2,221 research outputs found
Continuum states from time-dependent density functional theory
Linear response time-dependent density functional theory is used to study
low-lying electronic continuum states of targets that can bind an extra
electron. Exact formulas to extract scattering amplitudes from the
susceptibility are derived in one dimension. A single-pole approximation for
scattering phase shifts in three dimensions is shown to be more accurate than
static exchange for singlet electron-He scattering.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, J. Chem. Phys. accepte
Study of ground state phases for spin-1/2 Falicov-Kimball model on a triangular lattice
The spin-dependent Falicov-Kimball model (FKM) is studied on a triangular
lattice using numerical diagonalization technique and Monte-Carlo simulation
algorithm. Magnetic properties have been explored for different values of
parameters: on-site Coulomb correlation , exchange interaction and
filling of electrons. We have found that the ground state configurations
exhibit long range Ne\`el order, ferromagnetism or a mixture of both as is
varied. The magnetic moments of itinerant () and localized () electrons
are also studied. For the one-fourth filling case we found no magnetic moment
from - and -electrons for less than a critical value.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figure
Asian Drama: Discovering and Unleashing the Mobile Services
Telecommunications privatization, competition, liberalization, and regulatory independence in several countries have been embarked with the goals of maximizing universal access to telecommunications services as a developmental goal, promoting efficiency through competition and establishment of world class telecommunications networks. Using interview data from India and China –the two countries that have very different governments and policies, leading to differing approaches to the introduction of telecommunication competition and infrastructure development -- this paper provides analyses of privatization, competition, liberalization processes and legal frameworks governing telecommunications. India has set policy via recommendations of publicly visible independent regulatory authority while China has pursued a strategy of competition among government-owned organizations. The Indian case study shows evidence of complimentarity between privatization and competition in deepening network penetration and in dramatically restraining the rise of service pricing among privatized operators. China’s case study reveals that the state retained all the control rights, planned the country’s infrastructure development and made very little progress in regulatory reform including the enactment of telecoms laws, yet made substantial progress in infrastructure development. It remains to be seen whether India\u27s relatively transparent and market driven approach to telecommunications policy (and access) will prove effective in the long run
Magnetic and orbital order in overdoped bilayer manganites
The magnetic and orbital orders for the bilayer manganites in the doping
region have been investigated from a model that incorporates the
two orbitals at each Mn site, the inter-orbital Coulomb interaction and
lattice distortions. The usual double exchange operates via the orbitals.
It is shown that such a model reproduces much of the phase diagram recently
obtained for the bilayer systems in this range of doping. The C-type phase with
() spin order seen by Ling et al. appears as a natural consequence
of the layered geometry and is stabilised by the static distortions of the
system. The orbital order is shown to drive the magnetic order while the
anisotropic hopping across the orbitals, layered nature of the underlying
structure and associated static distortions largely determine the orbital
arrangements.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Glucose and fructose metabolism in a posphoglucoisomeraseless mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae
A mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae deficient in phosphoglucoisomerase (EC 5.3.1.9) is described. It does not grow on glucose or sucrose but does grow on galactose or maltose. Addition of glucose to cultures growing on fructose, mannose, or acetate arrests further growth without altering viability; removal of glucose permits resumption of growth. Glucose causes accumulation of nearly 30 µmoles of glucose-6-phosphate per g (wet weight) of cells and suppresses synthesis of ribonucleic acid. Inhibition of growth by glucose does not appear to be due to a loss of adenosine triphosphate or inorganic orthophosphate. The mutant, however, utilizes glucose-6-phosphate produced intracellularly. Release of carbon dioxide from specifically labeled glucose suggests a C-l preferential cleavage. The kinetics of glucose-6-phosphate accumulation during glucose utilization in the mutant is not consistent with the notion that the utilization of glucose is controlled by glucose-6-phosphate
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