213 research outputs found
Shape characterization of polymersome morphologies via light scattering techniques
Polymersomes, vesicles self-assembled from amphiphilic block copolymers, are well known for their robustness and for their broad applicability. Generating polymersomes of different shape is a topic of recent attention, specifically in the field of biomedical applications. To obtain information about their exact shape, tomography based on cryo-electron microscopy is usually the most preferred technique. Unfortunately, this technique is rather time consuming and expensive. Here we demonstrate an alternative analytical approach for the characterization of differently shaped polymersomes such as spheres, prolates and discs via the combination of multi-angle light scattering (MALS) and quasi-elastic light scattering (QELS). The use of these coupled techniques allowed for accurate determination of both the radius of gyration (Rg) and the hydrodynamic radius (Rh). This afforded us to determine the shape ratio ρ (Rg/Rh) with which we were able to distinguish between polymersome spheres, discs and rods.</p
A spatially-VSL gravity model with 1-PN limit of GRT
A scalar gravity model is developed according the 'geometric conventionalist'
approach introduced by Poincare (Einstein 1921, Poincare 1905, Reichenbach
1957, Gruenbaum1973). In principle this approach allows an alternative
interpretation and formulation of General Relativity Theory (GRT), with
distinct i) physical congruence standard, and ii) gravitation dynamics
according Hamilton-Lagrange mechanics, while iii) retaining empirical
indistinguishability with GRT. In this scalar model the congruence standards
have been expressed as gravitationally modified Lorentz Transformations
(Broekaert 2002). The first type of these transformations relate quantities
observed by gravitationally 'affected' (natural geometry) and 'unaffected'
(coordinate geometry) observers and explicitly reveal a spatially variable
speed of light (VSL). The second type shunts the unaffected perspective and
relates affected observers, recovering i) the invariance of the locally
observed velocity of light, and ii) the local Minkowski metric (Broekaert
2003). In the case of a static gravitation field the model retrieves the
phenomenology implied by the Schwarzschild metric. The case with proper source
kinematics is now described by introduction of a 'sweep velocity' field w: The
model then provides a hamiltonian description for particles and photons in full
accordance with the first Post-Newtonian approximation of GRT (Weinberg 1972,
Will 1993).Comment: v1: 11 pages, GR17 conf. paper, Dublin 2004, v2: WEP issue solved,
section on acceleration transformation added, text improved, more references,
same results, v3: typos removed, footnotes, added and references updated, v4:
appendix added, improved tex
Spin-Charge Separation in the Model: Magnetic and Transport Anomalies
A real spin-charge separation scheme is found based on a saddle-point state
of the model. In the one-dimensional (1D) case, such a saddle-point
reproduces the correct asymptotic correlations at the strong-coupling
fixed-point of the model. In the two-dimensional (2D) case, the transverse
gauge field confining spinon and holon is shown to be gapped at {\em finite
doping} so that a spin-charge deconfinement is obtained for its first time in
2D. The gap in the gauge fluctuation disappears at half-filling limit, where a
long-range antiferromagnetic order is recovered at zero temperature and spinons
become confined. The most interesting features of spin dynamics and transport
are exhibited at finite doping where exotic {\em residual} couplings between
spin and charge degrees of freedom lead to systematic anomalies with regard to
a Fermi-liquid system. In spin dynamics, a commensurate antiferromagnetic
fluctuation with a small, doping-dependent energy scale is found, which is
characterized in momentum space by a Gaussian peak at (, ) with
a doping-dependent width (, is the doping
concentration). This commensurate magnetic fluctuation contributes a
non-Korringa behavior for the NMR spin-lattice relaxation rate. There also
exits a characteristic temperature scale below which a pseudogap behavior
appears in the spin dynamics. Furthermore, an incommensurate magnetic
fluctuation is also obtained at a {\em finite} energy regime. In transport, a
strong short-range phase interference leads to an effective holon Lagrangian
which can give rise to a series of interesting phenomena including linear-
resistivity and Hall-angle. We discuss the striking similarities of these
theoretical features with those found in the high- cuprates and give aComment: 70 pages, RevTex, hard copies of 7 figures available upon request;
minor revisions in the text and references have been made; To be published in
July 1 issue of Phys. Rev. B52, (1995
On the violation of the Fermi-liquid picture in two-dimensional systems owing to the Van-Hove singularities
We consider the two-dimensional t-t' Hubbard model with the Fermi level being
close to the van Hove singularities. The phase diagram of the model is
discussed. In a broad energy region the self-energy at the singularity points
has a nearly-linear energy dependence. The corresponding correction to the
density of states is proportional to ln^3(e). Both real- and imaginary part of
the self-energy increase near the quantum phase transition into magnetically
ordered or superconducting phase which implies violation of the Fermi-liquid
behavior. The application of the results to cuprates is discussed.Comment: 16 pages, RevTeX, 5 figures; The errors of the published version (PRB
64, 205105, 2001) are correcte
Classical Simulation of Relativistic Quantum Mechanics in Periodic Optical Structures
Spatial and/or temporal propagation of light waves in periodic optical
structures offers a rather unique possibility to realize in a purely classical
setting the optical analogues of a wide variety of quantum phenomena rooted in
relativistic wave equations. In this work a brief overview of a few optical
analogues of relativistic quantum phenomena, based on either spatial light
transport in engineered photonic lattices or on temporal pulse propagation in
Bragg grating structures, is presented. Examples include spatial and temporal
photonic analogues of the Zitterbewegung of a relativistic electron, Klein
tunneling, vacuum decay and pair-production, the Dirac oscillator, the
relativistic Kronig-Penney model, and optical realizations of non-Hermitian
extensions of relativistic wave equations.Comment: review article (invited), 14 pages, 7 figures, 105 reference
Phase diagram of thiourea at atmospheric pressure under electric field : a theoretical analysis
The phase diagram of thiourea in the (E, T) plane at atmospheric pressure P0 is discussed in terms of a single harmonic approximation for the modulated phase. We use a Landau-Ginzburg approach of the type used to discuss Lifshitz points ; in this approach the temperature dependence of the square of the modulation wave vector is accounted for by the temperature dependence of the negative exchange stiffness constant. This theory allows qualitative as well as semi-quantitative understanding of the phase diagram, which is shown to exhibit a tricritical point in the close neighbourhood of an isolated critical point.Nous discutons le diagramme de phase de la thiourée dans le plan (E , T) à la pression atmosphérique P0, dans une approximation à une seule harmonique pour la phase modulée. Nous utilisons une approche à la Landau-Ginzburg, du genre de celle qui permet de discuter un point de Lifshitz : la variation thermique du carré du vecteur d'onde de la modulation est gouvernée par la variation thermique de la raideur d'échange négative. Cette théorie permet de comprendre qualitativement et semi-quantitativement le diagramme de phase. Ce dernier possède un point tricritique dans le voisinage d'un point critique isolé
- …