37 research outputs found
Anisotropy-based mechanism for zigzag striped patterns in magnetic thin films
In this work we studied a two dimensional ferromagnetic system using Monte
Carlo simulations. Our model includes exchange and dipolar interactions, a
cubic anisotropy term, and uniaxial out-of-plane and in-plane ones. According
to the set of parameters chosen, the model including uniaxial out-of-plane
anisotropy has a ground-state which consists of a canted state with stripes of
opposite out-of-plane magnetization. When the cubic anisotropy is introduced
zigzag patterns appear in the stripes at fields close to the remanence. An
analysis of the anisotropy terms of the model shows that this configuration is
related to specific values of the ratio between the cubic and the effective
uniaxial anisotropy. The mechanism behind this effect is related to particular
features of the anisotropy's energy landscape, since a global minima transition
as a function of the applied field is required in the anisotropy terms. This
new mechanism for zigzags formation could be present in monocrystal
ferromagnetic thin films in a given range of thicknesses.Comment: 910 pages, 10 figure
Static and dynamic properties of Single-Chain Magnets with sharp and broad domain walls
We discuss time-quantified Monte-Carlo simulations on classical spin chains
with uniaxial anisotropy in relation to static calculations. Depending on the
thickness of domain walls, controlled by the relative strength of the exchange
and magnetic anisotropy energy, we found two distinct regimes in which both the
static and dynamic behavior are different. For broad domain walls, the
interplay between localized excitations and spin waves turns out to be crucial
at finite temperature. As a consequence, a different protocol should be
followed in the experimental characterization of slow-relaxing spin chains with
broad domain walls with respect to the usual Ising limit.Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
A Scaling Hypothesis for Modulated Systems
We propose a scaling hypothesis for pattern-forming systems in which
modulation of the order parameter results from the competition between a
short-ranged interaction and a long-ranged interaction decaying with some power
of the inverse distance. With L being a spatial length characterizing
the modulated phase, all thermodynamic quantities are predicted to scale like
some power of L. The scaling dimensions with respect to L only depend on the
dimensionality of the system d and the exponent \alpha. Scaling predictions are
in agreement with experiments on ultra-thin ferromagnetic films and
computational results. Finally, our scaling hypothesis implies that, for some
range of values \alpha>d, Inverse-Symmetry-Breaking transitions may appear
systematically in the considered class of frustrated systems.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, expanded versio
Anomalous behavior of the irreversible magnetization and time relaxation in YBaCuO single crystals with splayed tracks
We have studied the angular dependence of the irreversible magnetization and
its time relaxation in YBaCuO single crystals with one or two
families of columnar defects inclined with respect to the c-axis. At high
magnetic fields, the magnetization shows the usual maximum centered at the mean
tracks' orientation and an associated minimum in the normalized relaxation
rate. In contrast, at low fields we observe an anomalous local minimum in the
magnetization and a maximum in the relaxation rate. We present a model to
explain this anomaly based on the slowing down of the creep processes arising
from the increase of the vortex-vortex interactions as the applied field is
tilted away from the mean tracks' direction.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev .
The Thyroid Hormone Receptors Modulate the Skin Response to Retinoids
[Background]: Retinoids play an important role in skin homeostasis and when administered topically cause skin hyperplasia, abnormal epidermal differentiation and inflammation. Thyroidal status in humans also influences skin morphology and function and we have recently shown that the thyroid hormone receptors (TRs) are required for a normal proliferative response to 12-O-tetradecanolyphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) in mice.
[Methodology/Principal Findings]: We have compared the epidermal response of mice lacking the thyroid hormone receptor binding isoforms TRα1 and TRβ to retinoids and TPA. Reduced hyperplasia and a decreased number of proliferating cells in the basal layer in response to 9-cis-RA and TPA were found in the epidermis of TR-deficient mice. Nuclear levels of proteins important for cell proliferation were altered, and expression of keratins 5 and 6 was also reduced, concomitantly with the decreased number of epidermal cell layers. In control mice the retinoid (but not TPA) induced parakeratosis and diminished expression of keratin 10 and loricrin, markers of early and terminal epidermal differentiation, respectively. This reduction was more accentuated in the TR deficient animals, whereas they did not present parakeratosis. Therefore, TRs modulate both the proliferative response to retinoids and their inhibitory effects on skin differentiation. Reduced proliferation, which was reversed upon thyroxine treatment, was also found in hypothyroid mice, demonstrating that thyroid hormone binding to TRs is required for the normal response to retinoids. In addition, the mRNA levels of the pro-inflammatory cytokines TNFα and IL-6 and the chemotactic proteins S1008A and S1008B were significantly elevated in the skin of TR knock-out mice after TPA or 9-cis-RA treatment and immune cell infiltration was also enhanced.
[Conclusions/significance]: Since retinoids are commonly used for the treatment of skin disorders, these results demonstrating that TRs regulate skin proliferation, differentiation and inflammation in response to these compounds
could have not only physiological but also therapeutic implications.This work was supported by grants BFU2007-62402 and SAF2008-00121 from Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, RD06/0020/0036 and RD06/0020/0029 from the Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias and by the European Grant CRESCENDO (FP-018652).Peer reviewe
A criterion for uniqueness of a critical point in H_2 rational approximation
Theme 4 - Simulation et optimisation de systemes complexes - Projet MIAOUAvailable at INIST (FR), Document Supply Service, under shelf-number : 14802 E, issue : a.1996 n.2869 / INIST-CNRS - Institut de l'Information Scientifique et TechniqueSIGLEFRFranc