3,101 research outputs found
Superconducting Plate in Transverse Magnetic Field: New State
A model to describe Cooper pairs near the transition point (on temperature
and magnetic field), when the distance between them is big compared to their
sizes, is proposed. A superconducting plate whose thickness is less than the
pair size in the transverse magnetic field near the critical value is
considered as an application of the model. A new state that is energetically
more favourable than that of Abrikosov vortex state within an interval near the
transition point was obtained. The system's wave function in this state looks
like that of Laughlin's having been used in fractional quantum Hall effect
(naturally, in our case - for Cooper pairs as Bose-particles) and it
corresponds to homogeneous incompressible liquid. The state energy is
proportional to the first power of value , unlike the vortex
state energy having this value squared. The interval of the new state existence
is greater for dirty specimens.Comment: 7 page
Mesoscale simulations of surfactant dissolution and mesophase formation
The evolution of the contact zone between pure surfactant and solvent has
been studied by mesoscale simulation. It is found that mesophase formation
becomes diffusion controlled and follows the equilibrium phase diagram
adiabatically almost as soon as individual mesophases can be identified,
corresponding to times in real systems of order 10 microseconds.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, ReVTeX
Detection and measurement of planetary systems with GAIA
We use detailed numerical simulations and the Andromedae,
planetary system as a template to evaluate the capability of the ESA
Cornerstone Mission GAIA in detecting and measuring multiple planets around
solar-type stars in the neighborhood of the Solar System. For the outer two
planets of the Andromedae, system, GAIA high-precision global
astrometric measurements would provide estimates of the full set of orbital
elements and masses accurate to better than 1--10%, and would be capable of
addressing the coplanarity issue by determining the true geometry of the system
with uncertainties of order of a few degrees. Finally, we discuss the
generalization to a variety of configurations of potential planetary systems in
the solar neighborhood for which GAIA could provide accurate measurements of
unique value for the science of extra-solar planets.Comment: 4 pages, 2 pictures, accepted for publication in A&A Letter
Electrons in the Earth's Outer Radiation Zone
Electrons in the earths outer radiation bel
First Results from the Transit Ephemeris Refinement and Monitoring Survey (TERMS)
Transiting planet discoveries have yielded a plethora of information towards understanding the structure and atmospheres of extra-solar planets. These discoveries have been restricted to the short-period or low-periastron distance regimes due to the bias inherent in the geometric transit probability. Through the refinement of planetary orbital parmaters, and hence reducing the size of transit windows, long-period planets become feasible targets for photometric follow-up. Here we describe the TERMS project which is monitoring these host stars at predicted transit times
Kinetic Approach to Fractional Exclusion Statistics
We show that the kinetic approach to statistical mechanics permits an elegant
and efficient treatment of fractional exclusion statistics. By using the
exclusion-inclusion principle recently proposed [Phys. Rev. E49, 5103 (1994)]
as a generalization of the Pauli exclusion principle, which is based on a
proper definition of the transition probability between two states, we derive a
variety of different statistical distributions interpolating between bosons and
fermions. The Haldane exclusion principle and the Haldane-Wu fractional
exclusion statistics are obtained in a natural way as particular cases. The
thermodynamic properties of the statistical systems obeying the generalized
exclusion-inclusion principle are discussed.Comment: 6 pages, REVTE
Pairing via Index theorem
This work is motivated by a specific point of view: at short distances and
high energies the undoped and underdoped cuprates resemble the -flux phase
of the t-J model. The purpose of this paper is to present a mechanism by which
pairing grows out of the doped -flux phase. According to this mechanism
pairing symmetry is determined by a parameter controlling the quantum tunneling
of gauge flux quanta. For zero tunneling the symmetry is ,
while for large tunneling it is . A zero-temperature critical
point separates these two limits
Topological Quantum Phase Transitions in Topological Superconductors
In this paper we show that BF topological superconductors (insulators) exibit
phase transitions between different topologically ordered phases characterized
by different ground state degeneracy on manifold with non-trivial topology.
These phase transitions are induced by the condensation (or lack of) of
topological defects. We concentrate on the (2+1)-dimensional case where the BF
model reduce to a mixed Chern-Simons term and we show that the superconducting
phase has a ground state degeneracy and not . When the symmetry is
, namely when both gauge fields are compact, this model is
not equivalent to the sum of two Chern-Simons term with opposite chirality,
even if naively diagonalizable. This is due to the fact that U(1) symmetry
requires an ultraviolet regularization that make the diagonalization
impossible. This can be clearly seen using a lattice regularization, where the
gauge fields become angular variables. Moreover we will show that the phase in
which both gauge fields are compact is not allowed dynamically.Comment: 5 pages, no figure
Estrogen blocks the protective action of melatonin in a behavioral model of ethanol-induced hangover in mice
Melatonin has antioxidant and neuroprotective properties in human beings and experimental models, as well as 'anti-estrogenic' effects. Ethanol (EtOH) affects various behavioral parameters during a period known as ethanol-induced hangover. Our study evaluated the neuroprotective effect of melatonin on motor performance during ethanol hangover in male and female Swiss mice. The females were subjected to specific hormonal states: ovariectomized (OVX) and OVX estrogenized (OVX-E2). Mice received melatonin (25μg/ml) or vehicle in their drinking water for seven days and were given intraperitoneal (i.p.) injections of EtOH (3.8g/kg) or saline on the morning of the eighth day. Motor performance was evaluated by the tightrope test 6h after EtOH exposure (hangover onset). During ethanol hangover, males exhibited lower motor performance than controls (p<0.01) but pretreatment with melatonin significantly improved performance during hangover (p<0.05). In females, melatonin treatment before ethanol-induced hangover led to a better motor performance in OVX compared with intact females (p<0.01) and a lower performance in OVX-E2 compared with not-estrogenized OVX (p<0.05). Consequently, estrogen reversed the motor performance enhancement afforded by melatonin. We conclude that estrogen interferes with the protective action of melatonin on motor performance during ethanol hangover.Fil: Karadayian, A. G.. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Medicina; ArgentinaFil: Mc Laughlin, M. A.. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Medicina; ArgentinaFil: Cutrera, Rodolfo Angel. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Medicina; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Houssay; Argentin
Finite Density of States in a Mixed State of d_x^2-y^2+id_xy Superconductor
We have calculated the density of states of quasiparticles in a
d_x^2-y^2+id_xy superconductor, and show that in the mixed state the
quasiparticle spectrum remains gapless because of the Doppler shift by
superflow. It was found that if the d_{xy} order gap
as suggested by experiments, then thermal conductivity in accord with experimental data at lowest temperatures. This is an
appended version of the paper published in Phys. Rev. {\bf B 59}, 6024, (1999).
We now also discuss the disorder effects and analyze the H log H crossover at
small fields. We argue that H log H regime is present and disorder effect is
dominant as the field-induced seconary gap is small at small fields.Comment: This is an appended version of the paper published in Phys. Rev. {\bf
B 59}, 6024, (1999). We now also discuss the disorder effects and analyze the
H log H crossover at small fields. 3 pages, Latex file with 2 eps figure
file
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