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The hippocampus, prefrontal cortex, and perirhinal cortex are critical to incidental order memory.
Considerable research in rodents and humans indicates the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex are essential for remembering temporal relationships among stimuli, and accumulating evidence suggests the perirhinal cortex may also be involved. However, experimental parameters differ substantially across studies, which limits our ability to fully understand the fundamental contributions of these structures. In fact, previous studies vary in the type of temporal memory they emphasize (e.g., order, sequence, or separation in time), the stimuli and responses they use (e.g., trial-unique or repeated sequences, and incidental or rewarded behavior), and the degree to which they control for potential confounding factors (e.g., primary and recency effects, or order memory deficits secondary to item memory impairments). To help integrate these findings, we developed a new paradigm testing incidental memory for trial-unique series of events, and concurrently assessed order and item memory in animals with damage to the hippocampus, prefrontal cortex, or perirhinal cortex. We found that this new approach led to robust order and item memory, and that hippocampal, prefrontal and perirhinal damage selectively impaired order memory. These findings suggest the hippocampus, prefrontal cortex and perirhinal cortex are part of a broad network of structures essential for incidentally learning the order of events in episodic memory
Neutron star radii and crusts: uncertainties and unified equations of state
The uncertainties in neutron star (NS) radii and crust properties due to our
limited knowledge of the equation of state (EOS) are quantitatively analysed.
We first demonstrate the importance of a unified microscopic description for
the different baryonic densities of the star. If the pressure functional is
obtained matching a crust and a core EOS based on models with different
properties at nuclear matter saturation, the uncertainties can be as large as
for the crust thickness and for the radius. Necessary
conditions for causal and thermodynamically consistent matchings between the
core and the crust are formulated and their consequences examined. A large set
of unified EOS for purely nucleonic matter is obtained based on 24 Skyrme
interactions and 9 relativistic mean-field nuclear parametrizations. In
addition, for relativistic models 17 EOS including a transition to hyperonic
matter at high density are presented. All these EOS have in common the property
of describing a star and of being causal within stable NS. A span
of km and km is obtained for the radius of, respectively,
and star. Applying a set of nine further
constraints from experiment and ab-initio calculations the uncertainty is
reduced to km and km, respectively. These residual uncertainties
reflect lack of constraints at large densities and insufficient information on
the density dependence of the EOS near the nuclear matter saturation point. The
most important parameter to be constrained is shown to be the symmetry energy
slope which exhibits a linear correlation with the stellar radius,
particularly for masses . Potential constraints on , the
NS radius and the EOS from observations of thermal states of NS are also
discussed. [Abriged]Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. C. Supplemental material not include
Analytical treatment of the dHvA frequency combinations due to chemical potential oscillations in an idealized two-band Fermi liquid
de Haas-van Alphen oscillation spectrum is studied for an idealized
two-dimensional Fermi liquid with two parabolic bands in the case of canonical
(fixed number of quasiparticles) and grand canonical (fixed chemical potential)
ensembles. As already reported in the literature, oscillations of the chemical
potential in magnetic field yield frequency combinations that are forbidden in
the framework of the semiclassical theory. Exact analytical calculation of the
Fourier components is derived at zero temperature and an asymptotic expansion
is given for the high temperature and low magnetic field range. A good
agreement is obtained between analytical formulae and numerical computations.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Damping of field-induced chemical potential oscillations in ideal two-band compensated metals
The field and temperature dependence of the de Haas-van Alphen oscillations
spectrum is studied for an ideal two-dimensional compensated metal. It is shown
that the chemical potential oscillations, involved in the frequency
combinations observed in the case of uncompensated orbits, are strongly damped
and can even be suppressed when the effective masses of the electron- and
hole-type orbits are the same. When magnetic breakdown between bands occurs,
this damping is even more pronounced and the Lifshits-Kosevich formalism
accounts for the data in a wide field range.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, to appear in PR
Recent developments in the determination of the amplitude and phase of quantum oscillations for the linear chain of coupled orbits
De Haas-van Alphen oscillations are studied for Fermi surfaces (FS)
illustrating the model proposed by Pippard in the early sixties, namely the
linear chain of orbits coupled by magnetic breakdown. This FS topology is
relevant for many multiband quasi-two dimensional (q-2D) organic metals such as
-(BEDT-TTF)Cu(NCS) and
-(BEDT-TTF)CoBr(CHCl) which are considered in
detail. Whereas the Lifshits-Kosevich model only involves a first order
development of field- and temperature-dependent damping factors, second order
terms may have significant contribution on the Fourier components amplitude for
such q-2D systems at high magnetic field and low temperature. The strength of
these second order terms depends on the relative value of the involved damping
factors, which are in turns strongly dependent on parameters such as the
magnetic breakdown field, effective masses and, most of all, effective
Land\'{e} factors. In addition, the influence of field-dependent Onsager phase
factors on the oscillation spectra is considered.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1304.665
SM(2,4k) fermionic characters and restricted jagged partitions
A derivation of the basis of states for the superconformal minimal
models is presented. It relies on a general hypothesis concerning the role of
the null field of dimension . The basis is expressed solely in terms of
modes and it takes the form of simple exclusion conditions (being thus a
quasi-particle-type basis). Its elements are in correspondence with
-restricted jagged partitions. The generating functions of the latter
provide novel fermionic forms for the characters of the irreducible
representations in both Ramond and Neveu-Schwarz sectors.Comment: 12 page
Properties of Non-Abelian Fractional Quantum Hall States at Filling
We compute the physical properties of non-Abelian Fractional Quantum Hall
(FQH) states described by Jack polynomials at general filling
. For , these states are identical to the
Read-Rezayi parafermions, whereas for they represent new FQH states. The
states, multiplied by a Vandermonde determinant, are a non-Abelian
alternative construction of states at fermionic filling . We
obtain the thermal Hall coefficient, the quantum dimensions, the electron
scaling exponent, and show that the non-Abelian quasihole has a well-defined
propagator falling off with the distance. The clustering properties of the Jack
polynomials, provide a strong indication that the states with can be
obtained as correlators of fields of \emph{non-unitary} conformal field
theories, but the CFT-FQH connection fails when invoked to compute physical
properties such as thermal Hall coefficient or, more importantly, the quasihole
propagator. The quasihole wavefuntion, when written as a coherent state
representation of Jack polynomials, has an identical structure for \emph{all}
non-Abelian states at filling .Comment: 2 figure
Random site dilution properties of frustrated magnets on a hierarchical lattice
We present a method to analyze magnetic properties of frustrated Ising spin
models on specific hierarchical lattices with random dilution. Disorder is
induced by dilution and geometrical frustration rather than randomness in the
internal couplings of the original Hamiltonian. The two-dimensional model
presented here possesses a macroscopic entropy at zero temperature in the large
size limit, very close to the Pauling estimate for spin-ice on pyrochlore
lattice, and a crossover towards a paramagnetic phase. The disorder due to
dilution is taken into account by considering a replicated version of the
recursion equations between partition functions at different lattice sizes. An
analysis at first order in replica number allows for a systematic
reorganization of the disorder configurations, leading to a recurrence scheme.
This method is numerically implemented to evaluate the thermodynamical
quantities such as specific heat and susceptibility in an external field.Comment: 26 pages, 11 figure
New bases for a general definition for the moving preferred basis
One of the challenges of the Environment-Induced Decoherence (EID) approach
is to provide a simple general definition of the moving pointer basis or moving
preferred basis. In this letter we prove that the study of the poles that
produce the decaying modes in non-unitary evolution, could yield a general
definition of the relaxation, the decoherence times, and the moving preferred
basis. These probably are the most important concepts in the theory of
decoherence, one of the most relevant chapters of theoretical (and also
practical) quantum mechanics. As an example we solved the Omnes (or
Lee-Friedrich) model using our theory.Comment: 6 page
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