1,702 research outputs found
Phason modes in spin-density wave in the presence of long-range Coulomb interaction
We study the effect of long-range Coulomb interaction on the phason in
spin-density wave (SDW) within mean field theory. In the longitudinal limit and
in the absence of SDW pinning the phason is completely absorbed by the plasmon
due to the Anderson-Higgs mechanism. In the presence of SDW pinning or when the
wave vector {\bf q} is tilted from the chain direction, though the plasmon
still almost exhausts the optical sum rule, another optical mode appears at
, with small optical weight. This low frequency mode below
the SDW gap may be accessible to electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS).Comment: 7 pages, Revtex 2.1, SZFKI 102/9
Mitigating local over-fitting during single particle reconstruction with SIDESPLITTER
Single particle analysis has become a key structural biology technique. Experimental images are extremely noisy, and during iterative refinement it is possible to stably incorporate noise into the reconstruction. Such âover-fittingâ can lead to misinterpretation of the structure and flawed biological results. Several strategies are routinely used to prevent over-fitting, the most common being independent refinement of two sides of a split dataset. In this study, we show that over-fitting remains an issue within regions of low local signal-to-noise, despite independent refinement of half datasets. We propose a modification of the refinement process through the application of a local signal-to-noise filter: SIDESPLITTER. We show that our approach can reduce over-fitting for both idealised and experimental data while maintaining independence between the two sides of a split refinement. SIDESPLITTER refinement leads to improved density, and can also lead to improvement of the final resolution in extreme cases where datasets are prone to severe over-fitting, such as small membrane proteins
Ca-substitution and O-doping effects in superconducting Cu(Ba0.8Sr0.2)2(Yb1-xCax)Cu2O6+z obtained from neutron diffraction refinements
Distinct calcium and oxygen doping effects were studied in the Cu(Ba0.8Sr0.2)2(Yb1âxCax)Cu2O6+z (Cuâ1212:P) system by means of neutron diffraction and superconducting quantum interference device experiments in the wide substitution ranges of 0<~x<~0.35 and 0<z<1. The effectiveness of the two different ways to introduce holes into the CuO2 planes was compared both in respect to the capability to increase Tc and in terms of the hole production as estimated from neutron-diffraction data via bond-valence-sum calculation. Oxygen doping was found to increase the hole concentration less efficiently, and further, at a certain hole concentration value higher Tc values were obtained with calcium substitution than with oxygen doping. The two different hole-doping methods exhibited also different Tc vs Cu-O bond length relations. As a conclusion, the possible roles of the hole distribution in the in-plane Cu-O bond and the flatness of the CuO2 planes in determining the superconducting properties were recognized.Peer reviewe
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