1,394 research outputs found
Ferromagnetism in a hard-core boson model
The problem of ferromagnetism -- associated with a ground state with maximal
total spin -- is discussed in the framework of a hard-core model, which forbids
the occupancy at each site with more than one particle. It is shown that the
emergence of ferromagnetism on finite square lattices crucially depends on the
statistics of the particles. Fermions (electrons) lead to the well-known
instabilities for finite hole densities, whereas for bosons (with spin)
ferromagnetism appears to be stable for all hole densities.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, RevTex
Interface alloying and magnetic properties of Fe/Rh multilayers
Rh(20 Å)/57Fe(tFe) multilayers with Fe thicknesses tFe of 2, 5, 10, and 15 Å prepared by alternate evaporation in UHV have been investigated by x-ray diffraction (XRD), Mössbauer spectroscopy, and SQUID magnetometry. First- and second-order superstructure Bragg peaks (but no higher-order peaks) in small-angle XRD patterns suggest some compositional modulation. Mössbauer spectra taken at 4.2 K are characterized by a distribution P(Bhf) of hyperfine fields Bhf. Peaks observed in the P(Bhf) curves near 17 and 35 T are assigned to an fcc-RhFe interface alloy (~7–24 at. % Fe) with spin-glasslike properties and to a disordered ferromagnetic bcc-FeRh alloy (~96 at. % Fe), respectively. The magnetic transition temperature of the fcc alloy was found to be 23 and 45 K for tFe=2 and 5 Å, respectively, and Bhf follows a T3/2 law. For tFe=2 Å, spin-glasslike behavior was observed by magnetometry. Journal of Applied Physics is copyrighted by The American Institute of Physics
Astronomical Data Management
We present a summary of the major contributions to the Special Session on
Data Management held at the IAU General Assembly in Prague in 2006. While
recent years have seen enormous improvements in access to astronomical data,
and the Virtual Observatory aims to provide astronomers with seamless access to
on-line resources, more attention needs to be paid to ensuring the quality and
completeness of those resources. For example, data produced by telescopes are
not always made available to the astronomical community, and new instruments
are sometimes designed and built with insufficient planning for data
management, while older but valuable legacy data often remain undigitised. Data
and results published in journals do not always appear in the data centres, and
astronomers in developing countries sometimes have inadequate access to on-line
resources. To address these issues, an 'Astronomers Data Manifesto' has been
formulated with the aim of initiating a discussion that will lead to the
development of a 'code of best practice' in astronomical data management.Comment: Proceedings of Special Session SPS6 (Astronomical Data Management) at
the IAU GA 2006. To appear in Highlights of Astronomy, Volume 14, ed. K.A.
van der Huch
The breakdown of the Nagaoka phase in the 2D t-J model
In the limit of weak exchange, J, at low hole concentration, the ground state
of the 2D t-J model is believed to be ferromagnetic. We study the leading
instability of this Nagaoka state, which emerges with increasing J. Both exact
diagonalization of small clusters, and a semiclassical analytical calculation
of larger systems show that above a certain critical value of the exchange,
Nagaoka's state is unstable to phase separation. In a finite-size system a
bubble of antiferromagnetic Mott insulator appears in the ground state above
this threshold. The size of this bubble depends on the hole concentration and
scales as a power of the system size, N
Determination of the Cosmic Distance Scale from Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect and Chandra X-ray Measurements of High Redshift Galaxy Clusters
We determine the distance to 38 clusters of galaxies in the redshift range
0.14 < z < 0.89 using X-ray data from Chandra and Sunyaev-Zeldovich Effect data
from the Owens Valley Radio Observatory and the Berkeley-Illinois-Maryland
Association interferometric arrays. The cluster plasma and dark matter
distributions are analyzed using a hydrostatic equilibrium model that accounts
for radial variations in density, temperature and abundance, and the
statistical and systematic errors of this method are quantified. The analysis
is performed via a Markov chain Monte Carlo technique that provides
simultaneous estimation of all model parameters. We measure a Hubble constant
of 76.9 +3.9-3.4 +10.0-8.0 km/s/Mpc (statistical followed by systematic
uncertainty at 68% confidence) for an Omega_M=0.3, Omega_Lambda=0.7 cosmology.
We also analyze the data using an isothermal beta model that does not invoke
the hydrostatic equilibrium assumption, and find H_0=73.7 +4.6-3.8 +9.5-7.6
km/s/Mpc; to avoid effects from cool cores in clusters, we repeated this
analysis excluding the central 100 kpc from the X-ray data, and find H_0=77.6
+4.8-4.3 +10.1-8.2 km/s/Mpc. The consistency between the models illustrates the
relative insensitivity of SZE/X-ray determinations of H_0 to the details of the
cluster model. Our determination of the Hubble parameter in the distant
universe agrees with the recent measurement from the Hubble Space Telescope key
project that probes the nearby universe.Comment: ApJ submitted (revised version
The iron law of democratic socialism: British and Austrian influences on the young Karl Polanyi
This article has been made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund.A central thesis of Karl Polanyi's The great transformation concerns the tensions between capitalism and democracy: the former embodies the principle of inequality, while democracy represents that of equality. This paper explores the intellectual heritage of this thesis, in the ‘functional theory’ of G.D.H. Cole and Otto Bauer and in the writings of Eduard Bernstein. It scrutinizes Polanyi's relationship with Bernstein's ‘evolutionary socialism’ and charts his ‘double movement’ vis-à -vis Marxist philosophy: in the 1910s he reacted sharply against Marxism's deterministic excesses, but he then, in the 1920s, engaged in sympathetic dialogue with Austro-Marxist thinkers. The latter, like Bernstein, disavowed economic determinism and insisted upon the importance and autonomy of ethics. Yet they simultaneously predicted a law-like expansion of democracy from the political to the economic arena. Analysis of this contradiction provides the basis for a concluding discussion that reconsiders the deterministic threads in Polanyi's oeuvre. Whereas for some Polanyi scholars these attest to his residual attraction to Marxism, I argue that matters are more complex. While Polanyi did repudiate the more rigidly deterministic of currents in Marxist philosophy, those to which he was attracted, notably Bernstein's ‘revision’ and Austro-Marxism, incorporated a deterministic fatalism of their own, in respect of democratization. Herein lies a more convincing explanation of Polanyi's incomplete escape from a deterministic philosophy of history, as exemplified in his masterwork, The great transformation
Flat-band ferromagnetism induced by off-site repulsions
Density matrix renormalization group method is used to analyze how the
nearest-neighbor repulsion V added to the Hubbard model on 1D triangular
lattice and a railway trestle (t-t') model will affect the electron-correlation
dominated ferromagnetism arising from the interference (frustration). Obtained
phase diagram shows that there is a region in smaller-t' side where the
critical on-site repulsion above which the system becomes ferromagnetic is
reduced when the off-site repulsion is introduced.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex, 6 figures in Postscript, to be published in Phys.
Rev.
Exact single spin flip for the Hubbard model in
It is shown that the dynamics of a single -electron interacting
with a band of -electrons can be calculated exactly in the limit of
infinite dimension. The corresponding Green function is determined as a
continued fraction. It is used to investigate the stability of saturated
ferromagnetism and the nature of the ground state for two generic non-bipartite
infinite dimensional lattices. Non Fermi liquid behavior is found. For certain
dopings the -electron is bound to the -holes.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures included with psfig, Revtex; Phys. Rev. Lett. in
press; some amendments made to clarify the calculation of the self-energy,
the extrapolation of the continued fraction, and the statements on
Fermi-liquid theor
Lattice dependence of saturated ferromagnetism in the Hubbard model
We investigate the instability of the saturated ferromagnetic ground state
(Nagaoka state) in the Hubbard model on various lattices in dimensions d=2 and
d=3. A variational resolvent approach is developed for the Nagaoka instability
both for U = infinity and for U < infinity which can easily be evaluated in the
thermodynamic limit on all common lattices. Our results significantly improve
former variational bounds for a possible Nagaoka regime in the ground state
phase diagram of the Hubbard model. We show that a pronounced particle-hole
asymmetry in the density of states and a diverging density of states at the
lower band edge are the most important features in order to stabilize Nagaoka
ferromagnetism, particularly in the low density limit.Comment: Revtex, 18 pages with 18 figures, 7 pages appendices, section on bcc
lattice adde
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