2,178 research outputs found
Spin-Orbital Liquid on a Triangular Lattice
Using Lanczos exact diagonalization of finite clusters we demonstrate that
the spin-orbital model for triply degenerate orbitals on a
triangular lattice provides an example of a spin-orbital liquid ground state.
We also show that the spin-orbital liquid involves entangled valence bond
states which violate the Goodenough-Kanamori rules, and modify effective spin
exchange constants.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, presented at Euroconference Physics of Magnetism
201
Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Taxation as Public Health Policy -Lessons from Tobacco
Taxation, Tobacco, Obesity, Agricultural and Food Policy, Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety, Health Economics and Policy, I18,
Hypervelocity impact facility for simulating materials exposure to impact by space debris
As a result of man's venturing into space, the local debris contributed by his presence exceeds, at some orbital altitudes, that of the natural component. Man's contribution ranges from fuel residue to large derelect satellites that weigh many kilograms. Current debris models are able to predict the growth of the problem and suggest that spacecraft must employ armor or bumper shields for some orbital altitudes now, and that, the problem will become worse as a function of time. The practical upper limit to the velocity distribution is on the order of 40 km/s and is associated with the natural environment. The maximum velocity of the man-made component is in the 14-16 km/s range. The Long Duration Exposure Facility (LDEF) has verified that the 'high probability of impact' particles are in the microgram to milligram range. These particles can have significant effects on coatings, insulators, and thin metallic layers. The surface of thick materials becomes pitted and the local debris component is enhanced by ejecta from the debris spectrum in a controlled environment. The facility capability is discussed in terms of drive geometry, energetics, velocity distribution, diagnostics, and projectile/debris loading. The facility is currently being used to study impact phenomena on Space Station Freedom's solar array structure, other solar array materials, potential structural materials for use in the station, electrical breakdown in the space environment, and as a means of clarifying or duplicating the impact phenomena on the LDEF surfaces. The results of these experiments are described in terms of the mass/velocity distribution incident on selected samples, crater dynamics, and sample geometry
Microscopic gauge-invariant theory of the c-axis infrared response of bilayer cuprate superconductors and the origin of the superconductivity induced absorption bands
We report on results of our theoretical study of the c-axis infrared
conductivity of bilayer high-Tc cuprate superconductors using a microscopic
model involving the bilayer-split (bonding and antibonding) bands. An emphasis
is on the gauge-invariance of the theory, which turns out to be essential for
the physical understanding of the electrodynamics of these compounds. The
description of the optical response involves local (intra-bilayer and
inter-bilayer) current densities and local conductivities. The local
conductivities are obtained using a microscopic theory, where the
quasiparticles of the two bands are coupled to spin fluctuations. The coupling
leads to superconductivity and is described at the level of generalized
Eliashberg theory. Also addressed is the simpler case of quasiparticles coupled
by a separable and nonretarded interaction. The gauge invariance of the theory
is achieved by including a suitable class of vertex corrections. The resulting
response of the model is studied in detail and an interpretation of two
superconductivity-induced peaks in the experimental data of the real part of
the c-axis conductivity is proposed. The peak around 400/cm is attributed to a
collective mode of the intra-bilayer regions, that is an analogue of the
Bogolyubov-Anderson mode playing a crucial role in the theory of the
longitudinal response of superconductors. For small values of the bilayer
splitting, its nature is similar to that of the transverse plasmon of the
phenomenological Josephson superlattice model. The peak around 1000/cm is
interpreted as a pair breaking-feature that is related to the electronic
coupling through the spacing layers separating the bilayers.Comment: 18 pages, 15 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Price, Availability, and Youth Obesity: Evidence From Bridging the Gap
After a decade of analyzing environmental influences on substance use and its consequences among youth in the United States, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Bridging the Gap program has begun studying the effect of environmental factors on youth physical activity, diet, and weight outcomes. Much of this research has focused on access to food, as reflected by availability and price. Program researchers have documented disparities in access to healthy foods and opportunities for physical activity; healthier food outlets and opportunities for physical activity are relatively less available in communities with lower income and larger proportions of racial/ethnic minority populations. They also have found that healthier environments are associated with more fruit and vegetable consumption, more physical activity, lower body mass index, and reduced likelihood of obesity among youth
Marijuana and Youth
This paper contains the first estimates of the price sensitivity of the prevalence of youth marijuana use. Survey data on marijuana use by high school seniors from the Monitoring the Future Project are combined with data on marijuana prices and potency from the Drug Enforcement Administration Office of Intelligence or Intelligence Division. Our estimates of the price elasticity of annual marijuana participation range from 0.06 to 0.47, while those for thirty day participation range from 0.002 to 0.69. These estimates clearly imply that changes in the real, quality adjusted price of marijuana contributed significantly to the trends in youth marijuana use between 1982 and 1998, particularly during the contraction in use from 1982 to 1992. Similarly, changes in youth perceptions of the harms associated with regular marijuana use had a substantial impact on both the contraction in use during the 1982 though 1992 period and the subsequent expansion in use after 1992. These findings underscore the usefulness of considering price in addition to more traditional determinants in any analysis of marijuana consumption decisions made by youths.
Phase 1 : Assessment of suitability of Queensland Parks & Wildlife Service sea turtle data for use in models of the population dynamics of the southern Great Barrier Reef green turtle stock
The sea turtle research program of the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service (QPWS),
which is part of the Queensland Environmental Protection Agency is the most
comprehensive long-term program studying sea turtle demography in the world. The
program provides substantial data sets on key aspects of sea turtle demography
essential for developing an age-structured and sex-specific stochastic simulation model
with some explicit spatial structure. This model would be suitable for helping to design
conservation policies and strategies appropriate for addressing the potential impact of
harvesting and other competing mortality risks on the long-term viability of the
southern Great Barrier Reef (sGBR) green turtle stock. The statistical analyses to
support such stochastic simulation model development are presented here using the
extensive QPWS database. The data sets provide sufficient information to enable
inclusion of environmental and demographic stochasticity on key demographic
processes and for evaluating model performance against long-term stock abundance
estimates
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