16,156 research outputs found
Quantum Effects and Broken Symmetries in Frustrated Antiferromagnets
We investigate the interplay between frustration and zero-point quantum
fluctuations in the ground state of the triangular and Heisenberg
antiferromagnets, using finite-size spin-wave theory, exact diagonalization,
and quantum Monte Carlo methods. In the triangular Heisenberg antiferromagnet,
by performing a systematic size-scaling analysis, we have obtained strong
evidences for a gapless spectrum and a finite value of the thermodynamic order
parameter, thus confirming the existence of long-range N\'eel order.The good
agreement between the finite-size spin-wave results and the exact and quantum
Monte Carlo data also supports the reliability of the spin-wave expansion to
describe both the ground state and the low-energy spin excitations of the
triangular Heisenberg antiferromagnet. In the Heisenberg model, our
results indicate the opening of a finite gap in the thermodynamic excitation
spectrum at , marking the melting of the antiferromagnetic
N\'eel order and the onset of a non-magnetic ground state. In order to
characterize the nature of the latter quantum-disordered phase we have computed
the susceptibilities for the most important crystal symmetry breaking
operators. In the ordered phase the effectiveness of the spin-wave theory in
reproducing the low-energy excitation spectrum suggests that the uniform spin
susceptibility of the model is very close to the linear spin-wave prediction.Comment: Review article, 44 pages, 18 figures. See also PRL 87, 097201 (2001
Discreteness without symmetry breaking: a theorem
This paper concerns sprinklings into Minkowski space (Poisson processes). It
proves that there exists no equivariant measurable map from sprinklings to
spacetime directions (even locally). Therefore, if a discrete structure is
associated to a sprinkling in an intrinsic manner, then the structure will not
pick out a preferred frame, locally or globally. This implies that the
discreteness of a sprinkled causal set will not give rise to ``Lorentz
breaking'' effects like modified dispersion relations. Another consequence is
that there is no way to associate a finite-valency graph to a sprinkling
consistently with Lorentz invariance.Comment: 7 pages, laTe
Accurate evolutions of inspiralling and magnetized neutron-stars: equal-mass binaries
By performing new, long and numerically accurate general-relativistic
simulations of magnetized, equal-mass neutron-star binaries, we investigate the
role that realistic magnetic fields may have in the evolution of these systems.
In particular, we study the evolution of the magnetic fields and show that they
can influence the survival of the hypermassive-neutron star produced at the
merger by accelerating its collapse to a black hole. We also provide evidence
that even if purely poloidal initially, the magnetic fields produced in the
tori surrounding the black hole have toroidal and poloidal components of
equivalent strength. When estimating the possibility that magnetic fields could
have an impact on the gravitational-wave signals emitted by these systems
either during the inspiral or after the merger we conclude that for realistic
magnetic-field strengths B<~1e12 G such effects could be detected, but only
marginally, by detectors such as advanced LIGO or advanced Virgo. However,
magnetically induced modifications could become detectable in the case of
small-mass binaries and with the development of gravitational-wave detectors,
such as the Einstein Telescope, with much higher sensitivities at frequencies
larger than ~2 kHz.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures. Added two new figures (figures 1 and 7). Small
modifications to the text to match the version published on Phys. Rev.
Mild behavioral impairment in Parkinson's disease: Data from the Parkinson's disease cognitive impairment study (PACOS)
Neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS) have been frequently described in Parkinson's disease (PD), even in the earliest stages of the disease. Recently the construct of mild behavioral impairment (MBI) has been proposed as an at-risk state for incident cognitive decline and dementia. The aim of the present study is to evaluate the prevalence and associated factors of MBI in PD. Cross-sectional data from 429 consecutive PD patients enrolled in the PArkinson's disease COgnitive impairment Study (PACOS) were included in the study. All subjects underwent neuropsychological assessment, according to the MDS Level II criteria. NPS were evaluated with the Neuropsychiatric Inventory. Multivariate logistic regression models were used to evaluate clinical and behavioral characteristics, which are associated with PD-MBI. The latter was ascertained in 361 (84.1%) subjects of whom 155 (36.1%) were newly diagnosed patients (disease duration ≥1 year) and 206 (48.0%) had a disease duration <1 year. Furthermore, 68 (15.9%) out of 429 subjects were PDw (without MBI). Across the MBI domains, Impulse Dyscontrol was significantly more prevalent among PD-MBI with disease duration <1 year than newly diagnosed patients. The frequency of Social Inappropriateness and Abnormal Perception significantly increased throughout the entire PD-MBI sample with increasing Hoehn andYahr (H&Y) stages. PD-MBI in newly diagnosed PDwas significantly associated with H&Y stage (OR 2.35, 95% CI 1.05-5.24) and marginally with antidepressant drug use (OR 2.94, 95% CI 0.91-9.47), while in patients with a disease duration >1 year was associated with UPDRS-ME (OR 3.37, 95% CI 1.41-8.00). The overall MBI frequency in the PACOS sample was 84% and 36% among newly diagnosed patients. The presence of MBI mainly related to motor impairment and disability
Expectations For an Interferometric Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect Survey for Galaxy Clusters
Non-targeted surveys for galaxy clusters using the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect
(SZE) will yield valuable information on both cosmology and evolution of the
intra-cluster medium (ICM). The redshift distribution of detected clusters will
constrain cosmology, while the properties of the discovered clusters will be
important for studies of the ICM and galaxy formation. Estimating survey yields
requires a detailed model for both cluster properties and the survey strategy.
We address this by making mock observations of galaxy clusters in cosmological
hydrodynamical simulations. The mock observatory consists of an interferometric
array of ten 2.5 m diameter telescopes, operating at a central frequency of 30
GHz with a bandwidth of 8 GHz. We find that clusters with a mass above will be detected at any redshift, with the
exact limit showing a very modest redshift dependence. Using a Press-Schechter
prescription for evolving the number densities of clusters with redshift, we
determine that such a survey should find hundreds of galaxy clusters per year,
many at high redshifts and relatively low mass -- an important regime uniquely
accessible to SZE surveys. Currently favored cosmological models predict
roughly 25 clusters per square degree.Comment: revised to match published versio
An overview of the EXTraS project: Exploring the X-ray Transient and Variable Sky
The EXTraS project (Exploring the X-ray Transient and variable Sky) will
harvest the hitherto unexplored temporal domain information buried in the
serendipitous data collected by the European Photon Imaging Camera (EPIC)
instrument onboard the ESA XMM-Newton X-ray observatory since its launch. This
will include a search for fast transients, as well as a search and
characterization of variability (both periodic and aperiodic) in hundreds of
thousands of sources spanning more than nine orders of magnitude in time scale
and six orders of magnitude in flux. X-ray results will be complemented by
multiwavelength characterization of new discoveries. Phenomenological
classification of variable sources will also be performed. All our results will
be made available to the community. A didactic program in selected High Schools
in Italy, Germany and the UK will also be implemented. The EXTraS project
(2014-2016), funded within the EU/FP7 framework, is carried out by a
collaboration including INAF (Italy), IUSS (Italy), CNR/IMATI (Italy),
University of Leicester (UK), MPE (Germany) and ECAP (Germany).Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure. Proceedings of "Swift: 10 years of Discovery", to
appear in Po
Bubble Raft Model for a Paraboloidal Crystal
We investigate crystalline order on a two-dimensional paraboloid of
revolution by assembling a single layer of millimeter-sized soap bubbles on the
surface of a rotating liquid, thus extending the classic work of Bragg and Nye
on planar soap bubble rafts. Topological constraints require crystalline
configurations to contain a certain minimum number of topological defects such
as disclinations or grain boundary scars whose structure is analyzed as a
function of the aspect ratio of the paraboloid. We find the defect structure to
agree with theoretical predictions and propose a mechanism for scar nucleation
in the presence of large Gaussian curvature.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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