1,640 research outputs found

    Theory of a Continuous Hc2_{c2} Normal-to-Superconducting Transition

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    I study the Hc2H_{c2} transition within the Ginzburg-Landau model, with mm-component order parameter ψi\psi_i. I find a renormalized fixed point free energy, exact in m→∞m\rightarrow\infty limit, suggestive of a 22nd-order transition in contrast to a general belief of a 11st-order transition. The thermal fluctuations for H≠0H\neq 0 force one to consider an infinite set of marginally relevant operators for d<duc=6d<d_{uc}=6. I find dlc=4d_{lc}=4, predicting that the ODLRO does not survive thermal fluctuations in d=2,3d=2,3. The result is a solution to a critical fixed point that was found to be inaccessible within ϵ=6−d\epsilon=6-d-expansion, previously considered in E.Brezin, D.R.Nelson, A.Thiaville, Phys.Rev.B {\bf 31}, 7124 (1985), and was interpreted as a 11st-order transition.Comment: 4 pages, self-unpacking uuencoded compressed postscript file with a figure already inside text; to appear in Phys. Rev. Lett

    Space-time trellis code construction for fast fading channels

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    Abstract—The need for bandwidth- and power-efficient wireless communication systems has raised considerable interest in space-time codes. In this work, we propose a systematic space-time code construction procedure for fast fading channels. The method can be used to design space-time codes for an arbitrary number of transmit antennas and any memoryless modulation. We introduce a new design criterion that ensures full spatial diversity and de-velop the code design method based on this criterion. The flexibil-ity of the proposed approach is demonstrated by designing space-time trellis codes for 2, 3 and 4 transmit antennas with QPSK, 8PSK and 4ASK modulations. I

    Development of an in vitro system to study the interactions of aerosolized drugs with pulmonary mucus

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    © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Mucus is the first biological component inhaled drugs encounter on their journey towards their pharmacological target in the upper airways. Yet, how mucus may influence drug disposition and efficacy in the lungs has been essentially overlooked. In this study, a simple in vitro system was developed to investigate the factors promoting drug interactions with airway mucus in physiologically relevant conditions. Thin layers of porcine tracheal mucus were prepared in Transwell® inserts and initially, the diffusion of various fluorescent dyes across those layers was monitored over time. A deposition system featuring a MicroSprayer® aerosolizer was optimized to reproducibly deliver liquid aerosols to multiple air-facing layers and then exploited to compare the impact of airway mucus on the transport of inhaled bronchodilators. Both the dyes and drugs tested were distinctly hindered by mucus with high logP compounds being the most affected. The diffusion rate of the bronchodilators across the layers was in the order: ipratropium ≈ glycopyronnium > formoterol > salbutamol > indacaterol, suggesting hydrophobicity plays an important role in their binding to mucus but is not the unique parameter involved. Testing of larger series of compounds would nevertheless be necessary to better understand the interactions of inhaled drugs with airway mucus

    Genomics goes chromosomal to explore the wheat genome

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    OBJECTIVES: The implant design and surface modification are independent conditions that can alter the implant bone response. The objective of this study is to compare the bone response to roughened tapered and cylindrical screw-type implants with and without hydroxyapatite (HA) surface coating in the femoral trabecular bone of rabbits. MATERIAL AND METHOD: Thirty-two implants (8 x 3.5 mm) consisting of four different types (eight implants in each group), that is, tapered implants, cylindrical implants, HA-coated tapered implants, and HA-coated cylindrical implants were installed in the femoral condyle of 16 rabbits. After 8 weeks of healing, the femoral condyles were retrieved and studied histologically. The bone-to-implant contact percentage was assessed and analyzed statistically. Results : The histomorphometric analysis revealed that the bone-to-implant contact (BIC) values seemed to be higher for HA-coated tapered implants (65.62 +/- 13.02) followed by cylindrical non-coated implants. All four types of implants showed wide distribution of BIC with no statistical significance between different types of implants. CONCLUSION: It can be concluded that under the current experimental conditions, implant design and surface composition had little effect on the bone-to-implant interface

    First-Order Melting of a Moving Vortex Lattice: Effects of Disorder

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    We study the melting of a moving vortex lattice through numerical simulations with the current driven 3D XY model with disorder. We find that there is a first-order phase transition even for large disorder when the corresponding equilibrium transition is continuous. The low temperature phase is an anisotropic moving glass.Comment: Important changes from original version. Finite size analysis of results has been added. Figure 2 has been changed. There is a new additional Figure. To be published in Physical Review Letter

    First-Order Vortex Lattice Melting and Magnetization of YBa2_2Cu3_3O$_{7-\delta}

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    We present the first non-mean-field calculation of the magnetization M(T)M(T) of YBa2_2Cu3_3O7−δ_{7-\delta} both above and below the flux-lattice melting temperature Tm(H)T_m(H). The results are in good agreement with experiment as a function of transverse applied field HH. The effects of fluctuations in both order parameter ψ(r)\psi({\bf r}) and magnetic induction BB are included in the Ginzburg-Landau free energy functional: ψ(r)\psi({\bf r}) fluctuates within the lowest Landau level in each layer, while BB fluctuates uniformly according to the appropriate Boltzmann factor. The second derivative (∂2M/∂T2)H(\partial^2 M/\partial T^2)_H is predicted to be negative throughout the vortex liquid state and positive in the solid state. The discontinuities in entropy and magnetization at melting are calculated to be ∼0.034 kB\sim 0.034\, k_B per flux line per layer and ∼0.0014\sim 0.0014~emu~cm−3^{-3} at a field of 50 kOe.Comment: 11 pages, 4 PostScript figures in one uuencoded fil

    Energy cost associated with vortex crossing in superconductors

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    Starting from the Ginzburg-Landau free energy of a type II superconductor in a magnetic field we estimate the energy associated with two vortices crossing. The calculations are performed by assuming that we are in a part of the phase diagram where the lowest Landau level approximation is valid. We consider only two vortices but with two markedly different sets of boundary conditions: on a sphere and on a plane with quasi-periodic boundary conditions. We find that the answers are very similar suggesting that the energy is localised to the crossing point. The crossing energy is found to be field and temperature dependent -- with a value at the experimentally measured melting line of U×≃7.5kTm≃1.16/cL2U_\times \simeq 7.5 k T_m \simeq 1.16/c_L^2, where cLc_L is the Lindemann melting criterion parameter. The crossing energy is then used with an extension of the Marchetti, Nelson and Cates hydrodynamic theory to suggest an explanation of the recent transport experiments of Safar {{\em et al.}\ }.Comment: 15 pages, RevTex v3.0, followed by 5 postscript figure
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