603 research outputs found
Effects of the Nearest-Neighbour Coulomb Interactions on the Ground State of the Periodic Anderson Model
The magnetic and non-magnetic ground states of the periodic Anderson model
with Coulomb interaction between -electrons on the nearest-neighbour(NN)
sites are investigated using a variational method, which gives exact
calculation of the expectation values in the limit of infinite dimensions. It
is shown that for a critical value of NN Coulomb interactions the magnetic
ground state of the periodic Anderson model in the Kondo regime is unstable.
Factors in terms of the physical processes responsible for instability of the
magnetic ground state are also discussed. Our study indicates the importance of
the NN Coulomb interactions for correlated two band models.Comment: RevTeX, 6 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
A tapered multi-gap multi-aperture pseudospark-sourced electron gun based X-band slow wave oscillator
The experimental study of a tapered, multi-gap, multi-aperture pseudospark-sourced electron gun based X-band plasma assisted slow wave oscillator is presented. The designed electron gun is based on the pseudospark discharge concept and has been used to generate a high current density and high energy electron beam simultaneously. The distribution of apertures has been arranged such that the field penetration potency inside the backspace of the hollow-cathode is different while passing through the tapered gap region. This leads to non-concurrent ignition of the discharge through all the channels which is, in general, quite challenging in the case of multi-aperture plasma cathode electron gun geometries. Multiple and successive hollow cathode phases are reported from this electron gun geometry, which have been confirmed using simulations. This geometry also has led to the achievement of ∼71% fill factor inside the slow wave oscillator for an electron beam of energy of 20 keV and a beam current density in the range of 115-190 A/cm2 at a working argon gas pressure of 18 Pa. The oscillator has generated broadband microwave output in the frequency range of 10-11.7 GHz with a peak power of ∼10 kW for ∼50 ns
On the Experimental Evidence for Possible Superconductivity in LK99
The desire to create an energy efficient world is bound to be incomplete
without the discovery of a room temperature superconductor at ambient pressure.
A recent report on the room-temperature ambient-pressure superconductor has
inspired scientists to study the Cu doped Lead apatite named as LK-99. Here, we
have synthesized Cu doped LK-99 and Ni-doped LK-99 compounds and studied their
temperature dependent transport and magnetization behavior. In spite of the
presence of impurity phase CuS, the temperature dependent resistance shows
an insulating nature of the sample. The radio frequency penetration depth
measurement unveils the absence of diamagnetic flux expulsion in this sample.
The temperature dependent ac susceptibility measurements reveal the
paramagnetic nature of the Ni doped LK-99
A novel AhR ligand, 2AI, protects the retina from environmental stress.
Various retinal degenerative diseases including dry and neovascular age-related macular degeneration (AMD), retinitis pigmentosa, and diabetic retinopathy are associated with the degeneration of the retinal pigmented epithelial (RPE) layer of the retina. This consequently results in the death of rod and cone photoreceptors that they support, structurally and functionally leading to legal or complete blindness. Therefore, developing therapeutic strategies to preserve cellular homeostasis in the RPE would be a favorable asset in the clinic. The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) is a conserved, environmental ligand-dependent, per ARNT-sim (PAS) domain containing bHLH transcription factor that mediates adaptive response to stress via its downstream transcriptional targets. Using in silico, in vitro and in vivo assays, we identified 2,2'-aminophenyl indole (2AI) as a potent synthetic ligand of AhR that protects RPE cells in vitro from lipid peroxidation cytotoxicity mediated by 4-hydroxynonenal (4HNE) as well as the retina in vivo from light-damage. Additionally, metabolic characterization of this molecule by LC-MS suggests that 2AI alters the lipid metabolism of RPE cells, enhancing the intracellular levels of palmitoleic acid. Finally, we show that, as a downstream effector of 2AI-mediated AhR activation, palmitoleic acid protects RPE cells from 4HNE-mediated stress, and light mediated retinal degeneration in mice
On wealth and the diversity of friendships: high social class people around the world have fewer international friends
Having international social ties carries many potential advantages, including access to novel ideas and greater commercial opportunities. Yet little is known about who forms more international friendships. Here, we propose social class plays a key role in determining people's internationalism. We conducted two studies to test whether social class is related positively to internationalism (the building social class hypothesis) or negatively to internationalism (the restricting social class hypothesis). In Study 1, we found that among individuals in the United States, social class was negatively related to percentage of friends on Facebook that are outside the United States. In Study 2, we extended these findings to the global level by analyzing country-level data on Facebook friends formed in 2011 (nearly 50 billion friendships) across 187 countries. We found that people from higher social class countries (as indexed by GDP per capita) had lower levels of internationalism—that is, they made more friendships domestically than abroad
Self-organized stable pacemakers near the onset of birhythmicity
General amplitude equations for reaction-diffusion systems near to the soft
onset of birhythmicity described by a supercritical pitchfork-Hopf bifurcation
are derived. Using these equations and applying singular perturbation theory,
we show that stable autonomous pacemakers represent a generic kind of
spatiotemporal patterns in such systems. This is verified by numerical
simulations, which also show the existence of breathing and swinging pacemaker
solutions. The drift of self-organized pacemakers in media with spatial
parameter gradients is analytically and numerically investigated.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Observation of a three-dimensional fractional Hall response in HfTe5
Interacting electrons in two dimensions can bind magnetic flux lines to form
composite quasiparticles with fractional electric charge, manifesting
themselves in the fractional quantum Hall effect (FQHE). Although the FQHE has
also been predicted to occur in three dimensions, it has not yet been
experimentally observed. Here, we report the observation of fractional plateaus
in the Hall conductivity of the bulk semimetal HfTe5 at magnetic fields beyond
the quantum limit. The plateaus are accompanied by Shubnikov-de Haas minima of
the longitudinal electrical resistivity. The height of the Hall plateaus is
given by twice the Fermi wave vector in the direction of the applied magnetic
field and scales with integer and particular fractional multiples of the
conductance quantum. Our findings are consistent with strong electron-electron
interactions, stabilizing a fractionalized variant of the Hall effect in three
dimensions.Comment: 35 pages with 17 figure
Medical Management of Infants With Supraventricular Tachycardia: Results From a Registry and Review of the Literature
BACKGROUND: Several medication choices are available for acute and prophylactic treatment of refractory supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) in infants. There are almost no controlled trials, and medication choices are not necessarily evidence based. Our objective was to report the effectiveness of management strategies for infant SVT.
METHODS: A registry of infants admitted to hospital with re-entrant SVT and no haemodynamically significant heart disease were prospectively followed at 11 international tertiary care centres. In addition, a systematic review of studies on infant re-entrant SVT in MEDLINE and EMBASE was conducted. Data on demographics, symptoms, acute and maintenance treatments, and outcomes were collected.
RESULTS: A total of 2534 infants were included: n = 108 from the registry (median age, 9 days [0-324 days], 70.8% male) and n = 2426 from the literature review (median age, 14 days; 62.3% male). Propranolol was the most prevalent acute (61.4%) and maintenance treatment (53.8%) in the Registry, whereas digoxin was used sparingly (4.0% and 3.8%, respectively). Propranolol and digoxin were used frequently in the literature acutely (31% and 33.2%) and for maintenance (17.8% and 10.1%) (
CONCLUSION: This was the largest cohort of infants with SVT analysed to date. Digoxin monotherapy use was rare amongst contemporary paediatric cardiologists. There was limited evidence to support one medication over another. Overall, recurrence and mortality rates on antiarrhythmic treatment were low
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