1,020 research outputs found

    Spin-charge separation in the one dimensional Hubbard model with longer range hopping

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    Although it is very hard to solve the 2D Hubbard model in the U → ∞ limit, process can be made using a class of 1D models in which additional longer range-hopping is included. Here, an unusual form of mean field theory is used to study the charge motion in the simplest model of the class - that with nearest and next next nearest neighbour hopping. The solutions found are all spin-charge separated, and for lower electron densities, indications of hard core boson like behaviour for the charge degrees of freedom are seen. For higher electron densities Nagaoka ferromagnetism is seen

    Radar backscatter measurement accuracy for a spaceborne pencil-beam wind scatterometer with transmit modulation

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    Formability limits and process window based on fracture analysis of 5A02-O aluminium alloy in splitting spinning

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    Splitting spinning or rotary flow splitting is an advanced forming process for manufacturing axisymmetric integrated parts with bifurcated features and unique characteristics of high-performance and low-weight. During the process, under the kinematic effects of mandrel rotational movement and roller radial feed, plastic deformation occurs accompanied usually by undesirable fracture, which reduces the formability limit (FL). In this study, the kinematic effects on the FL of a 5A02-O aluminium alloy in the splitting spinning process were systematically investigated by finite element simulation based on a modified Lemaitre criterion and physical experiments. The results show that at a given roller feed speed or mandrel rotational speed (forming speed), the FL has a nonlinear relationship with forming speed, which increases firstly and then decreases. With the increase of forming speed, the maximum FL decreases, which appears at the larger forming speed. These variations of FL show that there exists a combined effect of the roller feed speed and mandrel rotational speed, thus a ratio between them, named as the roller feed ratio, is then used to investigate FL. It is found that there exists a critical roller feed ratio of approximately 2 mm/rev, independent of the speeds of roller and mandrel. Below this critical value, the FL increases with the roller feed ratio. While over the critical value, the FL decreases. In addition, the decrease of FL becomes more remarkable with the increase of mandrel rotational speed. Furthermore, the variations of stress triaxiality and tensile plastic strain were analyzed to see their effects on FL. The analyses show that the decrease of tensile plastic strain with the increasing roller feed ratio is dominant the increase of FL below the critical roller feed ratio value. The increase in the stress triaxiality is dominant in the decrease of FL when the roller feed ratio is over the critical value in combination with not too high forming speed, whereas both increases are dominant in the decrease of FL when it is over the critical roller feed ratio value in combination with high forming speed. Based on the kinematic effects of mandrel and roller, the process windows of the splitting spinning process were obtained to improve the FL. It is found that under the condition of the roller feed ratio within 1–2.5 mm/rev, the mandrel rotational speed within 8–100 rev/min and the roller feed speed within 0.5–4 mm/s are helpful to get high FL values. The experiments were carried out to verify the prediction on the FL and the process window. The research provides an in-depth understanding of FL and its affecting factors, and thus lays a basis for process optimization and process parameter configuration

    A comparison of terrestrial laser scanning and structure-from-motion photogrammetry as methods for digital outcrop acquisition

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    Terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) has been used extensively in Earth Science for acquisition of digital outcrop data over the past decade. Structure-from-­motion (SfM) photogrammetry has recently emerged as an alternative and competing technology. The real-world performance of these technologies for ground-based digital outcrop acquisition is assessed using outcrops from North East England and the United Arab Emirates. Both TLS and SfM are via­ble methods, although no single technology is universally best suited to all situations. There are a range of practical considerations and operating conditions where each method has clear advantages. In comparison to TLS, SfM benefits from being lighter, more compact, cheaper, more easily replaced and repaired, with lower power requirements. TLS in comparison to SfM provides intrinsically validated data and more robust data acquisition in a wide range of operating conditions. Data post-processing is also swifter. The SfM data sets were found to contain systematic inaccuracies when compared to their TLS counterparts. These inaccuracies are related to the triangulation approach of the SfM, which is distinct from the time-of-flight principle employed by TLS. An elaborate approach is required for SfM to produce comparable results to TLS under most circumstances

    Distinct Magnetic Phase Transition at the Surface of an Antiferromagnet

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    In the majority of magnetic systems the surface is required to order at the same temperature as the bulk. In the present Letter, we report a distinct and unexpected surface magnetic phase transition at a lower temperature than the Néel temperature. Employing grazing incidence x-ray resonant magnetic scattering, we have observed the near-surface behavior of uranium dioxide. UO2 is a noncollinear, triple-q, antiferromagnet with the U ions on a face-centered cubic lattice. Theoretical investigations establish that at the surface the energy increase—due to the lost bonds—is reduced when the spins near the surface rotate, gradually losing their component normal to the surface. At the surface the lowest-energy spin configuration has a double-q (planar) structure. With increasing temperature, thermal fluctuations saturate the in-plane crystal field anisotropy at the surface, leading to soft excitations that have ferromagnetic XY character and are decoupled from the bulk. The structure factor of a finite two-dimensional XY model fits the experimental data well for several orders of magnitude of the scattered intensity. Our results support a distinct magnetic transition at the surface in the Kosterlitz-Thouless universality class

    Thermodynamics of the half-filled Kondo lattice model around the atomic limit

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    We present a perturbation theory for studying thermodynamic properties of the Kondo spin liquid phase of the half-filled Kondo lattice model. The grand partition function is derived to calculate chemical potential, spin and charge susceptibilities and specific heat. The treatment is applicable to the model with strong couplings in any dimensions (one, two and three dimensions). The chemical potential equals zero at any temperatures, satisfying the requirement of the particle-hole symmetry. Thermally activated behaviors of the spin(charge) susceptibility due to the spin(quasiparticle) gap can be seen and the two-peak structure of the specific heat is obtained. The same treatment to the periodic Anderson model around atomic limit is also briefly discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Responding to a Community's Concern: A Comparison of Breast Cancer Characteristics and Initial Treatment in Three Selected North Carolina Counties

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    BACKGROUND A 2007 national report identified North Carolina's Edgecombe County as having among the highest breast cancer incidence and mortality rates nationally, motivating the initiation of a task force and other local efforts to address the problem. The goal of this study is to examine county breast cancer characteristics before and after the report, including whether geographic variation may mask racial disparities in this majority African American community. METHOD With guidance from community partners, breast cancer cases from 2000 to 2012 in Edgecombe, Nash, and Orange Counties (N = 2,641) were obtained from the North Carolina Central Cancer Registry. Bivariate and trend analyses of tumor and treatment characteristics were examined by county and race. RESULTS Women in Edgecombe and Nash Counties were diagnosed with more advanced stage, higher grade tumors. African Americans in Edgecombe and Nash Counties were diagnosed with advanced disease more often than African Americans in Orange County. Average time-to-treatment was well within guideline recommendations. Incidence and mortality rates appear to have declined, with variation in measures of racial differences over time. LIMITATIONS Changes in coding standards across the observation period required reliance on coarse measures that may partially mute useful findings. CONCLUSIONS Racial disparities remain a concern in North Carolina; however, they appear to be less profound than in the 2007 national report. The portentous statistics in the report represent an all-time high, after which some, but not all, measures reflect positive change amidst ongoing local efforts to improve breast cancer knowledge and care

    The long-term X-ray lightcurve of RX J0527.8--6954

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    Supersoft X-ray sources are commonly believed to be stably burning white dwarfs. However, the observations of some supersoft sources show dramatic variability of their X-ray flux on timescales ranging from days to years. Here, we present further observational data of the supersoft X-ray source RX J0527.8--6954 exhibiting a continuous decline over the past 5 yrs. With no clear trend of a concordant temperature decrease this might suggest a evolutionary scenario where the WD leaves the steady burning branch and the combined effect of reduced luminosity and cooling at constant radius produces the observed effect.Comment: 6 pages LATEX (with A&A style macro l-aa.tex) including 1 postscript figure (using psfig.tex) accepted for publication in Astron. Astrophy

    Endothelial Cell-Astrocyte Interactions

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75690/1/j.1749-6632.1988.tb51417.x.pd

    The spectral gap for some spin chains with discrete symmetry breaking

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    We prove that for any finite set of generalized valence bond solid (GVBS) states of a quantum spin chain there exists a translation invariant finite-range Hamiltonian for which this set is the set of ground states. This result implies that there are GVBS models with arbitrary broken discrete symmetries that are described as combinations of lattice translations, lattice reflections, and local unitary or anti-unitary transformations. We also show that all GVBS models that satisfy some natural conditions have a spectral gap. The existence of a spectral gap is obtained by applying a simple and quite general strategy for proving lower bounds on the spectral gap of the generator of a classical or quantum spin dynamics. This general scheme is interesting in its own right and therefore, although the basic idea is not new, we present it in a system-independent setting. The results are illustrated with an number of examples.Comment: 48 pages, Plain TeX, BN26/Oct/9
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