±0.07\beta_I=0.49\pm 0.07 (1-sigma error). We discuss the constraints on Ω\Omega and biasing that follow if we assume a COBE-normalized CDM power spectrum. Our model also yields the 1-D noise noise in the velocity field, including IRAS prediction errors, which we find to be be 125 +/- 20 km/sec.Comment: 53 pages, 20 encapsulated figures, two tables. Submitted to the Astrophysical Journal. Also available at http://astro.stanford.edu/jeff

    Pulsed versus DC I-V characteristics of resistive manganites

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    We report on pulsed and DC I-V characteristics of polycrystalline samples of three charge-ordered manganites, Pr_{2/3}Ca_{1/3}MnO_3, Pr_{1/2}Ca_{1/2}MnO_3, Bi_{1/2}Sr_{1/2}MnO_3 and of a double-perovskite Sr_2MnReO_6, in a temperature range where their ohmic resistivity obeys the Efros-Shklovskii variable range hopping relation. For all samples, the DC I(V) exhibits at high currents negative differential resistance and hysteresis, which mask a perfectly ohmic or a moderately nonohmic conductivity obtained by pulsed measurements. This demonstrates that the widely used DC I-V measurements are usually misleading.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication to AP

    Inter-grain tunneling in the half-metallic double-perovskites Sr2_2BB'O6_6 (BB'-- FeMo, FeRe, CrMo, CrW, CrRe

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    The zero-field conductivities (σ\sigma) of the polycrystaline title materials, are governed by inter-grain transport. In the majority of cases their σ\sigma(T) can be described by the "fluctuation induced tunneling" model. Analysis of the results in terms of this model reveals two remarkable features: 1. For \emph{all} Sr2_2FeMoO6_6 samples of various microstructures, the tunneling constant (barrier width ×\times inverse decay-length of the wave-function) is ∼\sim 2, indicating the existence of an intrinsic insulating boundary layer with a well defined electronic (and magnetic) structure. 2. The tunneling constant for \emph{all} cold-pressed samples decreases linearly with increasing magnetic-moment/formula-unit.Comment: 10 pages, 2 tables, 3 figure

    The Velocity Field from Type Ia Supernovae Matches the Gravity Field from Galaxy Surveys

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    We compare the peculiar velocities of nearby SNe Ia with those predicted by the gravity fields of full sky galaxy catalogs. The method provides a powerful test of the gravitational instability paradigm and strong constraints on the density parameter beta = Omega^0.6/b. For 24 SNe Ia within 10,000 km/s we find the observed SNe Ia peculiar velocities are well modeled by the predictions derived from the 1.2 Jy IRAS survey and the Optical Redshift Survey (ORS). Our best β\beta is 0.4 from IRAS, and 0.3 from the ORS, with beta>0.7 and beta<0.15 ruled out at 95% confidence levels from the IRAS comparison. Bootstrap resampling tests show these results to be robust in the mean and in its error. The precision of this technique will improve as additional nearby SNe Ia are discovered and monitored.Comment: 16 pages (LaTex), 3 postscript figure
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