4,315 research outputs found
The Pendragon Cycle: Celtic Christianity in the Arthurian Legend through Bards, Prophets, and Historians
This thesis centers on The Pendragon Cycle as a late-twentieth century retelling of the Arthurian legend by the American author Stephen Lawhead. Through The Pendragon Cycle, Lawhead emphasizes the historical foundation of Arthuriana in the setting of fifth-century Britain while simultaneously incorporating mythology from the Atlanteans, to the Celtic Otherworld, to the Holy Grail. Lawhead draws inspiration from medieval Welsh and Christian characterizations of the legend such as medieval historical chronicles like The History of the Kings of Britain by Geoffrey of Monmouth; following in the footsteps of medieval historians, Lawhead uses the medium of the Arthurian legend to present a message of spiritual, evangelic Christianity in opposition to the neo-Pagan shift of Arthuriana in the late twentieth century, creating an argument for a “neo-Christianity” that is grounded in the spiritual and natural values of Celtic belief systems
Derivation of Source-Free Maxwell and Gravitational Radiation Equations by Group Theoretical Methods
We derive source-free Maxwell-like equations in flat spacetime for any
helicity "j" by comparing the transformation properties of the 2(2j+1) states
that carry the manifestly covariant representations of the inhomogeneous
Lorentz group with the transformation properties of the two helicity "j" states
that carry the irreducible representations of this group. The set of
constraints so derived involves a pair of curl equations and a pair of
divergence equations. These reduce to the free-field Maxwell equations for j=1
and the analogous equations coupling the gravito-electric and the
gravito-magnetic fields for j=2.Comment: 15 pages, no figures, to appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
Echolocation by Quasiparticles
It is shown that the local density of states (LDOS), measured in an Scanning
Tunneling Microscopy (STM) experiment, at a single tip position contains
oscillations as a function of Energy, due to quasiparticle interference, which
is related to the positions of nearby scatterers. We propose a method of STM
data analysis based on this idea, which can be used to locate the scatterers.
In the case of a superconductor, the method can potentially distinguish the
nature of the scattering by a particular impurity.Comment: 4+ page
Two-Dimensional Inversion Asymmetric Topological Insulators in Functionalized III-Bi Bilayers
The search for inversion asymmetric topological insulators (IATIs) persists
as an effect for realizing new topological phenomena. However, so for only a
few IATIs have been discovered and there is no IATI exhibiting a large band gap
exceeding 0.6 eV. Using first-principles calculations, we predict a series of
new IATIs in saturated Group III-Bi bilayers. We show that all these IATIs
preserve extraordinary large bulk band gaps which are well above
room-temperature, allowing for viable applications in room-temperature
spintronic devices. More importantly, most of these systems display large bulk
band gaps that far exceed 0.6 eV and, part of them even are up to ~1 eV, which
are larger than any IATIs ever reported. The nontrivial topological situation
in these systems is confirmed by the identified band inversion of the band
structures and an explicit demonstration of the topological edge states.
Interestingly, the nontrivial band order characteristics are intrinsic to most
of these materials and are not subject to spin-orbit coupling. Owning to their
asymmetric structures, remarkable Rashba spin splitting is produced in both the
valence and conduction bands of these systems. These predictions strongly
revive these new systems as excellent candidates for IATI-based novel
applications.Comment: 17 pages,5figure
The Structure of Barium in the hcp Phase Under High Pressure
Recent experimental results on two hcp phases of barium under high pressure
show interesting variation of the lattice parameters. They are here interpreted
in terms of electronic structure calculation by using the LMTO method and
generalized pseudopotential theory (GPT) with a NFE-TBB approach. In phase II
the dramatic drop in c/a is an instability analogous to that in the group II
metals but with the transfer of s to d electrons playing a crucial role in Ba.
Meanwhile in phase V, the instability decrease a lot due to the core repulsion
at very high pressure. PACS numbers: 62.50+p, 61.66Bi, 71.15.Ap, 71.15Hx,
71.15LaComment: 29 pages, 8 figure
Generation of spiral bevel gears with zero kinematical errors and computer aided tooth contact analysis
Kinematic errors in spiral bevel gears are a major source of noise and vibrations in transmissions. A method for the generation of Gleason's spiral bevel gears which provides conjugated gear tooth surfaces and an improved bearing contact was developed. A computer program for the simulation of meshing, misalignment, and bearing contact was written
Total energy differences between SiC polytypes revisited
The total energy differences between various SiC polytypes (3C, 6H, 4H, 2H,
15R and 9R) were calculated using the full-potential linear muffin-tin orbital
method using the Perdew-Wang-(91) generalized gradient approximation to the
exchange-correlation functional in the density functional method. Numerical
convergence versus k-point sampling and basis set completeness are demonstrated
to be better than 1 meV/atom. The parameters of several generalized anisotropic
next-nearest-neighbor Ising models are extracted and their significance and
consequences for epitaxial growth are discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, Latex, uses epsfig and revte
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