1,233 research outputs found
Autoplot: A browser for scientific data on the web
Autoplot is software developed for the Virtual Observatories in Heliophysics
to provide intelligent and automated plotting capabilities for many typical
data products that are stored in a variety of file formats or databases.
Autoplot has proven to be a flexible tool for exploring, accessing, and viewing
data resources as typically found on the web, usually in the form of a
directory containing data files with multiple parameters contained in each
file. Data from a data source is abstracted into a common internal data model
called QDataSet. Autoplot is built from individually useful components, and can
be extended and reused to create specialized data handling and analysis
applications and is being used in a variety of science visualization and
analysis applications. Although originally developed for viewing
heliophysics-related time series and spectrograms, its flexible and generic
data representation model makes it potentially useful for the Earth sciences.Comment: 16 page
Self-energy corrections to anisotropic Fermi surfaces
The electron-electron interactions affect the low-energy excitations of an
electronic system and induce deformations of the Fermi surface. These effects
are especially important in anisotropic materials with strong correlations,
such as copper oxides superconductors or ruthenates. Here we analyze the
deformations produced by electronic correlations in the Fermi surface of
anisotropic two-dimensional systems, treating the regular and singular regions
of the Fermi surface on the same footing. Simple analytical expressions are
obtained for the corrections, based on local features of the Fermi surface. It
is shown that, even for weak local interactions, the behavior of the
self-energy is non trivial, showing a momentum dependence and a self-consistent
interplay with the Fermi surface topology. Results are compared to experimental
observations and to other theoretical results.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figure
Disclinations, dislocations and continuous defects: a reappraisal
Disclinations, first observed in mesomorphic phases, are relevant to a number
of ill-ordered condensed matter media, with continuous symmetries or frustrated
order. They also appear in polycrystals at the edges of grain boundaries. They
are of limited interest in solid single crystals, where, owing to their large
elastic stresses, they mostly appear in close pairs of opposite signs. The
relaxation mechanisms associated with a disclination in its creation, motion,
change of shape, involve an interplay with continuous or quantized dislocations
and/or continuous disclinations. These are attached to the disclinations or are
akin to Nye's dislocation densities, well suited here. The notion of 'extended
Volterra process' takes these relaxation processes into account and covers
different situations where this interplay takes place. These concepts are
illustrated by applications in amorphous solids, mesomorphic phases and
frustrated media in their curved habit space. The powerful topological theory
of line defects only considers defects stable against relaxation processes
compatible with the structure considered. It can be seen as a simplified case
of the approach considered here, well suited for media of high plasticity
or/and complex structures. Topological stability cannot guarantee energetic
stability and sometimes cannot distinguish finer details of structure of
defects.Comment: 72 pages, 36 figure
Quantum Gravity Vacuum and Invariants of Embedded Spin Networks
We show that the path integral for the three-dimensional SU(2) BF theory with
a Wilson loop or a spin network function inserted can be understood as the
Rovelli-Smolin loop transform of a wavefunction in the Ashtekar connection
representation, where the wavefunction satisfies the constraints of quantum
general relativity with zero cosmological constant. This wavefunction is given
as a product of the delta functions of the SU(2) field strength and therefore
it can be naturally associated to a flat connection spacetime. The loop
transform can be defined rigorously via the quantum SU(2) group, as a spin foam
state sum model, so that one obtains invariants of spin networks embedded in a
three-manifold. These invariants define a flat connection vacuum state in the
q-deformed spin network basis. We then propose a modification of this
construction in order to obtain a vacuum state corresponding to the flat metric
spacetime.Comment: 15 pages, revised version to appear in Class. Quant. Gra
Fourier transform spectroscopy of d-wave quasiparticles in the presence of atomic scale pairing disorder
The local density of states power spectrum of optimally doped
BiSrCaCuO (BSCCO) has been interpreted in terms of
quasiparticle interference peaks corresponding to an "octet'' of scattering
wave vectors connecting k-points where the density of states is maximal. Until
now, theoretical treatments have not been able to reproduce the experimentally
observed weights and widths of these "octet'' peaks; in particular, the
predominance of the dispersing "q'' peak parallel to the Cu-O bond
directions has remained a mystery. In addition, such theories predict
"background'' features which are not observed experimentally. Here, we show
that most of the discrepancies can be resolved when a realistic model for the
out-of-plane disorder in BSCCO is used. Weak extended potential scatterers,
which are assumed to represent cation disorder, suppress large-momentum
features and broaden the low-energy "q''-peaks, whereas scattering at order
parameter variations, possibly caused by a dopant-modulated pair interaction
around interstitial oxygens, strongly enhances the dispersing "q''-peaks.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Kinematics of electrons near a Van Hove singularity
A two dimensional electronic system, where the Fermi surface is close to a
Van Hove singularity, shows a variety of weak coupling instabilities, and it is
a convenient model to study the interplay between antiferromagnetism and
anisotropic superconductivity. We present a detailed analysis of the kinematics
of the electron scattering in this model. The similitudes, and differences,
between a standard Renormalization Group approach and previous work based on
parquet summations of log divergences are analyzed, with emphasis on the
underlying physical processes. General properties of the phase diagram are
discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 3 postscript figure
Deformation of anisotropic Fermi surfaces due to electron-electron interactions
We analyze the deformations of the Fermi surface induced by electron-electron
interactions in anisotropic two dimensional systems. We use perturbation theory
to treat, on the same footing, the regular and singular regions of the Fermi
surface. It is shown that, even for weak local coupling, the self-energy
presents a nontrivial behavior showing momentum dependence and interplay with
the Fermi surface shape. Our scheme gives simple analytical expressions based
on local features of the Fermi surface.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
A Bima Array Survey of Molecules in Comets Linear (C/2002 T7) and Neat (C/2001 Q4)
We present an interferometric search for large molecules, including methanol,
methyl cyanide, ethyl cyanide, ethanol, and methyl formate in comets LINEAR
(C/2002 T7) and NEAT (C/2001 Q4) with the Berkeley-Illinois-Maryland
Association (BIMA) array. In addition, we also searched for transitions of the
simpler molecules CS, SiO, HNC, HN13C and 13CO . We detected transitions of
methanol and CS around Comet LINEAR and one transition of methanol around Comet
NEAT within a synthesized beam of ~20''. We calculated the total column density
and production rate of each molecular species using the variable temperature
and outflow velocity (VTOV) model described by Friedel et al.(2005).Considering
the molecular production rate ratios with respect to water, Comet T7 LINEAR is
more similar to Comet Hale-Bopp while Comet Q4 NEAT is more similar to Comet
Hyakutake. It is unclear, however, due to such a small sample size, whether
there is a clear distinction between a Hale-Bopp and Hyakutake class of comet
or whether comets have a continuous range of molecular production rate ratios.Comment: Accepted for Publication in the Astrophysical Journa
How Preussag became TUI : kissing too many toads can make you a toad
In the period 1997-2004, Preussag, a diversified German conglomerate of old economy businesses, changed itself into TUI, a company focused almost entirely on tourism and logistics. This paper analyzes how this strategy was executed and how it contributed to Preussagâs underperformance of the stock market. We collect 417 announcements of acquisitions, financial disclosures and other news and disentangle the impact of different parts of the companyâs strategy. We find that only the divestitures created value, that the strategy to invest in tourism destroyed value, and that the acquisition premiums Preussag paid were mostly unjustified. Bad luck like the events of September 11, 2001 cannot account for the poor performance of the stock. Poor management resulted from poor governance, combining a state-owned bank as the largest shareholder, board interlocks, and insufficient managerial incentives. The case shows how divestiture programs increase the liquid resources available to management beyond free operating cash flows and casts doubt on the positive governance role of institutional blockholders
Friedel Oscillations in Relativistic Nuclear Matter
We calculate the low-momentum N-N effective potential obtained in the OBE
approximation, inside a nuclear plasma at finite temperature, as described by
the relativistic - model. We analyze the screening effects
on the attractive part of the potential in the intermediate range as density or
temperature increase. In the long range the potential shows Friedel-like
oscillations instead of the usual exponential damping. These oscillations arise
from the sharp edge of the Fermi surface and should be encountered in any
realistic model of nuclear matter.Comment: 11 pages in preprint format, typeset using REVTEX, 3 included figures
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