24,995 research outputs found
The interplay of university and industry through the FP5 network
To improve the quality of life in a modern society it is essential to reduce
the distance between basic research and applications, whose crucial roles in
shaping today's society prompt us to seek their understanding. Existing studies
on this subject, however, have neglected the network character of the
interaction between university and industry. Here we use state-of-the-art
network theory methods to analyze this interplay in the so-called Framework
Programme--an initiative which sets out the priorities for the European Union's
research and technological development. In particular we study in the 5th
Framework Programme (FP5) the role played by companies and scientific
institutions and how they contribute to enhance the relationship between
research and industry. Our approach provides quantitative evidence that while
firms are size hierarchically organized, universities and research
organizations keep the network from falling into pieces, paving the way for an
effective knowledge transfer.Comment: 21 pages (including Appendix), 8 figures. Published online at
http://stacks.iop.org/1367-2630/9/18
Zero-temperature spin-glass freezing in self-organized arrays of Co nanoparticles
We study, by means of magnetic susceptibility and magnetic aging experiments,
the nature of the glassy magnetic dynamics in arrays of Co nanoparticles,
self-organized in N layers from N=1 (two-dimensional limit) up to N=20
(three-dimensional limit). We find no qualitative differences between the
magnetic responses measured in these two limits, in spite of the fact that no
spin-glass phase is expected above T=0 in two dimensions. More specifically,
all the phenomena (critical slowing down, flattening of the field-cooled
magnetization below the blocking temperature and the magnetic memory induced by
aging) that are usually associated with this phase look qualitatively the same
for two-dimensional and three-dimensional arrays. The activated scaling law
that is typical of systems undergoing a phase transition at zero temperature
accounts well for the critical slowing down of the dc and ac susceptibilities
of all samples. Our data show also that dynamical magnetic correlations
achieved by aging a nanoparticle array below its superparamagnetic blocking
temperature extend mainly to nearest neighbors. Our experiments suggest that
the glassy magnetic dynamics of these nanoparticle arrays is associated with a
zero-temperature spin-glass transition.Comment: 6 pages 6 figure
XMM-Newton and Chandra observations of G272.2-3.2. Evidence of stellar ejecta in the central region
We aim to study the spatial distribution of the physical and chemical
properties of the X-ray emitting plasma of the supernova remnant G272.2-3.2, in
order to get important constraints on its ionization stage, on the progenitor
supernova explosion, and the age of the remnant. We report combined XMM-Newton
and Chandra images, median photon energy map, silicon and sulfur equivalent
width maps, and a spatially resolved spectral analysis for a set of regions of
the remnant. Complementary radio and H{\alpha} observations, available in the
literature, are also used to study the multi-wavelength connection of all
detected emissions. The X-ray morphology of the remnant displays an overall
structure with an almost circular appearance, a centrally brightened hard
region, with a peculiar elongated hard structure oriented along the
northwest-southeast direction of the central part. The X-ray spectral study of
the regions shows distinct K{\alpha} emission-line features of metal elements,
confirming the thermal origin of the emission. The X-ray spectra are well
represented by an absorbed VNEI thermal plasma model, which produces elevated
abundances of Si, S, and Fe in the circular central region, typical of ejecta
material. The values of abundances found in the central region of the SNR favor
a Type Ia progenitor for this remnant. The outer region shows abundances below
the solar value, as expected if the emission arises from the shocked ISM. The
relatively low ionization timescales suggests non-equilibrium ionization. We
identify the location of the contact discontinuity. Its distance to the outer
shock is higher than expected for expansion in a uniform media, what suggests
that the remnant spent most of its time in a more dense medium.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
Harmonic states for the free particle
Different families of states, which are solutions of the time-dependent free
Schr\"odinger equation, are imported from the harmonic oscillator using the
Quantum Arnold Transformation introduced in a previous paper. Among them,
infinite series of states are given that are normalizable, expand the whole
space of solutions, are spatially multi-localized and are eigenstates of a
suitably defined number operator. Associated with these states new sets of
coherent and squeezed states for the free particle are defined representing
traveling, squeezed, multi-localized wave packets. These states are also
constructed in higher dimensions, leading to the quantum mechanical version of
the Hermite-Gauss and Laguerre-Gauss states of paraxial wave optics. Some
applications of these new families of states and procedures to experimentally
realize and manipulate them are outlined.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures. Title changed, content added, references adde
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