608 research outputs found
Numerical scheme based on the spectral method for calculating nonlinear hyperbolic evolution equations
High-precision numerical scheme for nonlinear hyperbolic evolution equations
is proposed based on the spectral method. The detail discretization processes
are discussed in case of one-dimensional Klein-Gordon equations. In conclusion,
a numerical scheme with the order of total calculation cost is
proposed. As benchmark results, the relation between the numerical precision
and the discretization unit size are demonstrated.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of ICCM2020. Figure is modified from the
original versio
Chiral charge-density-waves
We discovered the chirality of charge density waves (CDW) in 1T-TiSe by
using scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) and optical ellipsometry. We found
that the CDW intensity becomes , where (i =1, 2, 3) is the amplitude of the tunnelling current
contributed by the CDWs. There were two states, in which the three intensity
peaks of the CDW decrease \textit{clockwise} and \textit{anticlockwise} when we
index each nesting vector in order of intensity in the Fourier transformation
of the STM images. The chirality in CDW results in the three-fold symmetry
breaking. Macroscopically, two-fold symmetry was indeed observed in optical
measurement. We propose the new generalized CDW chirality H_{CDW} \equiv
{\boldmath q_1} \cdot ({\boldmath q_2}\times {\boldmath q_3}), where
{\boldmath q_i} are the nesting vectors, which is independent of the
symmetry of components. The nonzero - the triple-{\boldmath q}
vectors do not exist in an identical plane in the reciprocal space - should
induce a real-space chirality in CDW system.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Theoretical calculation of hydrogen molecule in silicon
科研費報告書収録論文(課題番号:09450296・基盤研究(B)(2)・H9~H10/研究代表者:宮本, 明/新しい高速化第一原理分子動力学計算プログラムの開発と金属超微粒子触媒への応用
Discovery of 15-second oscillations in Hubble Space Telescope observations of WZ Sagittae following the 2001 outburst
We report the discovery of 15-s oscillations in ultraviolet observations of
WZ Sge obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope approximately one month after
the peak of the 2001 outburst. This is the earliest detection of oscillations
in WZ Sge following an outburst and the first time that a signal near 15 s has
been seen to be dominant. The oscillations are quite strong (amplitude about
5%), but not particularly coherent. In one instance, the oscillation period
changed by 0.7 s between successive observations separated by less than 1 hour.
We have also found evidence for weaker signals with periods near 6.5 s in some
of our data. We discuss the implications of our results for the models that
have been proposed to account for the 28-s oscillations seen in quiescence. If
the periods of the 15-s oscillations can be identified with the periods of
revolution of material rotating about the white dwarf, the mass of the white
dwarf must satisfy M_WD > 0.71 M_sun. The corresponding limit for the 6.5-s
signals is M_WD > 1.03 M_sun.Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ Letters; 13 pages, 4 postscript
figures; new version corrects a few typos and matches version that will
appear in ApJ
Formation of hydrogen-boron complexes in boron-doped silicon treated with a high concentration of hydrogen atoms
The formation of hydrogen (H) related complexes and their effect on boron (B) dopant were investigated in B-ion implanted and annealed silicon (Si) substrates treated with a high concentration of H. Isotope shifts by replacement of 10B with 11B were observed for some H-related Raman peaks, but not for other peaks. This shows proof of the formation of B-H complexes in which H directly bonds to B in Si. This is an experimental result concerning the formation of B-H complexes with H bonded primarily to B. Electrical resistivity measurements showed that the B acceptors are passivated via the formation of the observed B-H complexes, as well as the well-known passivation center in B-doped Si; namely, the H-B passivation center
Ultrafast changes in lattice symmetry probed by coherent phonons
The electronic and structural properties of a material are strongly
determined by its symmetry. Changing the symmetry via a photoinduced phase
transition offers new ways to manipulate material properties on ultrafast
timescales. However, in order to identify when and how fast these phase
transitions occur, methods that can probe the symmetry change in the time
domain are required. We show that a time-dependent change in the coherent
phonon spectrum can probe a change in symmetry of the lattice potential, thus
providing an all-optical probe of structural transitions. We examine the
photoinduced structural phase transition in VO2 and show that, above the phase
transition threshold, photoexcitation completely changes the lattice potential
on an ultrafast timescale. The loss of the equilibrium-phase phonon modes
occurs promptly, indicating a non-thermal pathway for the photoinduced phase
transition, where a strong perturbation to the lattice potential changes its
symmetry before ionic rearrangement has occurred.Comment: 14 pages 4 figure
Measures of insulin sensitivity, leptin, and adiponectin concentrations in cats in diabetic remission compared to healthy control cats
Objectives: Firstly, to compare differences in insulin, adiponectin, leptin, and measures of insulin sensitivity between diabetic cats in remission and healthy control cats, and determine whether these are predictors of diabetic relapse. Secondly, to determine if these hormones are associated with serum metabolites known to differ between groups. Thirdly, if any of the hormonal or identified metabolites are associated with measures of insulin sensitivity.
Animals: Twenty cats in diabetic remission for a median of 101 days, and 21 healthy matched control cats.
Methods: A casual blood glucose measured on admission to the clinic. Following a 24 h fast, a fasted blood glucose was measured, and blood sample taken for hormone (i.e., insulin, leptin, and adiponectin) and untargeted metabolomic (GC-MS and LC-MS) analysis. A simplified IVGGT (1 g glucose/kg) was performed 3 h later. Cats were monitored for diabetes relapse for at least 9 months (270 days).
Results: Cats in diabetic remission had significantly higher serum glucose and insulin concentrations, and decreased insulin sensitivity as indicated by an increase in HOMA and decrease in QUICKI and Bennett indices. Leptin was significantly increased, but there was no difference in adiponectin (or body condition score). Several significant correlations were found between insulin sensitivity indices, leptin, and serum metabolites identified as significantly different between remission and control cats. No metabolites were significantly correlated with adiponectin. No predictors of relapse were identified in this study.
Conclusion and clinical importance: Insulin resistance, an underlying factor in diabetic cats, persists in diabetic remission. Cats in remission should be managed to avoid further exacerbating insulin resistance
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