2,135 research outputs found
Stability of 3D Cubic Fixed Point in Two-Coupling-Constant \phi^4-Theory
For an anisotropic euclidean -theory with two interactions [u
(\sum_{i=1^M {\phi}_i^2)^2+v \sum_{i=1}^M \phi_i^4] the -functions are
calculated from five-loop perturbation expansions in
dimensions, using the knowledge of the large-order behavior and Borel
transformations. For , an infrared stable cubic fixed point for
is found, implying that the critical exponents in the magnetic phase
transition of real crystals are of the cubic universality class. There were
previous indications of the stability based either on lower-loop expansions or
on less reliable Pad\'{e approximations, but only the evidence presented in
this work seems to be sufficently convincing to draw this conclusion.Comment: Author Information under
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/institution.html . Paper also at
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/kleiner_re250/preprint.htm
Non-equilibrium heat capacity of polytetrafluoroethylene at room temperature
Polytetrafluoroethylene can be considered as a model for calorimetric studies
of complex systems with thermodynamics transitions at ambient temperature. This
polymer exhibits two phase transitions of different nature at 292 K and 303 K.
We show that sensitive ac-calorimetry measurements allow us to study the
thermodynamic behaviour of polytetrafluoroethylene when it is brought out of
thermodynamic equilibrium. Thanks to the thermal modelisation of our
calorimetric device, the frequency dependent complex heat capacity of this
polymer is extracted. The temperature and frequency variations of the real and
imaginary parts of the complex heat capacity are obtained when
polytetrafluoroethylene undergoes its first-order structural phase transition
at 292 K
Statistics of extremes under random censoring
We investigate the estimation of the extreme value index when the data are
subject to random censorship. We prove, in a unified way, detailed asymptotic
normality results for various estimators of the extreme value index and use
these estimators as the main building block for estimators of extreme
quantiles. We illustrate the quality of these methods by a small simulation
study and apply the estimators to medical data.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.3150/07-BEJ104 the Bernoulli
(http://isi.cbs.nl/bernoulli/) by the International Statistical
Institute/Bernoulli Society (http://isi.cbs.nl/BS/bshome.htm
New geometries for high spatial resolution hall probes
The Hall response function of symmetric and asymmetric planar Hall effect
devices is investigated by scanning a magnetized tip above a sensor surface
while simultaneously recording the topography and the Hall voltage. Hall sensor
geometries are tailored using a Focused Ion Beam, in standard symmetric and new
asymmetric geometries. With this technique we are able to reduce a single
voltage probe to a narrow constriction 20 times smaller than the other device
dimensions. We show that the response function is peaked above the
constriction, in agreement with numerical simulations. The results suggest a
new way to pattern Hall sensors for enhanced spatial resolution.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Journal of Applied Physic
Bolidomonas: a new genus with two species belonging to a new algal class, the Bolidophyceae (Heterokonta) 1.
International audienceA new algal class, the Bolidophyceae (Heterokonta), is described from one genus, Bolidomonas, gen, nov., and two species, Bolidomonas pacifica, sp, nov and Bolidomonas mediterranea, sp, nov., isolated from the equatorial Pacific Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea, respectively. Both species are approximately 1.2 mu m in diameter and have two unequal flagella; the longer flagellum bears tubular hairs, whereas the shorter is smooth. The flagellar basal apparatus is restricted to two basal bodies, and there is no transitional helix. Cells are naked, devoid of walls or siliceous structures. The internal cellular organization is simple with a single plastid containing a ring genophore and a girdle lamella, one mitochondrion with tubular cristae, and one Golgi apparatus close to the basal bodies. The Mediterranean and the Pacific species differ in the insertion angle between their flagella and their pattern of swimming, these differences possibly being linked to each other. Analyses of the SSU rDNA gene place the two strains as a sister group to the diatoms, Moreover, pigment analyses confirm this position, as fucoxanthin is found as the major carotenoid in both lineages. These data strongly suggest that the ancestral heterokont that gave rise to the diatom lineage was probably a biflagellated unicell
New approach to Borel summation of divergent series and critical exponent estimates for an N-vector cubic model in three dimensions from five-loop \epsilon expansions
A new approach to summation of divergent field-theoretical series is
suggested. It is based on the Borel transformation combined with a conformal
mapping and does not imply the exact asymptotic parameters to be known. The
method is tested on functions expanded in their asymptotic power series. It is
applied to estimating the critical exponent values for an N-vector field model,
describing magnetic and structural phase transitions in cubic and tetragonal
crystals, from five-loop \epsilon expansions.Comment: 9 pages, LaTeX, 3 PostScript figure
Effect of obesity and metabolic syndrome on plasma oxysterols and fatty acids in human
BACKGROUND:
Obesity and the related entity metabolic syndrome are characterized by altered lipid metabolism and associated with increased morbidity risk for cardiovascular disease and cancer. Oxysterols belong to a large family of cholesterol-derived molecules known to play crucial role in many signaling pathways underlying several diseases. Little is known on the potential effect of obesity and metabolic syndrome on oxysterols in human.
OBJECTIVES:
In this work, we questioned whether circulating oxysterols might be significantly altered in obese patients and in patients with metabolic syndrome. We also tested the potential correlation between circulating oxysterols and fatty acids.
METHODS:
60 obese patients and 75 patients with metabolic syndrome were enrolled in the study along with 210 age- and sex-matched healthy subjects, used as control group. Plasma oxysterols were analyzed by isotope dilution GC/MS, and plasma fatty acids profiling was assessed by gas chromatography coupled with flame ionization detection.
RESULTS:
We found considerable differences in oxysterols profiling in the two disease groups that were gender-related. Compared to controls, males showed significant differences only in 4α- and 4ÎČ-hydroxycholesterol levels in obese and metabolic syndrome patients. In contrast, females showed consistent differences in 7-oxocholesterol, 4α-hydroxycholesterol, 25-hydroxycholesterol and triol. Concerning fatty acids, we found minor differences in the levels of these variables in males of the three groups. Significant changes were observed in plasma fatty acid profile of female patients with obesity or metabolic syndrome. We found significant correlations between various oxysterols and fatty acids. In particular, 4ÎČ-hydroxycholesterol, which is reduced in obesity and metabolic syndrome, correlated with a number of saturated and mono-unsaturated fatty acids that are end-products of de novo lipogenesis.
CONCLUSIONS:
Our data provide the first evidence that obesity and metabolic syndrome are associated with major, gender-specific, changes in circulating oxysterols and fatty acids. These findings suggest a metabolic link between oxysterols and fatty acids, and that oxysterols may contribute to the epidemic diseases associated with obesity and metabolic syndrome in female
Spin Frustration and Orbital Order in Vanadium Spinels
We present the results of our theoretical study on the effects of geometrical
frustration and the interplay between spin and orbital degrees of freedom in
vanadium spinel oxides VO ( = Zn, Mg or Cd). Introducing an
effective spin-orbital-lattice coupled model in the strong correlation limit
and performing Monte Carlo simulation for the model, we propose a reduced spin
Hamiltonian in the orbital ordered phase to capture the stabilization mechanism
of the antiferromagnetic order. Orbital order drastically reduces spin
frustration by introducing spatial anisotropy in the spin exchange
interactions, and the reduced spin model can be regarded as weakly-coupled
one-dimensional antiferromagnetic chains. The critical exponent estimated by
finite-size scaling analysis shows that the magnetic transition belongs to the
three-dimensional Heisenberg universality class. Frustration remaining in the
mean-field level is reduced by thermal fluctuations to stabilize a collinear
ordering.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, proceedings submitted to SPQS200
Surface critical behavior in fixed dimensions : Nonanalyticity of critical surface enhancement and massive field theory approach
The critical behavior of semi-infinite systems in fixed dimensions is
investigated theoretically. The appropriate extension of Parisi's massive field
theory approach is presented.Two-loop calculations and subsequent Pad\'e-Borel
analyses of surface critical exponents of the special and ordinary phase
transitions yield estimates in reasonable agreement with recent Monte Carlo
results. This includes the crossover exponent , for which we obtain
the values and , considerably
lower than the previous -expansion estimates.Comment: Latex with Revtex-Stylefiles, 4 page
Large-Order Behavior of Two-coupling Constant -Theory with Cubic Anisotropy
For the anisotropic [u (\sum_{i=1^N {\phi}_i^2)^2+v \sum_{i=1^N
\phi_i^4]-theory with {} we calculate the imaginary parts of the
renormalization-group functions in the form of a series expansion in , i.e.,
around the isotropic case. Dimensional regularization is used to evaluate the
fluctuation determinants for the isotropic instanton near the space dimension
4. The vertex functions in the presence of instantons are renormalized with the
help of a nonperturbative procedure introduced for the simple g{\phi^4-theory
by McKane et al.Comment: LaTeX file with eps files in src. See also
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/institution.htm
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