279 research outputs found

    On the Topological Origin of Entanglement in Ising Spin Glasses

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    The origin of thermal and quantum entanglement in a class of three-dimensional spin models, at low momenta, is traced to purely topological reasons. The establishment of the result is facilitated by the gauge principle which, when used in conjunction with the duality mapping of the spin models, enables us to recast them as lattice Chern-Simons gauge theories. The thermal and quantum entanglement measures are expressed in terms of the expectation values of Wilson lines, loops, and their generalisations. For continuous spins, these are known to yield the topological invariants of knots and links. For Ising-like models, they are expressible in terms of the topological invariants of three-manifolds obtained from finite group cohomology -- the so-called Dijkgraaf-Witten invariants.Comment: RevTex4, 6 page

    Re-appearance of antiferromagnetic ordering with Zn and Ni substitution in La_{2-x}Sr_xCuO_4

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    The effects of nonmagnetic Zn and magnetic Ni substitution for Cu site on magnetism are studied by measurements of uniform magnetic susceptibility for lightly doped La_{2-x}Sr_xCu_{1-z}M_zO_4 (M=Zn or Ni) polycrystalline samples. For the parent x=0, Zn doping suppresses the N\'{e}el temperature T_N whereas Ni doping hardly changes T_N up to z=0.3. For the lightly doped samples with T_N~0, the Ni doping recovers T_N. For the superconducting samples, the Ni doping induces the superconductivity-to-antiferromagnetic transition (or crossover). All the heavily Ni doped samples indicate a spin glass behavior at \~15 K.Comment: 2 pages including 3 figures, to be published in Physica C (LT23, Hiroshima 2002

    Variation in Phenol Content of Sorghum Lines after Inoculation with Colletotrichum graminicola

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    Phenolic compounds accumulate in numerous plant species following infection by plant pathogens (Kuk 1972). Many of such compounds, or their oxidation products are toxic to pathogenic and non-pathogenic fungi, and have been considered an important factor in induced resistance to plant pathogens. The variation in phenol content following infection with Colletotrichum graminicola, the causal fungus of anthracnose of sorghum was studied using six sorghum lines, resistant (A 2267-2, IRAT204); moderately resistant (IS 3758, IS 8354); and susceptible (IS 3089, IS 18442) to anthracnose. The lines were selected based on their disease reactions in the International Sorghum Anthracnose Virulence Nursery conducted at 10-12 locations in India and Africa during 1992 and 1993. Plants of each genotype were grown in 13-cm square plastic pots in a Vertisol mix (Vertisol, farmyard manure, and sand, 2:1:1 by volume, steam sterilized at 105°C) in a greenhouse at ICRISAT-Patancheru

    के मा प्रौ सं के विशाखपट्टणम अनुसंधान केंद्र का मात्स्यिकी क्षेत्र में योगदान

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    के मा प्रौ सं के विशाखपट्टणम अनुसंधान केंद्र का मात्स्यिकी क्षेत्र में योगदा

    Complex Behavior of Polymers as Drag Reducing Agents Through Pipe Fittings

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    Polymer induced turbulent drag reduction has significant industrial importance and finds application in industries, oil and gas, fire-fighting, marine, irrigation, biomedical etc. Most of the reported literature is focused on the skin drag reduction in pipe flow employing drag reducing additives (DRAs) like polymers, surfactants, fibres and suspensions. In this work, the effect of polymeric addition on the total drag reduction (skin and form) is studied for turbulent flow of water through various fittings like 45 degree elbow, 90 degree miter, sudden expansion and sudden contraction. Different polymers like PAM, PEO, HPMC have been employed as DRAs at various concentrations and pressure drops. The results indicate a complex and interesting behavior. When compared to the results reported for pipe flow, even in this case polymers are found to give total drag reduction (TDR) though less relative to skin drag alone. The extent of TDR is found to depend on the nature of fitting, polymer and its concentration and the pressure drop used. From the results, it is also clear that there is a strong need to further investigate the problem using sophisticated analytical tools on rheometry and polymer degradation

    Kinetics of the long-range spherical model

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    The kinetic spherical model with long-range interactions is studied after a quench to T<TcT < T_c or to T=TcT = T_c. For the two-time response and correlation functions of the order-parameter as well as for composite fields such as the energy density, the ageing exponents and the corresponding scaling functions are derived. The results are compared to the predictions which follow from local scale-invariance.Comment: added "fluctuation-dissipation ratios"; fixed typo

    Phase diagram of orbital-selective Mott transitions at finite temperatures

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    Mott transitions in the two-orbital Hubbard model with different bandwidths are investigated at finite temperatures. By means of the self-energy functional approach, we discuss the stability of the intermediate phase with one orbital localized and the other itinerant, which is caused by the orbital-selective Mott transition (OSMT). It is shown that the OSMT realizes two different coexistence regions at finite temperatures in accordance with the recent results of Liebsch. We further find that the particularly interesting behavior emerges around the special condition U=UU=U' and J=0, which includes a new type of the coexistence region with three distinct states. By systematically changing the Hund coupling, we establish the global phase diagram to elucidate the key role played by the Hund coupling on the Mott transitions.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure

    Three interaction energy scales in single-layer high-TC_C cuprate HgBa2_2CuO4+δ_{4+\delta}

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    The lamellar cuprate superconductors exhibit the highest ambient-pressure superconducting transition temperatures (TC_C) and, after more than three decades of extraordinary research activity, continue to pose formidable scientific challenges. A major experimental obstacle has been to distinguish universal phenomena from materials- or technique-dependent ones. Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) measures momentum-dependent single-particle electronic excitations and has been invaluable in the endeavor to determine the anisotropic momentum-space properties of the cuprates. HgBa2_2CuO4+δ_{4+\delta} (Hg1201) is a single-CuO2_2-layer cuprate with a particularly high optimal TC_C and a simple crystal structure; yet there exists little information from ARPES about the electronic properties of this model system. Here we present an ARPES study of doping-, temperature-, and momentum-dependent systematics of near-nodal dispersion anomalies in Hg1201. The data reveal a hierarchy of three distinct energy scales -a sub-gap low-energy kink, an intermediate-energy kink near 55 meV, and a peak-dip-hump structure. The first two features are attributed to the coupling of electrons to Ba-derived optical phonons and in-plane bond-stretching phonons, respectively. The nodal peak-dip-hump structure appears to have a common doping-dependence in several single-layer cuprates, and is interpreted as a manifestation of pseudogap physics at the node. These results establish several universal phenomena, both in terms of connecting multiple experimental techniques for a single material, and in terms of connecting comparable spectral features in multiple structurally similar cuprates

    Oscillatory Exchange Coupling and Positive Magnetoresistance in Epitaxial Oxide Heterostructures

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    Oscillations in the exchange coupling between ferromagnetic La2/3Ba1/3MnO3La_{2/3}Ba_{1/3}MnO_3 layers with paramagnetic LaNiO3LaNiO_3 spacer layer thickness has been observed in epitaxial heterostructures of the two oxides. This behavior is explained within the RKKY model employing an {\it ab initio} calculated band structure of LaNiO3LaNiO_3, taking into account strong electron scattering in the spacer. Antiferromagnetically coupled superlattices exhibit a positive current-in-plane magnetoresistance.Comment: 4 pages (RevTeX), 5 figures (EPS

    Absence of strong magnetic fluctuations or interactions in the normal state of LaNiGa2_2

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    We present nuclear magnetic (NMR) and qudrupole (NQR) resonance and magnetization data in the normal state of the topological crystalline superconductor LaNiGa2_2. We find no evidence of magnetic fluctuations or enhanced paramagnetism. These results suggest that the time-reversal symmetry breaking previously reported in the superconducting state of this material is not driven by strong electron correlations.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
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