1,290 research outputs found
Specific Heat of Sr4Ru3O10
We have measured the specific heat of single crystals of the triple-layer
Ruddlesden-Popper material, Sr4Ru3O10, grown both in an image furnace and by
flux-growth. The flux grown sample has a sharp mean-field-like anomaly at the
onset of magnetic order, Tc = 102 K, but a much broader anomaly, indicative of
residual heterogeneity, is observed for the image furnace sample. Even for the
flux grown sample, however, the anomaly is at least an order of magnitude
smaller than one would expect for complete ordering of the spins. Neither
sample exhibits an anomaly at Tm ~ 50 K, where magnetic measurements suggest
that basal plane antiferromagnetism sets in. Anomalous behavior (e.g.
consistent with a term in the specific heat ~ T^3/2 as would be observed for a
three-dimensional ferromagnet with weak exchange) is observed at low
temperatures for both samples, indicative of the unusual magnetic order in this
material.Comment: 14 pages including 4 figure
Legendre polynomials, modified zeta function and Schrödinger equation
We study the dependence between prime numbers and the real and imaginary parts of the nontrivial zeros of the Riemann zeta function. The Legendre polynomials and the partial derivatives of the Riemann zeta function are used to investigate the above dependence along with the Riemann hypothesis with physical interpretations. A modified zeta function with finite terms is defined as a new implement for the study of the zeta function and its zeros. (C) 2012 American Institute of Physics. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4770050]ope
Strength Reduction in Electrical and Elastic Networks
Particular aspects of problems ranging from dielectric breakdown to metal
insu- lator transition can be studied using electrical o elastic networks. We
present an expression for the mean breakdown strength of such networks.First,
we intro- duce a method to evaluate the redistribution of current due to the
removal of a finite number of elements from a hyper-cubic network of
conducatances.It is used to determine the reduction of breakdown strength due
to a fracture of size .Numerical analysis is used to show that the
analogous reduction due to random removal of elements from electrical and
elastic networks follow a similar form.One possible application, namely the use
of bone density as a diagnostic tools for osteorosporosis,is discussed.Comment: one compressed file includes: 9 PostScrpt figures and a text fil
The complete chloroplast genome of pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum (L.) R. Br.) and comparative analysis within the family poaceae
The complete chloroplast (cp) genome sequence of Pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum [L.] R. Br.), an important grain and forage crop in the family Poaceae, is reported in this study. The complete cp genome sequence of P. glaucum is 138,172 bp in length with 38.6% overall GC content and exhibits a typical quadripartite structure comprising one pair of inverted repeat (IR) regions (22,275 bp) separated by a small single-copy (SSC) region (12,409 bp) and a large single-copy (LSC) region (81,213). The P. glaucum cp genome encodes 110 unique genes, 76 of which are protein-coding genes, 4 ribosomal RNA (rRNA) genes, 30 transfer RNA (tRNA) genes and 18 duplicated genes in the IR region. Nine genes contain one or two introns. Whole genome alignments of cp genome were performed for genome-wide comparison. Locally collinear blocks (LCBs) identified among the cp genomes showed that they were well conserved with respect to gene organization and order. This newly determined cp genome sequence of P. glaucum will provide valuable information for the future breeding programs of valuable cereal crops in the family Poaceae
Shell Neurons of the Master Circadian Clock Coordinate the Phase of Tissue Clocks Throughout the Brain and Body
Background: Daily rhythms in mammals are programmed by a master clock in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). The SCN contains two main compartments (shell and core), but the role of each region in system-level coordination remains ill defined. Herein, we use a functional assay to investigate how downstream tissues interpret region-specific outputs by using in vivo exposure to long day photoperiods to temporally dissociate the SCN. We then analyze resulting changes in the rhythms of clocks located throughout the brain and body to examine whether they maintain phase synchrony with the SCN shell or core. Results: Nearly all of the 17 tissues examined in the brain and body maintain phase synchrony with the SCN shell, but not the SCN core, which indicates that downstream oscillators are set by cues controlled specifically by the SCN shell. Interestingly, we also found that SCN dissociation diminished the amplitude of rhythms in core clock gene and protein expression in brain tissues by 50–75 %, which suggests that light-driven changes in the functional organization of the SCN markedly influence the strength of rhythms in downstream tissues. Conclusions: Overall, our results reveal that body clocks receive time-of-day cues specifically from the SCN shell, which may be an adaptive design principle that serves to maintain system-level phase relationships in a changing environment. Further, we demonstrate that lighting conditions alter the amplitude of the molecular clock in downstream tissues, which uncovers a new form of plasticity that may contribute to seasonal changes in physiology and behavior
Form factors in RQM approaches: constraints from space-time translations
Different relativistic quantum mechanics approaches have recently been used
to calculate properties of various systems, form factors in particular. It is
known that predictions, which most often rely on a single-particle current
approximation, can lead to predictions with a very large range. It was shown
that accounting for constraints related to space-time translations could
considerably reduce this range. It is shown here that predictions can be made
identical for a large range of cases. These ones include the following
approaches: instant form, front form, and "point-form" in arbitrary momentum
configurations and a dispersion-relation approach which can be considered as
the approach which the other ones should converge to. This important result
supposes both an implementation of the above constraints and an appropriate
single-particle-like current. The change of variables that allows one to
establish the equivalence of the approaches is given. Some points are
illustrated with numerical results for the ground state of a system consisting
of scalar particles.Comment: 37 pages, 7 figures; further comments in ps 16 and 19; further
references; modified presentation of some formulas; corrected misprint
Effects of hydrostatic pressure on the magnetic susceptibility of ruthenium oxide Sr3Ru2O7: Evidence for pressure-enhanced antiferromagnetic instability
Hydrostatic pressure effects on the temperature- and magnetic field
dependencies of the in-plane and out-of-plane magnetization of the bi-layered
perovskite Sr3Ru2O7 have been studied by SQUID magnetometer measurements under
a hydrostatic helium-gas pressure. The anomalously enhanced low-temperature
value of the paramagnetic susceptibility has been found to systematically
decrease with increasing pressure. The effect is accompanied by an increase of
the temperature Tmax of a pronounced peak of susceptibility. Thus,
magnetization measurements under hydrostatic pressure reveal that the lattice
contraction in the structure of Sr3Ru2O7 promotes antiferromagnetism and not
ferromagnetism, contrary to the previous beliefs. The effects can be explained
by the enhancement of the inter-bi-layer antiferromagnetic spin coupling,
driven by the shortening of the superexchange path, and suppression, due to the
band-broadening effect, of competing itinerant ferromagnetic correlations.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Complete solutions to the metric of spherically collapsing dust in an expanding spacetime with a cosmological constant
We present semi-analytical solutions to the background equations describing
the Lema\^itre-Tolman-Bondi (LTB) metric as well as the homogeneous Friedmann
equations, in the presence of dust, curvature and a cosmological constant
Lambda. For none of the presented solutions any numerical integration has to be
performed. All presented solutions are given for expanding and collapsing
phases, preserving continuity in time and radius. Hence, these solutions
describe the complete space time of a collapsing spherical object in an
expanding universe. In the appendix we present for completeness a solution of
the Friedmann equations in the additional presence of radiation, only valid for
the Robertson-Walker metric.Comment: 23 pages, one figure. Numerical module for evaluation of the
solutions released at
http://web.physik.rwth-aachen.de/download/valkenburg/ColLambda/ Matches
published version, published under Open Access. Note change of titl
Loop-Generated Bounds on Changes to the Graviton Dispersion Relation
We identify the effective theory appropriate to the propagation of massless
bulk fields in brane-world scenarios, to show that the dominant low-energy
effect of asymmetric warping in the bulk is to modify the dispersion relation
of the effective 4-dimensional modes. We show how such changes to the graviton
dispersion relation may be bounded through the effects they imply, through
loops, for the propagation of standard model particles. We compute these bounds
and show that they provide, in some cases, the strongest constraints on
nonstandard gravitational dispersions. The bounds obtained in this way are the
strongest for the fewest extra dimensions and when the extra-dimensional Planck
mass is the smallest. Although the best bounds come for warped 5-D scenarios,
for which the 5D Planck Mass is O(TeV), even in 4 dimensions the graviton loop
can lead to a bound on the graviton speed which is comparable with other
constraints.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX, 4 figures, uses revte
Automatic regularization by quantization in reducible representations of CCR: Point-form quantum optics with classical sources
Electromagnetic fields are quantized in manifestly covariant way by means of
a class of reducible representations of CCR. transforms as a Hermitian
four-vector field in Minkowski four-position space (no change of gauge), but in
momentum space it splits into spin-1 massless photons (optics) and two massless
scalars (similar to dark matter). Unitary dynamics is given by point-form
interaction picture, with minimal-coupling Hamiltonian constructed from fields
that are free on the null-cone boundary of the Milne universe. SL(2,C)
transformations and dynamics are represented unitarily in positive-norm Hilbert
space describing four-dimensional oscillators. Vacuum is a Bose-Einstein
condensate of the -oscillator gas. Both the form of and its
transformation properties are determined by an analogue of the twistor
equation. The same equation guarantees that the subspace of vacuum states is,
as a whole, Poincar\'e invariant. The formalism is tested on quantum fields
produced by pointlike classical sources. Photon statistics is well defined even
for pointlike charges, with UV/IR regularizations occurring automatically as a
consequence of the formalism. The probabilities are not Poissonian but of a
R\'enyi type with . The average number of photons occurring in
Bremsstrahlung splits into two parts: The one due to acceleration, and the one
that remains nonzero even if motion is inertial. Classical Maxwell
electrodynamics is reconstructed from coherent-state averaged solutions of
Heisenberg equations. Static pointlike charges polarize vacuum and produce
effective charge densities and fields whose form is sensitive to both the
choice of representation of CCR and the corresponding vacuum state.Comment: 2 eps figures; in v2 notation in Eq. (39) and above Eq. (38) is
correcte
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