4,906 research outputs found
Signatures of pairing mechanisms and order parameters in ferromagnetic superconductors
Two predictions are made for properties of the ferromagnetic superconductors
discovered recently. The first one is that spin-triplet, p-wave pairing in such
materials will give the magnons a mass inversely proportional to the square of
the magnetization. The second one is based on a specific mechanism for p-wave
pairing, and predicts that the observed broad anomaly in the specific heat of
URhGe will be resolved into a split transition with increasing sample quality.
These predictions will help discriminate between different possible mechanisms
for ferromagnetic superconductivity.Comment: 4 pp., 1 ps fi
QTL Analysis of Mineral Content in Perennial Ryegrass (\u3cem\u3eLolium Perenne\u3c/em\u3e L.)
Variation in mineral content of grasses can be strongly influenced by genetic factors. Grass tetany (hypomagnesemia) of cattle and sheep is due to disturbances in serum magnesium levels. In Southern Australia, resultant levels of mortality in cattle vary between 0.5-1.5% of total stock numbers. Serum magnesium variation may be due to feed deficits, or dietary imbalances that interfere with magnesium metabolism. High levels of potassium appear to exert negative effects on the levels of magnesium in the blood. Italian ryegrass genotypes with high levels of magnesium can alleviate the incidence of grass tetany. The genetic control of mineral content, including magnesium, in perennial ryegrass has been investigated using molecular marker-based analysis
Hydrodynamics of the Kuramoto-Sivashinsky Equation in Two Dimensions
The large scale properties of spatiotemporal chaos in the 2d
Kuramoto-Sivashinsky equation are studied using an explicit coarse graining
scheme. A set of intermediate equations are obtained. They describe
interactions between the small scale (e.g., cellular) structures and the
hydrodynamic degrees of freedom. Possible forms of the effective large scale
hydrodynamics are constructed and examined. Although a number of different
universality classes are allowed by symmetry, numerical results support the
simplest scenario, that being the KPZ universality class.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
A factorization of a super-conformal map
A super-conformal map and a minimal surface are factored into a product of
two maps by modeling the Euclidean four-space and the complex Euclidean plane
on the set of all quaternions. One of these two maps is a holomorphic map or a
meromorphic map. These conformal maps adopt properties of a holomorphic
function or a meromorphic function. Analogs of the Liouville theorem, the
Schwarz lemma, the Schwarz-Pick theorem, the Weierstrass factorization theorem,
the Abel-Jacobi theorem, and a relation between zeros of a minimal surface and
branch points of a super-conformal map are obtained.Comment: 21 page
Estimating Carbon Budgets for Ambitious Climate Targets
Carbon budgets, which define the total allowable CO2 emissions associated with a given global climate target, are a useful way of framing the climate mitigation challenge. In this paper, we review the geophysical basis for the idea of a carbon budget, showing how this concept emerges from a linear climate response to cumulative CO2 emissions. We then discuss the difference between a “CO2-only carbon budget” associated with a given level of CO2-induced warming and an “effective carbon budget” associated with a given level of warming caused by all human emissions. We present estimates for the CO2-only and effective carbon budgets for 1.5 and 2 °C, based on both model simulations and updated observational data. Finally, we discuss the key contributors to uncertainty in carbon budget estimates and suggest some implications of this uncertainty for decision-making. Based on the analysis presented here, we argue that while the CO2-only carbon budget is a robust upper bound on allowable emissions for a given climate target, the size of the effective carbon budget is dependent on the how quickly we are able to mitigate non-CO2 greenhouse gas and aerosol emissions. This suggests that climate mitigation efforts could benefit from being responsive to a changing effective carbon budget over time, as well as to potential new information that could narrow uncertainty associated with the climate response to CO2 emissions
Hydrodynamics of nuclear matter in the chiral limit
Using the Poisson bracket method, we construct the hydrodynamics of nuclear
matter in the chiral limit, which describes the dynamics of all low-energy
degrees of freedom, including the fluid-dynamical and pionic ones. The
hydrodynamic equations contain, beside five Euler equations of relativistic
fluid dynamics, Nf^2-1 second order equations describing propagating pions and
Nf^2-1 first order equations describing the advection of the baryonic vector
isospin charges. We present hydrodynamic arguments showing that the pion
velocity vanishes at the second order phase transition at Nf=2.Comment: 9 pages; small improvements. Version published in PR
Theory of transverse spin dynamics in a polarized Fermi liquid and an itinerant ferromagnet
The linear equations for transverse spin dynamics in a weakly polarized
degenerate Fermi liquid with arbitrary relationship between temperature and
polarization are derived from Landau-Silin phenomenological kinetic equation
with general form of two-particle collision integral. Unlike the previous
treatment where Fermi velocity and density of states have been taken as
constants independent of polarization here we made derivation free from this
assumption. The obtained equations are applicable for description of spin
dynamics in paramagnetic Fermi liquid with finite polarization as well in an
itinerant ferromagnet. In both cases transverse spin wave frequency is found to
be proportional to the square of the wave vector with complex constant of
proportionality (diffusion coefficient) such that the damping has a finite
value at T=0. The polarization dependence of the diffusion coefficient is found
to be different for a polarized Fermi liquid and for an itinerant ferromagnet.
These conclusions are confirmed by derivation of transverse spin wave
dispersion law in frame of field theoretical methods from the integral equation
for the vortex function. It is shown that similar derivation taking into
consideration the divergency of static transverse susceptibility also leads to
the same attenuating spin wave spectrum.Comment: 7 pages, no figure
A PC parallel port button box provides millisecond response time accuracy under Linux
For psychologists, it is sometimes necessary to measure people's reaction times to the nearest millisecond. This article describes how to use the PC parallel port to receive signals from a button box to achieve millisecond response time accuracy. The workings of the parallel port, the corresponding port addresses, and a simple Linux program for controlling the port are described. A test of the speed and reliability of button box signal detection is reported. If the reader is moderately familiar with Linux, this article should provide sufficient instruction for him or her to build and test his or her own parallel port button box. This article also describes how the parallel port could be used to control an external apparatus
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