20,076 research outputs found
Transition to Fulde-Ferrel-Larkin-Ovchinnikov phases near the tricritical point : an analytical study
We explore analytically the nature of the transition to the
Fulde-Ferrel-Larkin-Ovchinnikov superfluid phases in the vicinity of the
tricritical point, where these phases begin to appear. We make use of an
expansion of the free energy up to an overall sixth order, both in order
parameter amplitude and in wavevector. We first explore the minimization of
this free energy within a subspace, made of arbitrary superpositions of plane
waves with wavevectors of different orientations but same modulus. We show that
the standard second order FFLO phase transition is unstable and that a first
order transition occurs at higher temperature. Within this subspace we prove
that it is favorable to have a real order parameter and that, among these
states, those with the smallest number of plane waves are prefered. This leads
to an order parameter with a dependence, in
agreement with preceding work. Finally we show that the order parameter at the
transition is only very slightly modified by higher harmonics contributions
when the constraint of working within the above subspace is released.Comment: 11 pages, revte
Microbial manganese and sulfate reduction in Black Sea shelf sediments
The microbial ecology of anaerobic carbon oxidation processes was investigated in Black Sea shelf sediments from mid-shelf with well-oxygenated bottom water to the oxic-anoxic chemocline at the shelf-break. At all stations, organic carbon (Corg) oxidation rates were rapidly attenuated with depth in anoxically incubated sediment. Dissimilatory Mn reduction was the most important terminal electron-accepting process in the active surface layer to a depth of ∼1 cm, while SO42− reduction accounted for the entire Corg oxidation below. Manganese reduction was supported by moderately high Mn oxide concentrations. A contribution from microbial Fe reduction could not be discerned, and the process was not stimulated by addition of ferrihydrite. Manganese reduction resulted in carbonate precipitation, which complicated the quantification of Corg oxidation rates. The relative contribution of Mn reduction to Corg oxidation in the anaerobic incubations was 25 to 73% at the stations with oxic bottom water. In situ, where Mn reduction must compete with oxygen respiration, the contribution of the process will vary in response to fluctuations in bottom water oxygen concentrations. Total bacterial numbers as well as the detection frequency of bacteria with fluorescent in situ hybridization scaled to the mineralization rates. Most-probable-number enumerations yielded up to 105 cells of acetate-oxidizing Mn-reducing bacteria (MnRB) cm−3, while counts of Fe reducers were <102 cm−3. At two stations, organisms affiliated with Arcobacter were the only types identified from 16S rRNA clone libraries from the highest positive MPN dilutions for MnRB. At the third station, a clone type affiliated with Pelobacter was also observed. Our results delineate a niche for dissimilatory Mn-reducing bacteria in sediments with Mn oxide concentrations greater than ∼10 μmol cm−3 and indicate that bacteria that are specialized in Mn reduction, rather than known Mn and Fe reducers, are important in this niche
Linearized Weyl-Weyl Correlator in a de Sitter Breaking Gauge
We use a de Sitter breaking graviton propagator to compute the tree order
correlator between noncoincident Weyl tensors on a locally de Sitter
background. An explicit, and very simple result is obtained, for any spacetime
dimension D, in terms of a de Sitter invariant length function and the tensor
basis constructed from the metric and derivatives of this length function. Our
answer does not agree with the one derived previously by Kouris, but that
result must be incorrect because it not transverse and lacks some of the
algebraic symmetries of the Weyl tensor. Taking the coincidence limit of our
result (with dimensional regularization) and contracting the indices gives the
expectation value of the square of the Weyl tensor at lowest order. We propose
the next order computation of this as a true test of de Sitter invariance in
quantum gravity.Comment: 31 pages, 2 tables, no figures, uses LaTex2
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