6,085 research outputs found
Influence of a small fraction of individuals with enhanced mutations on a population genetic pool
Computer simulations of the Penna ageing model suggest that already a small
fraction of births with enhanced number of new mutations can negatively
influence the whole population.Comment: 10 pages including 6 figures; draf
Spin-glass phase transition and behavior of nonlinear susceptibility in the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick model with random fields
The behavior of the nonlinear susceptibility and its relation to the
spin-glass transition temperature , in the presence of random fields, are
investigated. To accomplish this task, the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick model is
studied through the replica formalism, within a one-step
replica-symmetry-breaking procedure. In addition, the dependence of the
Almeida-Thouless eigenvalue (replicon) on the random fields
is analyzed. Particularly, in absence of random fields, the temperature
can be traced by a divergence in the spin-glass susceptibility ,
which presents a term inversely proportional to the replicon . As a result of a relation between and , the
latter also presents a divergence at , which comes as a direct consequence
of at . However, our results show that, in the
presence of random fields, presents a rounded maximum at a temperature
, which does not coincide with the spin-glass transition temperature
(i.e., for a given applied random field). Thus, the maximum
value of at reflects the effects of the random fields in the
paramagnetic phase, instead of the non-trivial ergodicity breaking associated
with the spin-glass phase transition. It is also shown that still
maintains a dependence on the replicon , although in a more
complicated way, as compared with the case without random fields. These results
are discussed in view of recent observations in the LiHoYF
compound.Comment: accepted for publication in PR
Polarized Neutron Laue Diffraction on a Crystal Containing Dynamically Polarized Proton Spins
We report on a polarized-neutron Laue diffraction experiment on a single
crystal of neodynium doped lanthanum magnesium nitrate hydrate containing
polarized proton spins. By using dynamic nuclear polarization to polarize the
proton spins, we demonstrate that the intensities of the Bragg peaks can be
enhanced or diminished significantly, whilst the incoherent background, due to
proton spin disorder, is reduced. It follows that the method offers unique
possibilities to tune continuously the contrast of the Bragg reflections and
thereby represents a new tool for increasing substantially the signal-to-noise
ratio in neutron diffraction patterns of hydrogenous matter.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Efficient extraction of a collimated ultra-cold neutron beam using diffusive channels
We present a first experimental demonstration of a new method to extract a
well-collimated beam of ultra-cold neutrons (UCN) from a storage vessel.
Neutrons with too large divergence are not removed from the beam by an
absorbing collimation, but a diffuse or semidiffuse channel with high Fermi
potential reflects them back into the vessel. This avoids unnecessary losses
and keeps the storage time high, which may be beneficial when the vessel is
part of a UCN source with long buildup time of a high UCN density
Composition and distribution of the peracarid crustacean fauna along a latitudinal transect off Victoria Land (Ross Sea, Antarctica) with special emphasis on the Cumacea
The following study was the first to describe composition and structure of the peracarid fauna systematically along a latitudinal transect off Victoria Land (Ross Sea, Antarctica). During the 19th Antarctic expedition of the Italian research vessel “Italica” in February 2004, macrobenthic samples were collected by means of a Rauschert dredge with a mesh size of 500 m at depths between 85 and 515 m. The composition of peracarid crustaceans, especially Cumacea was investigated. Peracarida contributed 63% to the total abundance of the fauna. The peracarid samples were dominated by amphipods (66%), whereas cumaceans were represented with 7%. Previously, only 13 cumacean species were known, now the number of species recorded from the Ross Sea increased to 34. Thus, the cumacean fauna of the Ross Sea, which was regarded as the poorest in terms of species richness, has to be considered as equivalent to that of other high Antarctic areas. Most important cumacean families concerning abundance and species richness were Leuconidae, Nannastacidae, and Diastylidae. Cumacean diversity was lowest at the northernmost area (Cape Adare). At the area off Coulman Island, which is characterized by muddy sediment, diversity was highest. Diversity and species number were higher at the deeper stations and abundance increased with latitude. A review of the bathymetric distribution of the Cumacea from the Ross Sea reveals that most species distribute across the Antarctic continental shelf and slope. So far, only few deep-sea records justify the assumption of a shallow-water–deep-sea relationship in some species of Ross Sea Cumacea, which is discussed from an evolutionary point of view
Formation of viable cell fragments by treatment with colchicine
Time-lapse cinematography of human fibroblasts revealed that mitotic cells separated into numerous cell fragments containing varying amounts of chromatin and cytoplasm when treated with colchicine. As cell fragments were very loosely attached to the surface of the culture vessel during their formation, they could be easily detached like mitotic cells by gently shaking the vessel and thus separated from normal interphase cells. Fragments obtained by this procedure were able to exclude trypan blue indicating, therefore, an intact cell membrane. When placed into Petri dishes many of them attached to and even spread out on the surface. Five hours later the majority of the attached fragments incorporated [3H]leucine. Time-lapse films showed that fragments were able to extend and retract pseudopodia at least for several hours after their formation. Although the fragments degenerated within a few days, in the present experiments the possibility was not excluded that fragments which had lost only a very small amount of chromatin and cytoplasm survived for longer periods of time. The observations clearly indicate viability of many newly formed fragments
Antiferromagnetic Ising spin glass competing with BCS pairing interaction in a transverse field
The competition among spin glass (SG), antiferromagnetism (AF) and local
pairing superconductivity (PAIR) is studied in a two-sublattice fermionic Ising
spin glass model with a local BCS pairing interaction in the presence of an
applied magnetic transverse field . In the present approach, spins in
different sublattices interact with a Gaussian random coupling with an
antiferromagnetic mean and standard deviation . The problem is
formulated in the path integral formalism in which spin operators are
represented by bilinear combinations of Grassmann variables. The saddle-point
Grand Canonical potential is obtained within the static approximation and the
replica symmetric ansatz. The results are analysed in phase diagrams in which
the AF and the SG phases can occur for small ( is the strength of the
local superconductor coupling written in units of ), while the PAIR phase
appears as unique solution for large . However, there is a complex line
transition separating the PAIR phase from the others. It is second order at
high temperature that ends in a tricritical point. The quantum fluctuations
affect deeply the transition lines and the tricritical point due to the
presence of .Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, accepted Eur. Phys. J.
Effective calculation of LEED intensities using symmetry-adapted functions
The calculation of LEED intensities in a spherical-wave representation can be substantially simplified by symmetry relations. The wave field around each atom is expanded in symmetry-adapted functions where the local point symmetry of the atomic site applies. For overlayer systems with more than one atom per unit cell symmetry-adapted functions can be used when the division of the crystal into monoatomic subplanes is replaced by division into subplanes containing all symmetrically equivalent atomic positions
Arbitrarily large families of spaces of the same volume
In any connected non-compact semi-simple Lie group without factors locally
isomorphic to SL_2(R), there can be only finitely many lattices (up to
isomorphism) of a given covolume. We show that there exist arbitrarily large
families of pairwise non-isomorphic arithmetic lattices of the same covolume.
We construct these lattices with the help of Bruhat-Tits theory, using Prasad's
volume formula to control their covolumes.Comment: 9 pages. Syntax corrected; one reference adde
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