113,916 research outputs found

    Dynamic microscopic structures and dielectric response in the cubic-to-tetragonal phase transition for BaTiO3 studied by first-principles molecular dynamics simulation

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    The dynamic structures of the cubic and tetragonal phase in BaTiO3 and its dielectric response above the cubic-to-tetragonal phase transition temperature (Tp) are studied by first-principles molecular dynamics (MD) simulation. It's shown that the phase transition is due to the condensation of one of the transverse correlations. Calculation of the phonon properties for both the cubic and tetragonal phase shows a saturation of the soft mode frequency near 60 cm-1 near Tp and advocates its order-disorder nature. Our first-principles calculation leads directly to a two modes feature of the dielectric function above Tp [Phys. Rev. B 28, 6097 (1983)], which well explains the long time controversies between experiments and theories

    Information filtering via Iterative Refinement

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    With the explosive growth of accessible information, expecially on the Internet, evaluation-based filtering has become a crucial task. Various systems have been devised aiming to sort through large volumes of information and select what is likely to be more relevant. In this letter we analyse a new ranking method, where the reputation of information providers is determined self-consistently.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication on Europhysics Letter

    Opinion diversity and community formation in adaptive networks

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    It is interesting and of significant importance to investigate how network structures co-evolve with opinions. The existing models of such co-evolution typically lead to the final states where network nodes either reach a global consensus or break into separated communities, each of which holding its own community consensus. Such results, however, can hardly explain the richness of real-life observations that opinions are always diversified with no global or even community consensus, and people seldom, if not never, totally cut off themselves from dissenters. In this article, we show that, a simple model integrating consensus formation, link rewiring and opinion change allows complex system dynamics to emerge, driving the system into a dynamic equilibrium with co-existence of diversified opinions. Specifically, similar opinion holders may form into communities yet with no strict community consensus; and rather than being separated into disconnected communities, different communities remain to be interconnected by non-trivial proportion of inter-community links. More importantly, we show that the complex dynamics may lead to different numbers of communities at steady state with a given tolerance between different opinion holders. We construct a framework for theoretically analyzing the co-evolution process. Theoretical analysis and extensive simulation results reveal some useful insights into the complex co-evolution process, including the formation of dynamic equilibrium, the phase transition between different steady states with different numbers of communities, and the dynamics between opinion distribution and network modularity, etc.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, Journa

    Manifestation of superfluidity in an evolving Bose-condensed gas

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    We study the generation of excitations due to an ''impurity''(static perturbation) placed into an oscillating Bose-condensed gas in the time-dependent trapping field. It is shown that there are two regions for the position of the local perturbation. In the first region the condensate flows around the ''impurity'' without generation of excitations demonstrating superfluid properties. In the second region the creation of excitations occurs, at least within a limited time interval, revealing destruction of superfluidity. The phenomenon can be studied by measuring the damping of condensate oscillations at different positions of the ''impurity''

    LL-valley electron gg factor in bulk GaAs and AlAs

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    We study the Land\'e gg-factor of conduction electrons in the LL-valley of bulk GaAs and AlAs by using a three-band kp\mathbf{k}\cdot\mathbf{p} model together with the tight-binding model. We find that the LL-valley gg-factor is highly anisotropic, and can be characterized by two components, gg_{\perp} and gg_{\|}. gg_{\perp} is close to the free electron Land\'e factor but gg_{\|} is strongly affected by the remote bands. The contribution from remote bands on gg_{\|} depends on how the remote bands are treated. However, when the magnetic field is in the Voigt configuration, which is widely used in the experiments, different models give almost identical gg-factor.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, To be published in J. App. Phys. 104, 200

    On freeze-out problem in hydro-kinetic approach to A+A collisions

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    A new method for evaluating spectra and correlations in the hydrodynamic approach is proposed. It is based on an analysis of Boltzmann equations (BE) in terms of probabilities for constituent particles to escape from the interacting system. The conditions of applicability of Cooper-Frye freeze-out prescription are considered within the method. The results are illustrated with a non-relativistic exact solution of BE for expanding spherical fireball as well as with approximate solutions for ellipsoidally expanding ones.Comment: 4 pages including 2 figures, RevTex, stylistic and clarifying corrections are made, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let

    Heat transport study of the spin liquid candidate 1T-TaS2

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    We present the ultra-low-temperature thermal conductivity measurements on single crystals of the prototypical charge-density-wave material 1TT-TaS2_2, which was recently argued to be a candidate for quantum spin liquid. Our experiments show that the residual linear term of thermal conductivity at zero field is essentially zero, within the experimental accuracy. Furthermore, the thermal conductivity is found to be insensitive to the magnetic field up to 9 T. These results clearly demonstrate the absence of itinerant magnetic excitations with fermionic statistics in bulk 1TT-TaS2_2 and, thus, put a strong constraint on the theories of the ground state of this material.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Nonlinear acoustic and microwave absorption in disordered semiconductors

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    Nonlinear hopping absorption of ultrasound and electromagnetic waves in amorphous and doped semiconductors is considered. It is shown that even at low amplitudes of the electric (or acoustic) field the nonlinear corrections to the relaxational absorption appear anomalously large. The physical reason for such behavior is that the nonlinear contribution is dominated by a small group of close impurity pairs having one electron per pair. Since the group is small, it is strongly influenced by the field. An external magnetic field strongly influences the absorption by changing the overlap between the pair components' wave functions. It is important that the influence is substantially different for the linear and nonlinear contributions. This property provides an additional tool to extract nonlinear effects.Comment: correction : misspelled name in references correcte
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