5,055 research outputs found
Universality in adsorbate ordering on nanotube surfaces
Numerically efficient transfer matrix technique for studying statistics of
coherent adsorbates on small nanotubes has been developed. In the framework of
a realistic microscopic model fitted to the data of ab initio calculations
taken from literature sources, the ordering of potassium adsorbate on (6,0)
single-walled carbon nanotube has been studied. Special attention has been
payed to the phase transition-like abrupt changes seen in the adsorption
isotherms at low temperature. It has been found that the behavior during the
transitions conforms with the universality hypothesis of the theory of critical
phenomena and is qualitatively the same as in the one dimensional Ising model.
Quantitatively the critical behavior can be fully described by two parameters.
Their qualitative connection with the properties of interphase boundaries is
suggested but further research is needed to develop a quantitative theory.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures; some typos correcte
On the rate of convergence for critical crossing probabilities
For the site percolation model on the triangular lattice and certain generalizations for which Cardy’s Formula has been established we acquire a power law estimate for the rate of convergence of the crossing probabilities to Cardy’s Formula
The evolution with temperature of magnetic polaron state in an antiferromagnetic chain with impurities
The thermal behavior of a one-dimensional antiferromagnetic chain doped by
donor impurities was analyzed. The ground state of such a chain corresponds to
the formation of a set of ferromagnetically correlated regions localized near
impurities (bound magnetic polarons). At finite temperatures, the magnetic
structure of the chain was calculated simultaneously with the wave function of
a conduction electron bound by an impurity. The calculations were performed
using an approximate variational method and a Monte Carlo simulation. Both
these methods give similar results. The analysis of the temperature dependence
of correlation functions for neighboring local spins demonstrated that the
ferromagnetic correlations inside a magnetic polaron remain significant even
above the N\'eel temperature implying rather high stability of the
magnetic polaron state. In the case when the electron-impurity coupling energy
is not too high (for lower that the electron hopping integral ), the
magnetic polaron could be depinned from impurity retaining its magnetic
structure. Such a depinning occurs at temperatures of the order of . At
even higher temperatures () magnetic polarons disappear and the chain
becomes completely disordered.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures, RevTe
Does Young's equation hold on the nanoscale? A Monte Carlo test for the binary Lennard-Jones fluid
When a phase-separated binary () mixture is exposed to a wall, that
preferentially attracts one of the components, interfaces between A-rich and
B-rich domains in general meet the wall making a contact angle .
Young's equation describes this angle in terms of a balance between the
interfacial tension and the surface tensions ,
between, respectively, the - and -rich phases and the wall,
. By Monte Carlo simulations
of bridges, formed by one of the components in a binary Lennard-Jones liquid,
connecting the two walls of a nanoscopic slit pore, is estimated from
the inclination of the interfaces, as a function of the wall-fluid interaction
strength. The information on the surface tensions ,
are obtained independently from a new thermodynamic integration method, while
is found from the finite-size scaling analysis of the
concentration distribution function. We show that Young's equation describes
the contact angles of the actual nanoscale interfaces for this model rather
accurately and location of the (first order) wetting transition is estimated.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Many-body position operator in lattice fermionic systems with periodic boundary conditions
A total position operator in the position representation is derived for
lattice fermionic systems with periodic boundary conditions. The operator is
shown to be Hermitian, the generator of translations in momentum space, and its
time derivative is shown to correspond to the total current operator in a
periodic system. The operator is such that its moments can be calculated up to
any order. To demonstrate its utility finite size scaling is applied to the
Brinkman-Rice transition as well as metallic and insulating Gutzwiller
wavefunctions.Comment: to appear in Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and General
(reference will be added later
Percolation in the Harmonic Crystal and Voter Model in three dimensions
We investigate the site percolation transition in two strongly correlated
systems in three dimensions: the massless harmonic crystal and the voter model.
In the first case we start with a Gibbs measure for the potential,
, , and , a scalar height variable, and define
occupation variables for . The probability
of a site being occupied, is then a function of . In the voter model we
consider the stationary measure, in which each site is either occupied or
empty, with probability . In both cases the truncated pair correlation of
the occupation variables, , decays asymptotically like .
Using some novel Monte Carlo simulation methods and finite size scaling we find
accurate values of as well as the critical exponents for these systems.
The latter are different from that of independent percolation in , as
expected from the work of Weinrib and Halperin [WH] for the percolation
transition of systems with [A. Weinrib and B. Halperin,
Phys. Rev. B 27, 413 (1983)]. In particular the correlation length exponent
is very close to the predicted value of 2 supporting the conjecture by WH
that is exact.Comment: 8 figures. new version significantly different from the old one,
includes new results, figures et
Ferromagnetic phase transition in a Heisenberg fluid: Monte Carlo simulations and Fisher corrections to scaling
The magnetic phase transition in a Heisenberg fluid is studied by means of
the finite size scaling (FSS) technique. We find that even for larger systems,
considered in an ensemble with fixed density, the critical exponents show
deviations from the expected lattice values similar to those obtained
previously. This puzzle is clarified by proving the importance of the leading
correction to the scaling that appears due to Fisher renormalization with the
critical exponent equal to the absolute value of the specific heat exponent
. The appearance of such new corrections to scaling is a general
feature of systems with constraints.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures; submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
In vivo detection of cortical optical changes associated with seizure activity with optical coherence tomography.
The most common technology for seizure detection is with electroencephalography (EEG), which has low spatial resolution and minimal depth discrimination. Optical techniques using near-infrared (NIR) light have been used to improve upon EEG technology and previous research has suggested that optical changes, specifically changes in near-infrared optical scattering, may precede EEG seizure onset in in vivo models. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a high resolution, minimally invasive imaging technique, which can produce depth resolved cross-sectional images. In this study, OCT was used to detect changes in optical properties of cortical tissue in vivo in mice before and during the induction of generalized seizure activity. We demonstrated that a significant decrease (P < 0.001) in backscattered intensity during seizure progression can be detected before the onset of observable manifestations of generalized (stage-5) seizures. These results indicate the feasibility of minimally-invasive optical detection of seizures with OCT
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