1,799 research outputs found
Propagation and Ghosts in the Classical Kagome Antiferromagnet
We investigate the classical spin dynamics of the kagome antiferromagnet by
combining Monte Carlo and spin dynamics simulations. We show that this model
has two distinct low temperature dynamical regimes, both sustaining propagative
modes. The expected gauge invariance type of the low energy low temperature out
of plane excitations is also evidenced in the non linear regime. A detailed
analysis of the excitations allows to identify ghosts in the dynamical
structure factor, i.e propagating excitations with a strongly reduced spectral
weight. We argue that these dynamical extinction rules are of geometrical
origin.Comment: 4+ pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in the Physical Review
Letter
XY checkerboard antiferromagnet in external field
Ordering by thermal fluctuations is studied for the classical XY
antiferromagnet on a checkerboard lattice in zero and finite magnetic fields by
means of analytical and Monte Carlo methods. The model exhibits a variety of
novel broken symmetries including states with nematic ordering in zero field
and with triatic order parameter at high fields.Comment: 6 page
Dynamically-Induced Frustration as a Route to a Quantum Spin Ice State in Tb2Ti2O7 via Virtual Crystal Field Excitations and Quantum Many-Body Effects
The TbTiO pyrochlore magnetic material is attracting much
attention for its {\em spin liquid} state, failing to develop long range order
down to 50 mK despite a Curie-Weiss temperature K.
In this paper we reinvestigate the theoretical description of this material by
considering a quantum model of independent tetrahedra to describe its low
temperature properties. The naturally-tuned proximity of this system near a
N\'eel to spin ice phase boundary allows for a resurgence of quantum
fluctuation effects that lead to an important renormalization of its effective
low energy spin Hamiltonian. As a result, TbTiO is argued to be a
{\em quantum spin ice}. We put forward an experimental test of this proposal
using neutron scattering on a single crystal.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Version 2 has a modified introduction. Figure 2b
of version 1 (experimental neutron scattering has been removed. A proposal
for an experimental test is now included accompanied by a new Figure (Fig. 3
Orexin-1 receptor-cannabinoid CB1 receptor heterodimerization results in both ligand-dependent and -independent coordinated alterations of receptor localization and function
Following inducible expression in HEK293 cells, the human orexin-1 receptor was targeted to the cell surface but became internalized following exposure to the peptide agonist orexin A. By contrast, constitutive expression of the human cannabinoid CB1 receptor resulted in a predominantly punctate, intracellular distribution pattern consistent with spontaneous, agonistindependent internalization. Expression of the orexin-1 receptor in the presence of the CB1 receptor resulted in both receptors displaying the spontaneous internalization phenotype. Single cell fluorescence resonance energy transfer imaging indicated the two receptors were present as heterodimers/oligomers in intracellular vesicles. Addition of the CB1 receptor antagonist SR-141716A to cells expressing only the CB1 receptor resulted in re-localization of the receptor to the cell surface. Although SR-141716A has no significant affinity for the orexin-1 receptor, in cells co-expressing the CB1 receptor, the orexin-1 receptor was also re-localized to the cell surface by treatment with SR-141716A. Treatment of cells co-expressing the orexin-1 and CB1 receptors with the orexin-1 receptor antagonist SB-674042 also resulted in re-localization of both receptors to the cell surface. Treatment with SR-141716A resulted in decreased potency of orexin A to activate the mitogen-activated protein kinases ERK1/2 only in cells co-expressing the two receptors. Treatment with SB-674042 also reduced the potency of a CB1 receptor agonist to phosphorylate ERK1/2 only when the two receptors were co-expressed. These studies introduce an entirely novel pharmacological paradigm, whereby ligands modulate the function of receptors for which they have no significant inherent affinity by acting as regulators of receptor heterodimers
Inferring correlations associated to causal interactions in brain signals using autoregressive models
The specific connectivity of a neuronal network is reflected in the dynamics
of the signals recorded on its nodes. The analysis of how the activity in one
node predicts the behaviour of another gives the directionality in their
relationship. However, each node is composed of many different elements which
define the properties of the links. For instance, excitatory and inhibitory
neuronal subtypes determine the functionality of the connection. Classic
indexes such as the Granger causality (GC) quantifies these interactions, but
they do not infer into the mechanism behind them. Here, we introduce an
extension of the well-known GC that analyses the correlation associated to the
specific influence that a transmitter node has over the receiver. This way, the
G-causal link has a positive or negative effect if the predicted activity
follows directly or inversely, respectively, the dynamics of the sender. The
method is validated in a neuronal population model, testing the paradigm that
excitatory and inhibitory neurons have a differential effect in the
connectivity. Our approach correctly infers the positive or negative coupling
produced by different types of neurons. Our results suggest that the proposed
approach provides additional information on the characterization of G-causal
connections, which is potentially relevant when it comes to understanding
interactions in the brain circuits
Global land use implications of biofuels: State of the art conference and workshop on modelling global land use implications in the environmental assessment of biofuels
Background, Aims and Scope On 4¿5 June 2007, an international conference was held in Copenhagen. It provided an interdisciplinary forum where economists and geographers met with LCA experts to discuss the challenges of modelling the ultimate land use changes caused by an increased demand for biofuels. Main Features The main feature of the conference was the cross-breeding of experience from the different approaches to land use modelling: The field of LCA could especially benefit from economic modelling in the identification of marginal crop production and the resulting expansion of the global agricultural area. Furthermore, the field of geography offers insights in the complexity behind new land cultivation and practical examples of where this is seen to occur on a regional scale. Results Results presented at the conference showed that the magnitude and location of land use changes caused by biofuels demand depend on where the demand arises. For instance, mandatory blending in the EU will increase land use both within and outside of Europe, especially in South America. A key learning for the LCA society was that the response to a change in demand for a given crop is not presented by a single crop supplier or a single country, but rather by responses from a variety of suppliers of several different crops in several countries. Discussion The intensification potential of current and future crop and biomass production was widely discussed. It was generally agreed that some parts of the third world hold large potentials for intensification, which are not realised due to a number of barriers resulting in so-called yield gaps. Conclusions Modelling the global land use implications of biofuels requires an interdisciplinary approach optimally integrating economic, geographical, biophysical, social and possibly other aspects in the modelling. This interdisciplinary approach is necessary but also difficult due to different perspectives and mindsets in the different disciplines. Recommendations and Perspectives The concept of a location dependent marginal land use composite should be introduced in LCA of biofuels and it should be acknowledged that the typical LCA assumption of linear substitution is not necessarily valid. Moreover, fertiliser restrictions/accessibility should be included in land use modelling and the relation between crop demand and intensification should be further explored. In addition, environmental impacts of land use intensification should be included in LCA, the powerful concept of land use curves should be further improved, and so should the modelling of diminishing returns in crop production
Anomalous Hall Effect due to the spin chirality in the Kagom\'{e} lattice
We consider a model for a two dimensional electron gas moving on a kagom\'{e}
lattice and locally coupled to a chiral magnetic texture. We show that the
transverse conductivity does not vanish even if spin-orbit
coupling is not present and it may exhibit unusual behavior. Model parameters
are the chirality, the number of conduction electrons and the amplitude of the
local coupling. Upon varying these parameters, a topological transition
characterized by change of the band Chern numbers occur. As a consequence,
can be quantized, proportional to the chirality or have a non
monotonic behavior upon varying these parameters.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Classical heisenberg antiferromagnet away from the pyrochlore lattice limit: entropic versus energetic selection
The stability of the disordered ground state of the classical Heisenberg
pyrochlore antiferromagnet is studied within extensive Monte Carlo simulations
by introducing an additional exchange interaction that interpolates
between the pyrochlore lattice () and the face-centered cubic lattice
(). It is found that for as low as , the system is
long range ordered : the disordered ground state of the pyrochlore
antiferromagnet is unstable when introducing very small deviations from the
pure limit. Furthermore, it is found that the selected phase is a
collinear state energetically greater than the incommensurate phase suggested
by a mean field analysis. To our knowledge this is the first example where
entropic selection prevails over the energetic one.Comment: 5 (two-column revtex4) pages, 1 table, 7 ps/eps figures. Submitted to
Phys. Rev.
Magnetic frustration in an iron based Cairo pentagonal lattice
The Fe3+ lattice in the Bi2Fe4O9 compound is found to materialize the first
analogue of a magnetic pentagonal lattice. Due to its odd number of bonds per
elemental brick, this lattice, subject to first neighbor antiferromagnetic
interactions, is prone to geometric frustration. The Bi2Fe4O9 magnetic
properties have been investigated by macroscopic magnetic measurements and
neutron diffraction. The observed non-collinear magnetic arrangement is related
to the one stabilized on a perfect tiling as obtained from a mean field
analysis with direct space magnetic configurations calculations. The
peculiarity of this structure arises from the complex connectivity of the
pentagonal lattice, a novel feature compared to the well-known case of
triangle-based lattices
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