1,802 research outputs found
Columnar defects and vortex fluctuations in layered superconductors
We investigate fluctuations of Josephson-coupled pancake vortices in layered
superconductors in the presence of columnar defects. We study the
thermodynamics of a single pancake stack pinned by columnar defects and obtain
the temperature dependence of localization length, pinning energy and critical
current. We study the creep regime and compute the crossover current between
line-like creep and pancake-like creep motion. We find that columnar defects
effectively increase interlayer Josephson coupling by suppressing thermal
fluctuations of pancakes. This leads to an upward shift in the decoupling line
most pronounced around the matching field.Comment: 5 pages, REVTeX, no figure
Reduction of myocardial infarction by postischemic administration of the calpain inhibitor A-705253 in comparison to the Na(+)/H(+) exchange inhibitor Cariporide (R) in isolated perfused rabbit hearts
The calpain inhibitor A-705253 and the Na(+)/H(+) exchange inhibitor Cariporide (R) were studied in isolated perfused rabbit hearts subjected to 60 min occlusion of the ramus interventricularis of the left coronary artery (below the origin of the first diagonal branch), followed by 120 min of reperfusion. The inhibitors were added to the perfusion fluid solely or in combination at the beginning of reperfusion. Hemodynamic monitoring and biochemical analysis of perfusion fluid from the coronary outflow were performed. Myocardial infarct size and area at risk (transiently not perfused myocardium) were determined from left ventricular slices after a special staining procedure with Evans blue and 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride. The infarcted area (dead myocardium) was 72.7 +/- 4.0% of the area at risk in untreated controls, but was significantly smaller in the presence of the inhibitors. The largest effect was observed with 10(-6) M A-705253, which reduced the infarcted area to 49.2 +/- 4.1% of the area at risk, corresponding to a reduction of 33.6%. Cariporide (R) at 10(-6) M reduced the infarct size to the same extent. The combination of both inhibitors, however, did not further improve cardioprotection. No significant difference was observed between the experimental groups in coronary perfusion, left ventricular pressure, heart rate, or in the release of lactate dehydrogenase and creatine kinase from heart muscle
Effects of columnar disorder on flux-lattice melting in high-temperature superconductors
The effect of columnar pins on the flux-lines melting transition in
high-temperature superconductors is studied using Path Integral Monte Carlo
simulations. We highlight the similarities and differences in the effects of
columnar disorder on the melting transition in YBaCuO
(YBCO) and the highly anisotropic BiSrCaCuO (BSCCO) at
magnetic fields such that the mean separation between flux-lines is smaller
than the penetration length. For pure systems, a first order transition from a
flux-line solid to a liquid phase is seen as the temperature is increased. When
adding columnar defects to the system, the transition temperature is not
affected in both materials as long as the strength of an individual columnar
defect (expressed as a flux-line defect interaction) is less than a certain
threshold for a given density of randomly distributed columnar pins. This
threshold strength is lower for YBCO than for BSCCO. For higher strengths the
transition line is shifted for both materials towards higher temperatures, and
the sharp jump in energy, characteristic of a first order transition, gives way
to a smoother and gradual rise of the energy, characteristic of a second order
transition. Also, when columnar defects are present, the vortex solid phase is
replaced by a pinned Bose glass phase and this is manifested by a marked
decrease in translational order and orientational order as measured by the
appropriate structure factors. For BSCCO, we report an unusual rise of the
translational order and the hexatic order just before the melting transition.
No such rise is observed in YBCO.Comment: 32 pages, 13 figures, revte
Unitarity and the Bethe-Salpeter Equation
We investigate the relation between different three-dimensional reductions of
the Bethe-Salpeter equation and the analytic structure of the resultant
amplitudes in the energy plane. This correlation is studied for both the
interaction Lagrangian and the system with -, -,
and -channel pole diagrams as driving terms. We observe that the equal-time
equation, which includes some of the three-body unitarity cuts, gives the best
agreement with the Bethe-Salpeter result. This is followed by other 3-D
approximations that have less of the analytic structure.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures; RevTeX. Version accepted for publication in
Phys. Rev.
Structures for caribou management and their status in the circumpolar north
Large herds of caribou (Rangifer tarandus) in Canada, Alaska, and Russia that winter in northern coniferous forests and summer in tundra of the Arctic have provided a sustainable source of meat and other products for indigenous peoples for thousands of years. Several different administrative structures for management of large caribou herds have emerged throughout the circumpolar North. In Russia under the previous Soviet government, the herd of the Taimyr Region, numbering around 500 000 caribou, was managed under a harvest quota system for both subsistence use by indigenous people and commercial sale of meat and skins. In North America, as indigenous peoples have gained increasing political empowerment, systems for caribou management have been undergoing change. Establishment of the Beverly and Qamanirjuaq Caribou Management Board in Canada, with majority representation from users of the resource, provides a model and a test of the effectiveness of a comanagement system. The Western Arctic Herd in northwestern Alaska, numbering close to 500 000 caribou, has been managed under the traditional American system of game management, with user advisory groups, but with management decisions resting with a statewide Board of Game, whose major representation is from sport-hunting interests. The Porcupine Caribou Herd, which is shared by the United States and Canada, is the focus of an international agreement, in principle designed to assure its continued productivity and well-being. The diversity of systems for caribou management in the circumpolar North provides an opportunity for comparing their effectiveness
The Multidimensional Study of Viral Campaigns as Branching Processes
Viral campaigns on the Internet may follow variety of models, depending on
the content, incentives, personal attitudes of sender and recipient to the
content and other factors. Due to the fact that the knowledge of the campaign
specifics is essential for the campaign managers, researchers are constantly
evaluating models and real-world data. The goal of this article is to present
the new knowledge obtained from studying two viral campaigns that took place in
a virtual world which followed the branching process. The results show that it
is possible to reduce the time needed to estimate the model parameters of the
campaign and, moreover, some important aspects of time-generations relationship
are presented.Comment: In proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Social
Informatics, SocInfo 201
Real-space local polynomial basis for solid-state electronic-structure calculations: A finite-element approach
We present an approach to solid-state electronic-structure calculations based
on the finite-element method. In this method, the basis functions are strictly
local, piecewise polynomials. Because the basis is composed of polynomials, the
method is completely general and its convergence can be controlled
systematically. Because the basis functions are strictly local in real space,
the method allows for variable resolution in real space; produces sparse,
structured matrices, enabling the effective use of iterative solution methods;
and is well suited to parallel implementation. The method thus combines the
significant advantages of both real-space-grid and basis-oriented approaches
and so promises to be particularly well suited for large, accurate ab initio
calculations. We develop the theory of our approach in detail, discuss
advantages and disadvantages, and report initial results, including the first
fully three-dimensional electronic band structures calculated by the method.Comment: replacement: single spaced, included figures, added journal referenc
Solitary wave solution to the generalized nonlinear Schrodinger equation for dispersive permittivity and permeability
We present a solitary wave solution of the generalized nonlinear Schrodinger
equation for dispersive permittivity and permeability using a scaling
transformation and coupled amplitude-phase formulation. We have considered the
third-order dispersion effect (TOD) into our model and show that soliton shift
may be suppressed in a negative index material by a judicious choice of the TOD
and self-steepening parameter.Comment: 6 page
Ab initio many-body calculations on infinite carbon and boron-nitrogen chains
In this paper we report first-principles calculations on the ground-state
electronic structure of two infinite one-dimensional systems: (a) a chain of
carbon atoms and (b) a chain of alternating boron and nitrogen atoms. Meanfield
results were obtained using the restricted Hartree-Fock approach, while the
many-body effects were taken into account by second-order M{\o}ller-Plesset
perturbation theory and the coupled-cluster approach. The calculations were
performed using 6-31 basis sets, including the d-type polarization
functions. Both at the Hartree-Fock (HF) and the correlated levels we find that
the infinite carbon chain exhibits bond alternation with alternating single and
triple bonds, while the boron-nitrogen chain exhibits equidistant bonds. In
addition, we also performed density-functional-theory-based local density
approximation (LDA) calculations on the infinite carbon chain using the same
basis set. Our LDA results, in contradiction to our HF and correlated results,
predict a very small bond alternation. Based upon our LDA results for the
carbon chain, which are in agreement with an earlier LDA calculation
calculation [ E.J. Bylaska, J.H. Weare, and R. Kawai, Phys. Rev. B 58, R7488
(1998).], we conclude that the LDA significantly underestimates Peierls
distortion. This emphasizes that the inclusion of many-particle effects is very
important for the correct description of Peierls distortion in one-dimensional
systems.Comment: 3 figures (included). To appear in Phys. Rev.
Riemann's theorem for quantum tilted rotors
The angular momentum, angular velocity, Kelvin circulation, and vortex
velocity vectors of a quantum Riemann rotor are proven to be either (1) aligned
with a principal axis or (2) lie in a principal plane of the inertia ellipsoid.
In the second case, the ratios of the components of the Kelvin circulation to
the corresponding components of the angular momentum, and the ratios of the
components of the angular velocity to those of the vortex velocity are analytic
functions of the axes lengths.Comment: 8 pages, Phys. Rev.
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