1,284 research outputs found
Structural properties in Sr0.61a0.39Nb2O6 in the temperature range 10 K to 500 K investigated by high-resolution neutron powder diffraction and specific heat measurements
We report high-resolution neutron powder diffraction on Sr0.61Ba0.39Nb2O6,
SBN61, in the temperature range 15-500 K. The results indicate that the
low-temperature anomalies (T<100K) observed in the dielectric dispersion are
due to small changes in the incommensurate modulation of the NbO6-octahedra, as
no structural phase transition of the average structure was observed. This
interpretation is supported by specific heat measurements, which show no latent
heat, but a glass-like behavior at low temperatures. Furthermore we find that
the structural changes connected with the ferroelectric phase transition at Tc
approx. 350K start already at 200K, explaining the anisotropic thermal
expansion in the temperature range 200-300K observed in a recent x-ray
diffraction study.Comment: Accepted by PRB (2006
Neutron scattering study of the field-dependent ground state and the spin dynamics in S=1/2 NH4CuCl3
Elastic and inelastic neutron scattering experiments have been performed on the dimer spin system NH4CuCl3, which shows plateaus in the magnetization curve at m=1/4 and m=3/4 of the saturation value. Two structural phase transitions at T1≈156 K and at T2=70 K lead to a doubling of the crystallographic unit cell along the b direction and as a consequence a segregation into different dimer subsystems. Long-range magnetic ordering is reported below TN=1.3 K. The magnetic field dependence of the excitation spectrum identifies successive quantum phase transitions of the dimer subsystems as the driving mechanism for the unconventional magnetization process in agreement with a recent theoretical model
M\"ossbauer, nuclear inelastic scattering and density functional studies on the second metastable state of Na2[Fe(CN)5NO]2H2O
The structure of the light-induced metastable state SII of
Na2[Fe(CN)5NO]2H2O 14 was investigated by transmission M\"ossbauer
spectroscopy (TMS) in the temperature range 15 between 85 and 135 K, nuclear
inelastic scattering (NIS) at 98 K using synchrotron 16 radiation and density
functional theory (DFT) calculations. The DFT and TMS results 17 strongly
support the view that the NO group in SII takes a side-on molecular orientation
18 and, further, is dynamically displaced from one eclipsed, via a staggered,
to a second 19 eclipsed orientation. The population conditions for generating
SII are optimal for 20 measurements by TMS, yet they are modest for
accumulating NIS spectra. Optimization 21 of population conditions for NIS
measurements is discussed and new NIS experiments on 22 SII are proposed
Classical generalized constant coupling model for geometrically frustrated antiferromagnets
A generalized constant coupling approximation for classical geometrically
frustrated antiferromagnets is presented. Starting from a frustrated unit we
introduce the interactions with the surrounding units in terms of an internal
effective field which is fixed by a self consistency condition. Results for the
magnetic susceptibility and specific heat are compared with Monte Carlo data
for the classical Heisenberg model for the pyrochlore and kagome lattices. The
predictions for the susceptibility are found to be essentially exact, and the
corresponding predictions for the specific heat are found to be in very good
agreement with the Monte Carlo results.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 2 columns. Discussion about the zero T value of
the pyrochlore specific heat correcte
Effect of noise on coupled chaotic systems
Effect of noise in inducing order on various chaotically evolving systems is
reviewed, with special emphasis on systems consisting of coupled chaotic
elements. In many situations it is observed that the uncoupled elements when
driven by identical noise, show synchronization phenomena where chaotic
trajectories exponentially converge towards a single noisy trajectory,
independent of the initial conditions. In a random neural network, with
infinite range coupling, chaos is suppressed due to noise and the system
evolves towards a fixed point. Spatiotemporal stochastic resonance phenomenon
has been observed in a square array of coupled threshold devices where a
temporal characteristic of the system resonates at a given noise strength. In a
chaotically evolving coupled map lattice with logistic map as local dynamics
and driven by identical noise at each site, we report that the number of
structures (a structure is a group of neighbouring lattice sites for whom
values of the variable follow certain predefined pattern) follow a power-law
decay with the length of the structure. An interesting phenomenon, which we
call stochastic coherence, is also reported in which the abundance and
lifetimes of these structures show characteristic peaks at some intermediate
noise strength.Comment: 21 page LaTeX file for text, 5 Postscript files for figure
Reviews of
Antibiotic Switch therapy is defined by the switch of intravenous antibiotic therapy to oral form. This research aimed to learn about the relationship of switch therapy toward the value of wound healing, lenght of stay and the antibiotic expenditure. The data of this cross sectional study was collected from medical record and by direct investigation to patients for their macroscopis the wound healings value. T-test was used to compared the relationship of the patient wound healings value, lenght of stay and the antibiotic expenditure between the those with and accurate switch therapy and those without it. The result showed that there was no different of wound healing value between those groups of patients (P>0,1). On the other hand, lenght of stay and antibiotic expenditure of the patient with the accurate switch therapy was cuted on the patient with the accurate switch therapy. These indicated that accuracy of switch therapy will proceed a benefit outcome to the patient with appendicitis, especially to there lenght of stay and antibiotic expenditure as well
COMPARATIVE PHARMACOKINETICS OF ORAL AND INTRAVENOUS IFOSFAMIDE/MESNA/METHYLENE BLUE THERAPY
This paper is available online at http://www.dmd.org ABSTRACT: Oral treatment with ifosfamide results in dose-limiting encephalopathy. Methylene blue is effective in reversal and prophylaxis of this side effect. In the present study, the pharmacokinetics of ifosfamide after iv and po therapy in combination with prophylactic administration of methylene blue were investigated. Nine patients with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer were treated by a combination of ifosfamide (3 days), sodium 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate (4 days), and etoposide (8 days). Cycles were repeated every 28 days. Ifosfamide was administered orally, with the exception of one of the first two cycles, when it was administered as a short infusion (randomly assigned). The patients received methylene blue in doses of 50 mg po 3 times daily; an initial dose of 50 mg was given the evening before chemotherapy. Urine samples were collected over the entire treatment period, and concentrations of ifosfamide and its major metabolite, 2-chloroethylamine, were measured by gas liquid chromatography. By the same technique, 2-and 3-dechloroethylifosfamide were determined in plasma and urine. Overall alkylating activity in urine was assayed by reaction of the alkylating metabolites with 4-(4-nitrobenzyl)-pyridine. The chemotherapeutic regimen was well-tolerated by all of the patients studied. There was no evidence of a shift in the metabolic pattern dependent on the route of administration. From the data, we conclude that methylene blue has a neuroprotective effect and that the pharmacokinetics of ifosfamide are not influenced by its comedication
Emergence of the Isotropic Kitaev Honeycomb Lattice with Two-dimensional Ising Universality in {\alpha}-RuCl
Anderson proposed structural topology in frustrated magnets hosting novel
quantum spin liquids (QSLs). The QSL state is indeed exactly derived by
fractionalizing the spin excitation into spinless Majorana fermions in a
perfect two dimensional (2D) honeycomb lattice, the so-called Kitaev lattice,
and its experimental realisation is eagerly being pursued. Here we, for the
first time, report the Kitaev lattice stacking with van der Waals (vdW) bonding
in a high quality {\alpha}-RuCl crystal using x-ray and neutron
diffractions. Even in absence of apparent monoclinic distortion, the system
exhibits antiferromagnetic (AFM) ordering below 6.5 K, likely due to minute
magnetic interaction from trigonal distortion and/or interlayer coupling
additionally to the Kitaev Hamiltonian. We also demonstrate 2D Ising-like
critical behaviors near the N\'eel temperature in the order parameter and
specific heat, capturing the characteristics of short-range spin-spin
correlations underlying the Kitaev model. Our findings hold promise for
unveiling enigmatic physics emerging from the Kitaev QSL
Magnetic Inversion Symmetry Breaking and Ferroelectricity in TbMnO\u3csub\u3e3\u3c/sub\u3e
TbMnO3 is an orthorhombic insulator where incommensurate spin order for temperature TN\u3c41 K is accompanied by ferroelectric order for T\u3c28 K. To understand this, we establish the magnetic structure above and below the ferroelectric transition using neutron diffraction. In the paraelectric phase, the spin structure is incommensurate and longitudinally modulated. In the ferroelectric phase, however, there is a transverse incommensurate spiral. We show that the spiral breaks spatial inversion symmetry and can account for magnetoelectricity in TbMnO3
Search for supersymmetry in final states with missing transverse momentum and three or more b-jets in 139 fb⁻¹ of proton–proton collisions at √s=13 TeV with the ATLAS detector
A search for supersymmetry involving the pair production of gluinos decaying via off-shell third-generation squarks into the lightest neutralino ( ˜χ01 ) is reported. It exploits LHC proton–proton collision data at a centre-of-mass energy √s = 13 TeV with an integrated luminosity of 139 fb−1 collected with the ATLAS detector from 2015 to 2018. The search uses events containing large missing transverse momentum, up to one electron or muon, and several energetic jets, at least three of which must be identified as containing b-hadrons. Both a simple kinematic event selection and an event selection based upon a deep neural-network are used. No significant excess above the predicted background is found. In simplified models involving the pair production of gluinos that decay via off-shell top (bottom) squarks, gluino masses less than 2.44 TeV (2.35 TeV) are excluded at 95% CL for a massless ˜χ01. Limits are also set on the gluino mass in models with variable branching ratios for gluino decays to b¯b˜χ01, t¯t˜χ01 and t¯b˜χ−1 /¯tb˜χ+1
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