161,781 research outputs found
How many electrons are needed to flip a local spin?
Considering the spin of a local magnetic atom as a quantum mechanical
operator, we illustrate the dynamics of a local spin interacting with a
ballistic electron represented by a wave packet. This approach improves the
semi-classical approximation and provides a complete quantum mechanical
understanding for spin transfer phenomena. Sending spin-polarized electrons
towards a local magnetic atom one after another, we estimate the minimum number
of electrons needed to flip a local spin.Comment: 3 figure
A Ground Water Quality Summary for Alaska: a Termination Report
The expanding economic activity throughout the State of Alaska
has created an urgent demand for water resource data. Ground water
quality information is of particular interest since this is the most
used source for domestic and industrial supplies.
Many agencies and individuals have accumulated large quantities
of data but their value has been marginal due to a lack of distribution
to potential users. It was the original intent of the work reported
herein to gather, collate, and publish all ground water quality data
available in the files of university, state, and federal laboratories.
Soon after the inception of the project the major contributor, the
U.S. Geological Survey, found it was administratively impossible to
contribute either the monies or the data necessary to accomplish the
ultimate goals of the project -- An Atlas on Alaskan Ground Water
Qualities.
At the time the above decision was made the Institute felt too
much information was on hand to allow it to lay fallow. Therefore,
this report was prepared, In a more limited scope than originally
planned, to fill the need for a readily available source of information.The work upon which this report is based was supported by
funds provided by the U.S. Department of the Interior, Office of
Water Resources Research, Project Number A-024-ALAS and Agreement
Number 14-01-0001-1070
Note on the boundary terms in AdS/CFT correspondence for Rarita-Schwinger field
In this letter the boundary problem for massless and massive Rarita-Schwinger
field in the AdS/CFT correspondence is considered. The considerations are along
the lines of a paper by Henneaux (hep-th/9902137) and are based on the
requirement the solutions to be a stationary point for the action functional.
It is shown that this requirement, along with a definite asymptotic behavior of
the solutions, fixes the boundary term that must be added to the initial
Rarita-Schwinger action. It is also shown that the boundary term reproduce the
known two point correlation functions of certain local operators in CFT living
on the boundary.Comment: 12 pages, one more refernce added, some typos correcte
Thermodynamics and kinetics of the undercooled liquid and the glass transition of the Zr41.2Ti13.8Cu12.5Ni10.0Be22.5 alloy
Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) was used to determine the thermodynamic functions of the undercooled liquid and the amorphous phase with respect to the crystalline state of the Zr41.2Ti13.8Cu12.5Ni10.0Be22.5bulk metallic glass forming alloy. The specific heat capacities of this alloy in the undercooled liquid, the amorphous state and the crystal were determined. The differences in enthalpy, âH, entropy, âS, and Gibbs free energy, âG, between crystal and the undercooled liquid were calculated using the measured specific heat capacity data as well as the heat of fusion. The results indicate that the Gibbs free energy difference between metastable undercooled liquid and crystalline solid, âG, stays small compared to conventional metallic glass forming alloys even for large undercoolings. Furthermore, the Kauzmann temperature, TK, where the entropy of the undercooled liquid equals to that of the crystal, was determined to be 560 K. The Kauzmann temperature is compared with the experimentally observed rate-dependent glass transition temperature, Tg. Both onset and end temperatures of the glass transition depend linearly on the logarithm of the heating rate based on the DSC experiments. Those characteristic temperatures for the kinetically observed glass transition become equal close to the Kauzmann temperature in this alloy, which suggests an underlying thermodynamic glass transition as a lower bound for the kinetically observed freezing process
Condensation and Clustering in the Driven Pair Exclusion Process
We investigate particle condensation in a driven pair exclusion process on
one- and two- dimensional lattices under the periodic boundary condition. The
model describes a biased hopping of particles subject to a pair exclusion
constraint that each particle cannot stay at a same site with its pre-assigned
partner. The pair exclusion causes a mesoscopic condensation characterized by
the scaling of the condensate size and the number of
condensates with the total number of sites .
Those condensates are distributed randomly without hopping bias. We find that
the hopping bias generates a spatial correlation among condensates so that a
cluster of condensates appears. Especially, the cluster has an anisotropic
shape in the two-dimensional system. The mesoscopic condensation and the
clustering are studied by means of numerical simulations.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Geometry and seismic properties of the subducting Cocos plate in central Mexico
The geometry and properties of the interface of the Cocos plate beneath central Mexico are determined from the receiver functions (RFs) utilizing data from the Meso America Subduction Experiment (MASE). The RF image shows that the subducting oceanic crust is shallowly dipping to the north at 15° for 80 km from Acapulco and then horizontally underplates the continental crust for approximately 200 km to the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt (TMVB). The crustal image also shows that there is no continental root associated with the TMVB. The migrated image of the RFs shows that the slab is steeply dipping into the mantle at about 75° beneath the TMVB. Both the continental and oceanic Moho are clearly seen in both images, and modeling of the RF conversion amplitudes and timings of the underplated features reveals a thin low-velocity zone between the plate and the continental crust that appears to absorb nearly all of the strain between the upper plate and the slab. By inverting RF amplitudes of the converted phases and their time separations, we produce detailed maps of the seismic properties of the upper and lower oceanic crust of the subducting Cocos plate and its thickness. High Poisson's and Vp/Vs ratios due to anomalously low S wave velocity at the upper oceanic crust in the flat slab region may indicate the presence of water and hydrous minerals or high pore pressure. The evidence of high water content within the oceanic crust explains the flat subduction geometry without strong coupling of two plates. This may also explain the nonvolcanic tremor activity and slow slip events occurring in the subducting plate and the overlying crust
BRST Quantization of the Proca Model based on the BFT and the BFV Formalism
The BRST quantization of the Abelian Proca model is performed using the
Batalin-Fradkin-Tyutin and the Batalin-Fradkin-Vilkovisky formalism. First, the
BFT Hamiltonian method is applied in order to systematically convert a second
class constraint system of the model into an effectively first class one by
introducing new fields. In finding the involutive Hamiltonian we adopt a new
approach which is more simpler than the usual one. We also show that in our
model the Dirac brackets of the phase space variables in the original second
class constraint system are exactly the same as the Poisson brackets of the
corresponding modified fields in the extended phase space due to the linear
character of the constraints comparing the Dirac or Faddeev-Jackiw formalisms.
Then, according to the BFV formalism we obtain that the desired resulting
Lagrangian preserving BRST symmetry in the standard local gauge fixing
procedure naturally includes the St\"uckelberg scalar related to the explicit
gauge symmetry breaking effect due to the presence of the mass term. We also
analyze the nonstandard nonlocal gauge fixing procedure.Comment: 29 pages, plain Latex, To be published in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
Quantization of spontaneously broken gauge theory based on the BFT-BFV Formalism
We quantize the spontaneously broken abelian U(1) Higgs model by using the
improved BFT and BFV formalisms. We have constructed the BFT physical fields,
and obtain the first class observables including the Hamiltonian in terms of
these fields. We have also explicitly shown that there are exact form
invariances between the second class and first class quantities. Then,
according to the BFV formalism, we have derived the corresponding Lagrangian
having U(1) gauge symmetry. We also discuss at the classical level how one
easily gets the first class Lagrangian from the symmetry-broken second class
Lagrangian.Comment: 16 pages, latex, final version published in Mod. Phys. Lett.
The cell cycle program of polypeptide labeling in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
The cell cycle program of polypeptide labeling in syndhronous cultures of wild-type Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was analyzed by pulse-labeling cells with 35SO4 = or [3H]arginine at different cell cycle stages. Nearly 100 labeled membrane and soluble polypeptides were resolved and studied using one-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)- polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The labeling experiments produced the following results. (a) Total 35SO4 = and [3H]arginine incorporation rates varied independently throughout the cell cycle. 35SO4 = incorporation was highest in the mid-light phase, while [3H]arginine incorporation peaked in the dark phase just before cell division. (b) The relative labeling rate for 20 of 100 polypeptides showed significant fluctuations (3-12 fold) during the cell cycle. The remaining polypeptides were labeled at a rate commensurate with total 35SO4 = or [3H]arginine incorporation. The polypeptides that showed significant fluctuations in relative labeling rates served as markers to identify cell cycle stages. (c) The effects of illumination conditions on the apparent cell cycle stage-specific labeling of polypeptides were tested. Shifting light-grown asynchronous cells to the dark had an immediate and pronounced effect on the pattern of polypeptide labeling, but shifting dark-phase syndhronous cells to the light had little effect. The apparent cell cycle variations in the labeling of ribulose 1,5-biphosphate (RUBP)-carboxylase were strongly influenced by illumination effects. (d) Pulse-chase experiments with light-grown asynchronous cells revealed little turnover or inter- conversion of labeled polypeptides within one cell generation, meaning that major polypeptides, whether labeled in a stage-specific manner or not, do not appear transiently in the cell cycle of actively dividing, light-grown cells. The cell cycle program of labeling was used to analyze effects of a temperature-sensitive cycle blocked (cb) mutant. A synchronous culture of ts10001 was shifted to restrictive temperature before its block point to prevent it from dividing. The mutant continued its cell cycle program of polypeptide labeling for over a cell generation, despite its inability to divide
An exactly solvable toy model that mimics the mode coupling theory of supercooled liquid and glass transition
A toy model is proposed which incorporates the reversible mode coupling
mechanism responsible for ergodic-nonergodic transition with trivial
Hamiltonian in the mode coupling theory (MCT) of structural glass transition.
The model can be analyzed without relying on uncontrolled approximations
inevitable in the current MCT. The strength of hopping processes can be easily
tuned and the ideal glass transition is reproduced only in a certain range of
the strength. On the basis of the analyses of our model we discuss about a
sharp ergodic-nonergodic transition and its smearing out by "hopping".Comment: 5 pages, 2 ps-figures, inappropriate terms replace
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