1,549 research outputs found
Characterization and reanalyses of volcanic cinder cone morphometry exploiting advances in remote sensing: the case study of Mauna Kea shield's cone field
Experimental evidence that livestock grazing intensity affects cyclic vole population regulation processes
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Genetic markers validate using the natural phenotypic characteristics of shed feathers to identify individual northern goshawks Accipiter gentilis
Acknowledgements We are grateful to S. Piertney for allowing access to laboratory facilities and to M. Wenzel, R. Ogden and G. Murray-Dickson for their advice on genetic methods. This research was partly funded by a Natural Environment Research Council studentship NE/J500148/1 to SH and by Natural Research Limited.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Hofstadter butterflies of carbon nanotubes: Pseudofractality of the magnetoelectronic spectrum
The electronic spectrum of a two-dimensional square lattice in a
perpendicular magnetic field has become known as the Hofstadter butterfly
[Hofstadter, Phys. Rev. B 14, 2239 (1976).]. We have calculated
quasi-one-dimensional analogs of the Hofstadter butterfly for carbon nanotubes
(CNTs). For the case of single-wall CNTs, it is straightforward to implement
magnetic fields parallel to the tube axis by means of zone folding in the
graphene reciprocal lattice. We have also studied perpendicular magnetic fields
which, in contrast to the parallel case, lead to a much richer, pseudofractal
spectrum. Moreover, we have investigated magnetic fields piercing double-wall
CNTs and found strong signatures of interwall interaction in the resulting
Hofstadter butterfly spectrum, which can be understood with the help of a
minimal model. Ubiquitous to all perpendicular magnetic field spectra is the
presence of cusp catastrophes at specific values of energy and magnetic field.
Resolving the density of states along the tube circumference allows recognition
of the snake states already predicted for nonuniform magnetic fields in the
two-dimensional electron gas. An analytic model of the magnetic spectrum of
electrons on a cylindrical surface is used to explain some of the results.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures update to published versio
Towards analytical approaches to the dynamical-cluster approximation
I introduce several simplified schemes for the approximation of the
self-consistency condition of the dynamical cluster approximation. The
applicability of the schemes is tested numerically using the
fluctuation-exchange approximation as a cluster solver for the Hubbard model.
Thermodynamic properties are found to be practically indistinguishable from
those computed using the full self-consistent scheme in all cases where the
non-interacting partial density of states is replaced by simplified analytic
forms with matching 1st and 2nd moments. Green functions are also compared and
found to be in close agreement, and the density of states computed using
Pad\'{e} approximant analytic continuation shows that dynamical properties can
also be approximated effectively. Extensions to two-particle properties and
multiple bands are discussed. Simplified approaches to the dynamical cluster
approximation should lead to new analytic solutions of the Hubbard and other
models
Spontaneous decay dynamics in atomically doped carbon nanotubes
We report a strictly non-exponential spontaneous decay dynamics of an excited
two-level atom placed inside or at different distances outside a carbon
nanotube (CN). This is the result of strong non-Markovian memory effects
arising from the rapid variation of the photonic density of states with
frequency near the CN. The system exhibits vacuum-field Rabi oscillations, a
principal signature of strong atom-vacuum-field coupling, when the atom is
close enough to the nanotube surface and the atomic transition frequency is in
the vicinity of the resonance of the photonic density of states. Caused by
decreasing the atom-field coupling strength, the non-exponential decay dynamics
gives place to the exponential one if the atom moves away from the CN surface.
Thus, atom-field coupling and the character of the spontaneous decay dynamics,
respectively, may be controlled by changing the distance between the atom and
CN surface by means of a proper preparation of atomically doped CNs. This opens
routes for new challenging nanophotonics applications of atomically doped CN
systems as various sources of coherent light emitted by dopant atoms.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Disease prevention versus data privacy : using landcover maps to inform spatial epidemic models
The availability of epidemiological data in the early stages of an outbreak of an infectious disease is vital for modelers to make accurate predictions regarding the likely spread of disease and preferred intervention strategies. However, in some countries, the necessary demographic data are only available at an aggregate scale. We investigated the ability of models of livestock infectious diseases to predict epidemic spread and obtain optimal control policies in the event of imperfect, aggregated data. Taking a geographic information approach, we used land cover data to predict UK farm locations and investigated the influence of using these synthetic location data sets upon epidemiological predictions in the event of an outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease. When broadly classified land cover data were used to create synthetic farm locations, model predictions deviated significantly from those simulated on true data. However, when more resolved subclass land use data were used, moderate to highly accurate predictions of epidemic size, duration and optimal vaccination and ring culling strategies were obtained. This suggests that a geographic information approach may be useful where individual farm-level data are not available, to allow predictive analyses to be carried out regarding the likely spread of disease. This method can also be used for contingency planning in collaboration with policy makers to determine preferred control strategies in the event of a future outbreak of infectious disease in livestock
Two-Stage Rotational Disordering of a Molecular Crystal Surface: C60
We propose a two-stage mechanism for the rotational surface disordering phase
transition of a molecular crystal, as realized in C fullerite. Our
study, based on Monte Carlo simulations, uncovers the existence of a new
intermediate regime, between a low temperature ordered state,
and a high temperature disordered phase. In the intermediate
regime there is partial disorder, strongest for a subset of particularly
frustrated surface molecules. These concepts and calculations provide a
coherent understanding of experimental observations, with possible extension to
other molecular crystal surfaces.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Core reconstruction in pseudopotential calculations
A new method is presented for obtaining all-electron results from a
pseudopotential calculation. This is achieved by carrying out a localised
calculation in the region of an atomic nucleus using the embedding potential
method of Inglesfield [J.Phys. C {\bf 14}, 3795 (1981)]. In this method the
core region is \emph{reconstructed}, and none of the simplifying approximations
(such as spherical symmetry of the charge density/potential or frozen core
electrons) that previous solutions to this problem have required are made. The
embedding method requires an accurate real space Green function, and an
analysis of the errors introduced in constructing this from a set of numerical
eigenstates is given. Results are presented for an all-electron reconstruction
of bulk aluminium, for both the charge density and the density of states.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Sodium atoms and clusters on graphite: a density functional study
Sodium atoms and clusters (N<5) on graphite (0001) are studied using density
functional theory, pseudopotentials and periodic boundary conditions. A single
Na atom is observed to bind at a hollow site 2.45 A above the surface with an
adsorption energy of 0.51 eV. The small diffusion barrier of 0.06 eV indicates
a flat potential energy surface. Increased Na coverage results in a weak
adsorbate-substrate interaction, which is evident in the larger separation from
the surface in the cases of Na_3, Na_4, Na_5, and the (2x2) Na overlayer. The
binding is weak for Na_2, which has a full valence electron shell. The presence
of substrate modifies the structures of Na_3, Na_4, and Na_5 significantly, and
both Na_4 and Na_5 are distorted from planarity. The calculated formation
energies suggest that clustering of atoms is energetically favorable, and that
the open shell clusters (e.g. Na_3 and Na_5) can be more abundant on graphite
than in the gas phase. Analysis of the lateral charge density distributions of
Na and Na_3 shows a charge transfer of about 0.5 electrons in both cases.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figure
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