2,713 research outputs found
Spin melting and refreezing driven by uniaxial compression on a dipolar hexagonal plate
We investigate freezing characteristics of a finite dipolar hexagonal plate
by the Monte Carlo simulation. The hexagonal plate is cut out from a piled
triangular lattice of three layers with FCC-like (ABCABC) stacking structure.
In the present study an annealing simulation is performed for the dipolar plate
uniaxially compressed in the direction of layer-piling. We find spin melting
and refreezing driven by the uniaxial compression. Each of the melting and
refreezing corresponds one-to-one with a change of the ground states induced by
compression. The freezing temperatures of the ground-state orders differ
significantly from each other, which gives rise to the spin melting and
refreezing of the present interest. We argue that these phenomena are
originated by a finite size effect combined with peculiar anisotropic nature of
the dipole-dipole interaction.Comment: Proceedings of the Highly Frustrated Magnetism (HFM2006) conference.
To appear in a special issue of J. Phys. Condens. Matte
Quartic Anomalous Couplings in Colliders
We study the constraints on the vertices ,
, and that can be obtained from
triple-gauge-boson production at the next generation of linear
colliders operating in the mode. We analyze the processes
(, or ) and show that these reactions
increase the potential of machines to search for anomalous
four-gauge-boson interactions.Comment: 15 pages, Latex file using ReVteX, 4 uufiled figures include
Optical observations of NEA 162173 (1999 JU3) during the 2011-2012 apparition
Near-Earth asteroid 162173 (1999 JU3) is a potential target of two asteroid
sample return missions, not only because of its accessibility but also because
of the first C-type asteroid for exploration missions. The lightcurve-related
physical properties of this object were investigated during the 2011-2012
apparition. We aim to confirm the physical parameters useful for JAXA's
Hayabusa 2 mission, such as rotational period, absolute magnitude, and phase
function. Our data complement previous studies that did not cover low phase
angles. With optical imagers and 1-2 m class telescopes, we acquired the
photometric data at different phase angles. We independently derived the
rotational lightcurve and the phase curve of the asteroid. We have analyzed the
lightcurve of 162173 (1999 JU3), and derived a synodic rotational period of
7.625 +/- 0.003 h, the axis ratio a/b = 1.12. The absolute magnitude H_R =
18.69 +/- 0.07 mag and the phase slope of G = -0.09 +/- 0.03 were also obtained
based on the observations made during the 2011-2012 apparition.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Neutrino Geophysics at Baksan I: Possible Detection of Georeactor Antineutrinos
J.M. Herndon in 90-s proposed a natural nuclear fission georeactor at the
center of the Earth with a power output of 3-10 TW as an energy source to
sustain the Earth magnetic field. R.S. Raghavan in 2002 y. pointed out that
under certain condition antineutrinos generated in georeactor can be detected
using massive scintillation detectors. We consider the underground Baksan
Neutrino Observatory (4800 m.w.e.) as a possible site for developments in
Geoneutrino physics. Here the intrinsic background level of less than one
event/year in a liquid scintillation ~1000 target ton detector can be achieved
and the main source of background is the antineutrino flux from power reactors.
We find that this flux is ~10 times lower than at KamLAND detector site and two
times lower than at Gran Sasso laboratory and thus at Baksan the georeactor
hypothesis can be conclusively tested. We also discuss possible search for
composition of georector burning nuclear fuel by analysis of the antineutrino
energy spectrum.Comment: 7 pages in LaTeX, 3 PS figures, Submitted to Physics of Atomic Nucle
The multilevel trigger system of the DIRAC experiment
The multilevel trigger system of the DIRAC experiment at CERN is presented.
It includes a fast first level trigger as well as various trigger processors to
select events with a pair of pions having a low relative momentum typical of
the physical process under study. One of these processors employs the drift
chamber data, another one is based on a neural network algorithm and the others
use various hit-map detector correlations. Two versions of the trigger system
used at different stages of the experiment are described. The complete system
reduces the event rate by a factor of 1000, with efficiency 95% of
detecting the events in the relative momentum range of interest.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figure
Observation of spin-polarized bands and domain-dependent Fermi arcs in polar Weyl semimetal MoTe
We investigate the surface electronic structures of polar 1T'-MoTe2, the Weyl
semimetal candidate realized through the nonpolar-polar structural phase
transition, by utilizing the laser angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy
(ARPES) combined with first-principles calculations. Two kinds of domains with
different surface band dispersions are observed from a single-crystalline
sample. The spin-resolved measurements further reveal that the spin
polarizations of the surface and the bulk-derived states show the different
domain-dependences, indicating the opposite bulk polarity. For both domains,
some segment-like band features resembling the Fermi arcs are clearly observed.
The patterns of the arcs present the marked contrast between the two domains,
respectively agreeing well with the slab calculation of (0 0 1) and (0 0 -1)
surfaces. The present result strongly suggests that the Fermi arc connects the
identical pair of Weyl nodes on one side of the polar crystal surface, whereas
it connects between the different pairs of Weyl nodes on the other side.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Protein design in a lattice model of hydrophobic and polar amino acids
A general strategy is described for finding which amino acid sequences have
native states in a desired conformation (inverse design). The approach is used
to design sequences of 48 hydrophobic and polar aminoacids on three-dimensional
lattice structures. Previous studies employing a sequence-space Monte-Carlo
technique resulted in the successful design of one sequence in ten attempts.
The present work also entails the exploration of conformations that compete
significantly with the target structure for being its ground state. The design
procedure is successful in all the ten cases.Comment: RevTeX, 12 pages, 1 figur
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