4,068 research outputs found
On the Stacking Charge Order in NaV2O5
We propose a mechanism for the observed stacking charge order in the
quarter-filled ladder compound NaV2O5. Via a standard mapping of the charge
degrees of freedom onto Ising spins we explain the stacking order as a result
of competition between couplings of the nearest and next-nearest planes with
the 4-fold degenerate super-antiferroelectric in-plane order.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
‘Big Think’, Disjointed Incrementalism: Chinese Economic Success and Policy Lessons for Africa, or the Case for Pan-Africanism
Chinese economic success is not the product of free market accidental coincidence. Rather, it is orchestrated by the State through a mixture of nationalism (‘big think’) and pragmatic decisions (disjointed incrementalism) in agriculture, finance and industry. Furthermore, these decisions build upon existing institutions (e.g. the Household Responsibility System, Township Village Enterprises, etc), some dating back to pre-revolutionary China (e.g. Special Economic Zones), rather than imported ones from outside China. The article explores the utility (and lack thereof) of the Chinese model in the African context, as well as the possibilities of an Africa-centred ‘big think’ (Pan-Africanism) capable of mobilizing the continent for development
Attractor Metadynamics in Adapting Neural Networks
Slow adaption processes, like synaptic and intrinsic plasticity, abound in
the brain and shape the landscape for the neural dynamics occurring on
substantially faster timescales. At any given time the network is characterized
by a set of internal parameters, which are adapting continuously, albeit
slowly. This set of parameters defines the number and the location of the
respective adiabatic attractors. The slow evolution of network parameters hence
induces an evolving attractor landscape, a process which we term attractor
metadynamics. We study the nature of the metadynamics of the attractor
landscape for several continuous-time autonomous model networks. We find both
first- and second-order changes in the location of adiabatic attractors and
argue that the study of the continuously evolving attractor landscape
constitutes a powerful tool for understanding the overall development of the
neural dynamics
Covering classes and 1-tilting cotorsion pairs over commutative rings
We are interested in characterising the commutative rings for which a 1-tilting cotorsion pair provides for covers, that is when the class A is a covering class. We use Hrbekšfs bijective correspondence between the 1-tilting cotorsion pairs over a commutative ring R and the faithful finitely generated Gabriel topologies on R. Moreover, we use results of Bazzoni-Positselski, in particular a generalisation of Matlis equivalence and their characterisation of covering classes for 1-tilting cotorsion pairs arising from flat injective ring epimorphisms. Explicitly, if is the Gabriel topology associated to the 1-tilting cotorsion pair, and R is the ring of quotients with respect to, we show that if A is covering, then G is a perfect localisation (in Stenstromšfs sense [B. Stenstrom, Rings of Quotients, Springer, New York, 1975]) and the localisation R has projective dimension at most one as an R-module. Moreover, we show that is covering if and only if both the localisation RG and the quotient rings R/J are perfect rings for every J ∈. Rings satisfying the latter two conditions are called G-almost perfect
Exact Diagonalization Dynamical Mean Field Theory for Multi-Band Materials: Effect of Coulomb correlations on the Fermi surface of Na_0.3CoO_2
Dynamical mean field theory combined with finite-temperature exact
diagonalization is shown to be a suitable method to study local Coulomb
correlations in realistic multi-band materials. By making use of the sparseness
of the impurity Hamiltonian, exact eigenstates can be evaluated for
significantly larger clusters than in schemes based on full diagonalization.
Since finite-size effects are greatly reduced this approach allows the study of
three-band systems down to very low temperatures, for strong local Coulomb
interactions and full Hund exchange. It is also shown that exact
diagonalization yields smooth subband quasi-particle spectra and self-energies
at real frequencies. As a first application the correlation induced charge
transfer between t2g bands in Na_0.3CoO_2 is investigated. For both Hund and
Ising exchange the small eg' Fermi surface hole pockets are found to be
slightly enlarged compared to the non-interacting limit, in agreement with
previous Quantum Monte Carlo dynamical mean field calculations for Ising
exchange, but in conflict with photoemission data.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
The Spin-SAF transition in NaV2O5 induced by spin-pseudospin coupling
We present microscopic estimates for the spin-spin and spin-speudospin
interactions of the quarter-filled ladder compound NaV2O5, obtained by exactly
diagonalizing appropriate clusters of the underlying generalized Hubbard
Hamiltonian. We present evidence for a substantial interladder spin-pseudospin
interaction term which would allow simultaneously for the
superantiferroelectric (SAF) charge (pseudospin) ordering and spin
dimerization. We discuss the values of the coupling constants appropriate for
NaV2O5 and deduce the absence of a soft antiferroelectric mode
Properties of the energetic particle distributions during the October 28, 2003 solar flare from INTEGRAL/SPI observations
Analysis of spectra obtained with the gamma-ray spectrometer SPI onboard
INTEGRAL of the GOES X17-class flare on October 28, 2003 is presented. In the
energy range 600 keV - 8 MeV three prominent narrow lines at 2.223, 4.4 and 6.1
MeV, resulting from nuclear interactions of accelerated ions within the solar
atmosphere could be observed. Time profiles of the three lines and the
underlying continuum indicate distinct phases with several emission peaks and
varying continuum-to-line ratio for several minutes before a smoother decay
phase sets in. Due to the high-resolution Ge detectors of SPI and the
exceptional intensity of the flare, detailed studies of the 4.4 and 6.1 MeV
line shapes was possible for the first time. Comparison with calculated line
shapes using a thick target interaction model and several energetic particle
angular distributions indicates that the nuclear interactions were induced by
downward-directed particle beams with alpha-to-proton ratios of the order of
0.1. There are also indications that the 4.4 MeV to 6.1 MeV line fluence ratio
changed between the beginning and the decay phase of the flare, possibly due to
a temporal evolution of the energetic particle alpha-to-proton ratio.Comment: 24 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication by A&
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