5 research outputs found
Thermodynamics, strange quark matter, and strange stars
Because of the mass density-dependence, an extra term should be added to the
expression of pressure. However, it should not appear in that of energy
according to both the general ensemble theory and basic thermodynamic
principle. We give a detail derivation of the thermodynamics with
density-dependent particle masses. With our recently determined quark mass
scaling, we study strange quark matter in this new thermodynamic treatment,
which still indicates a possible absolute stability as previously found.
However, the density behavior of the sound velocity is opposite to the previous
finding, but consistent with one of our recent publication. We have also
studied the structure of strange stars using the obtained equation of state.Comment: 6 pages, 6 PS figures, REVTeX styl
Quasi-long-range order in the random anisotropy Heisenberg model: functional renormalization group in 4-\epsilon dimensions
The large distance behaviors of the random field and random anisotropy O(N)
models are studied with the functional renormalization group in 4-\epsilon
dimensions. The random anisotropy Heisenberg (N=3) model is found to have a
phase with the infinite correlation radius at low temperatures and weak
disorder. The correlation function of the magnetization obeys a power law <
m(x) m(y) >\sim |x-y|^{-0.62\epsilon}. The magnetic susceptibility diverges at
low fields as \chi \sim H^{-1+0.15\epsilon}. In the random field O(N) model the
correlation radius is found to be finite at the arbitrarily weak disorder for
any N>3. The random field case is studied with a new simple method, based on a
rigorous inequality. This approach allows one to avoid the integration of the
functional renormalization group equations.Comment: 12 pages, RevTeX; a minor change in the list of reference
Deciphering Museums, Politics and Impact
This paper makes a contribution towards deciphering the relationship between museums, politics and impact. I suggest that this is akin to that between three languages in the early nineteenth century: Greek, Demotic and Hieroglyphs. I argue that museums should be taken much more seriously by the discipline of politics and international relations. This paper begins with an analysis of the REF 2014 Impact Case Studies submitted under the Politics and International Studies Unit of Assessment. Thereafter, it looks at how museums have been examined in the field of politics and international relations. Finally, it outlines some of the benefits and opportunities of scholars in the field engaging with museums in terms of their research, as potential collaborators, and as partners for knowledge transfer and impactful activities – within and outwith the strictures of the UK Research Excellence Framework (REF)