6,942 research outputs found
Static and dynamic XY-like short-range order in a frustrated magnet with exchange disorder
A single crystal of the Co2+ based pyrochlore NaCaCo2F7 was studied by
inelastic neutron scattering. This frustrated magnet with quenched exchange
disorder remains in a strongly correlated paramagnetic state down to one 60th
of the Curie-Weiss temperature. Below T_f = 2.4 K, diffuse elastic scattering
develops and comprises 30 +/- 10% of the total magnetic scattering, as expected
for J_{eff} = 1/2 moments frozen on a time scale that exceeds \hbar/\delta
E=3.8 ps. The diffuse scattering is consistent with short range XY
antiferromagnetism with a correlation length of 16 \AA. The momentum (Q)
dependence of the inelastic intensity indicates relaxing XY-like
antiferromagnetic clusters at energies below ~ 5.5 meV, and collinear
antiferromagnetic fluctuations above this energy. The relevant XY
configurations form a continuous manifold of symmetry-related states. Contrary
to well-known models that produce this continuous manifold, order-by-disorder
does not select an ordered state in NaCaCo2F7 despite evidence for weak (~12 %)
exchange disorder. Instead, NaCaCo2F7 freezes into short range ordered clusters
that span this manifold.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures. This updated version features modified figures
and some new discussio
Evidence of Titan's Climate History from Evaporite Distribution
Water-ice-poor, 5-m-bright material on Saturn's moon Titan has
previously been geomorphologically identified as evaporitic. Here we present a
global distribution of the occurrences of the 5-m-bright spectral unit,
identified with Cassini's Visual Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) and
examined with RADAR when possible. We explore the possibility that each of
these occurrences are evaporite deposits. The 5-m-bright material covers
1\% of Titan's surface and is not limited to the poles (the only regions with
extensive, long-lived surface liquid). We find the greatest areal concentration
to be in the equatorial basins Tui Regio and Hotei Regio. Our interpretations,
based on the correlation between 5-m-bright material and lakebeds, imply
that there was enough liquid present at some time to create the observed
5-m-bright material. We address the climate implications surrounding a
lack of evaporitic material at the south polar basins: if the south pole basins
were filled at some point in the past, then where is the evaporite
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Guttate leukoderma and acrokeratosis verruciformis of Hopf: a rare combination in Darier disease
A distinct Darier phenotype presenting with confetti-like hypopigmented macules was first described in 1965. Designated as "guttate leukoderma," this skin finding is a rarely-reported presentation of Darier disease. It has been theorized that the mutation in ATP2A2 causes defective E-cadherin, which in turn disrupts the adhesion of melanocytes to keratinocytes, thus leading to impaired dendrite formation, hindered melanin transfer, and ultimately to melanocyte apoptosis. Herein, we contribute a case of a 56-year old woman who presented with the rarely-described guttate leukoderma of Darier disease and acrokeratosis verruciformis of Hopf
Time series classification with ensembles of elastic distance measures
Several alternative distance measures for comparing time series have recently been proposed and evaluated on time series classification (TSC) problems. These include variants of dynamic time warping (DTW), such as weighted and derivative DTW, and edit distance-based measures, including longest common subsequence, edit distance with real penalty, time warp with edit, and move–split–merge. These measures have the common characteristic that they operate in the time domain and compensate for potential localised misalignment through some elastic adjustment. Our aim is to experimentally test two hypotheses related to these distance measures. Firstly, we test whether there is any significant difference in accuracy for TSC problems between nearest neighbour classifiers using these distance measures. Secondly, we test whether combining these elastic distance measures through simple ensemble schemes gives significantly better accuracy. We test these hypotheses by carrying out one of the largest experimental studies ever conducted into time series classification. Our first key finding is that there is no significant difference between the elastic distance measures in terms of classification accuracy on our data sets. Our second finding, and the major contribution of this work, is to define an ensemble classifier that significantly outperforms the individual classifiers. We also demonstrate that the ensemble is more accurate than approaches not based in the time domain. Nearly all TSC papers in the data mining literature cite DTW (with warping window set through cross validation) as the benchmark for comparison. We believe that our ensemble is the first ever classifier to significantly outperform DTW and as such raises the bar for future work in this area
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