482 research outputs found
Thermodynamics of the Antiferromagnetic Heisenberg Model on the Checkerboard Lattice
Employing numerical linked-cluster expansions (NLCEs) along with exact
diagonalizations of finite clusters with periodic boundary condition, we study
the energy, specific heat, entropy, and various susceptibilities of the
antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model on the checkerboard lattice. NLCEs, combined
with extrapolation techniques, allow us to access temperatures much lower than
those accessible to exact diagonalization and other series expansions. We find
that the high-temperature peak in specific heat decreases as the frustration
increases, consistent with the large amount of unquenched entropy in the region
around maximum classical frustration, where the nearest-neighbor and
next-nearest neighbor exchange interactions (J and J', respectively) have the
same strength, and with the formation of a second peak at lower temperatures.
The staggered susceptibility shows a change of character when J' increases
beyond 0.75J, implying the disappearance of the long-range antiferromagnetic
order at zero temperature. For J'=4J, in the limit of weakly coupled crossed
chains, we find large susceptibilities for stripe and Neel order with
Q=(pi/2,pi/2) at low temperatures with antiferromagnetic correlations along the
chains. Other magnetic and bond orderings, such as a plaquette valence-bond
solid and a crossed-dimer order suggested by previous studies, have also been
investigated.Comment: 10 pages, 13 figure
Classification and Retrieval of Digital Pathology Scans: A New Dataset
In this paper, we introduce a new dataset, \textbf{Kimia Path24}, for image
classification and retrieval in digital pathology. We use the whole scan images
of 24 different tissue textures to generate 1,325 test patches of size
10001000 (0.5mm0.5mm). Training data can be generated according
to preferences of algorithm designer and can range from approximately 27,000 to
over 50,000 patches if the preset parameters are adopted. We propose a compound
patch-and-scan accuracy measurement that makes achieving high accuracies quite
challenging. In addition, we set the benchmarking line by applying LBP,
dictionary approach and convolutional neural nets (CNNs) and report their
results. The highest accuracy was 41.80\% for CNN.Comment: Accepted for presentation at Workshop for Computer Vision for
Microscopy Image Analysis (CVMI 2017) @ CVPR 2017, Honolulu, Hawai
The modalities of Iranian soft power: from cultural diplomacy to soft war
Through exploring Iran's public diplomacy at the international level, this article demonstrates how the Islamic Republic's motives should not only be contextualised within the oft-sensationalised, material or ‘hard’ aspects of its foreign policy, but also within the desire to project its cultural reach through ‘softer’ means. Iran's utilisation of culturally defined foreign policy objectives and actions demonstrates its understanding of soft power's potentialities. This article explores the ways in which Iran's public diplomacy is used to promote its soft power and craft its, at times, shifting image on the world stage
Machine Learning in Electronic Quantum Matter Imaging Experiments
Essentials of the scientific discovery process have remained largely
unchanged for centuries: systematic human observation of natural phenomena is
used to form hypotheses that, when validated through experimentation, are
generalized into established scientific theory. Today, however, we face major
challenges because automated instrumentation and large-scale data acquisition
are generating data sets of such volume and complexity as to defy human
analysis. Radically different scientific approaches are needed, with machine
learning (ML) showing great promise, not least for materials science research.
Hence, given recent advances in ML analysis of synthetic data representing
electronic quantum matter (EQM), the next challenge is for ML to engage
equivalently with experimental data. For example, atomic-scale visualization of
EQM yields arrays of complex electronic structure images, that frequently elude
effective analyses. Here we report development and training of an array of
artificial neural networks (ANN) designed to recognize different types of
hypothesized order hidden in EQM image-arrays. These ANNs are used to analyze
an experimentally-derived EQM image archive from carrier-doped cuprate Mott
insulators. Throughout these noisy and complex data, the ANNs discover the
existence of a lattice-commensurate, four-unit-cell periodic,
translational-symmetry-breaking EQM state. Further, the ANNs find these
phenomena to be unidirectional, revealing a coincident nematic EQM state.
Strong-coupling theories of electronic liquid crystals are congruent with all
these observations.Comment: 44 pages, 15 figure
The first record of bobtail squid, Euprymna hyllebergi Nateewathana, 1997 (Cephalopoda:Sepiolidae) from the Persian Gulf, Iran
The family Sepiolidae comprises over 50 species in 14 genera. They are commonly known as bobtail squids with a worldwide distribution from tropical to temperate and sub-polar latitudes of all oceans (Nateewathana, 1997; Aungtonya et al., 2011). Euprymna hyllebergi belongs to the Sepiolidae family and Sepiolinae subfamily. This species has a wide distribution in the Eastern Indian Ocean, and has been recorded up to the depth of 47 meters in Andaman Sea, Thailand (Jereb and Roper, 2005). The family Sepiolidae, includes all bobtail squids with kidney-shape fins. Little is known about their biology, but they are common in tropical, temperate and sub polar waters of all oceans (Jereb and Roper, 2010). This is the first record of the bobtail squid, E. hyllebergi from the Persian Gulf. On 27th of March 2013 during a scuba diving session in Persian Gulf (Figure 1, coordinates: 54° 49’39.5”E, 26° 26’ 55.3”N) about 200 eggs of E. hyllebergi were collected at the depth of 40 meters in northern Persian Gulf. The eggs (Fig. 2a) were transferred to the Persian Gulf Shellfishes Research Center laboratory for further incubation and hatching
Passive arching in rubberized sand backfills
The deformation and stress profiles of passive arching in a coarse sand and two rubberized sand backfills were investigated using a trapdoor apparatus. The trapdoor apparatus was instrumented with high-speed imaging equipment and a series of pressure sensors. The images of the deformation process in the backfills were analysed using the digital image correlation technique. The effect of a local surcharge on the deformation and stress profiles was also examined. It was observed that the rubber inclusions helped reduce the deformation of the backfills. Passive arching moduli and stress variations between the backfills examined are compared.Hamidreza Khatami, An Deng, and Mark Jaks
Evaluation of ultrasound technology to break seed dormancy of common lambsquarters (Chenopodium album)
Although seed dormancy is advantageous for annual plants in the wild, unsynchronized germination in the laboratory leads to increased error in measurements. Therefore techniques to promote and synchronize germination are routinely used. Ultrasound is one of the newest methods for breaking dormancy in weed seeds. We have investigated whether ultrasonic waves can be used to break seed dormancy of common lambsquarters (Chenopodium album), a highly competitive annual weed that leads to significant reduction of yields of corn, soybeans, and sugar beets. Ultrasonic waves with frequency of 35kH were applied for 0 (control), 5, 10, 15 and 30 minutes using a completely randomized design. The results showed that the use of ultrasound waves generally enhanced the traits under investigation in the treated samples compared to the control sample. The maximum enhancement of germination percentage (180%), seedling dry weight (78%), and seedling vigor index I (271%) and II (392%) was seen in the common lambsquarters samples treated with ultrasound for 15 minutes and seedling length (40%) at 30 minutes compared to the control samples. Radical lengths were not statistically different from controls under any treatment and plumule length only increased marginally. These changes are reflected in seedling vigor index I and II measurements. For some of these traits, increasing the length of ultrasound treatment to 30 minutes had negative effects. These results demonstrate that ultrasound technology can be used as a quick, and efficient non-destructive method to break seed dormancy in common lambsquarters
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