51,188 research outputs found
Zero dimensional area law in a gapless fermion system
The entanglement entropy of a gapless fermion subsystem coupled to a gapless
bulk by a "weak link" is considered. It is demonstrated numerically that each
independent weak link contributes an entropy proportional to lnL, where L is
linear dimension of the subsystem.Comment: 6 pages, 11 figures; added 3d computatio
Rectification by charging -- the physics of contact-induced current asymmetry in molecular conductors
We outline the qualitatively different physics behind charging-induced
current asymmetries in molecular conductors operating in the weakly interacting
self-consistent field (SCF) and the strongly interacting Coulomb Blockade (CB)
regimes. A conductance asymmetry arises in SCF because of the unequal
mean-field potentials that shift a closed-shell conducting level differently
for positive and negative bias. A very different current asymmetry arises for
CB due to the unequal number of open-shell excitation channels at opposite bias
voltages. The CB regime, dominated by single charge effects, typically requires
a computationally demanding many-electron or Fock space description. However,
our analysis of molecular Coulomb Blockade measurements reveals that many novel
signatures can be explained using a {{simpler}} orthodox model that involves an
incoherent sum of Fock space excitations and {\it{hence treats the molecule as
a metallic dot or an island}}. This also reduces the complexity of the Fock
space description by just including various charge configurations only, thus
partially underscoring the importance of electronic structure, while retaining
the essence of the single charge nature of the transport process. We finally
point out, however, that the inclusion of electronic structure and hence
well-resolved Fock space excitations is crucial in some notable examples.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure
South African Corporations and post-Apartheid Expansion in Africa – creating a new regional space
The defeat of Apartheid in 1994 liberated not only South Africa’s internal political processes but also its economic relations with neighbouring countries in the Southern African Development Community (SADC). A key outcome was the surge of South African capital northward after years of dampened large scale investment because of legal sanction and more informal regulation. By the early 2000s, South African mining and industrial corporations, financial institutions and even some medium-sized enterprises have once again asserted their role as a dominant force in the SADC region. South Africa’s economic expansion is sometimes portrayed as a one-way process, where local environments and communities are passive recipients of SouthAfrican-led interventions. But evidence increasingly suggests that penetration of the region is highly contested by host countries, and sometimes actively and effectively resisted at local level. In other words, elements of both ‘sub-imperialism’ and local subversion are at play
Measuring Accuracy of Triples in Knowledge Graphs
An increasing amount of large-scale knowledge graphs have been constructed in recent years. Those graphs are often created from text-based extraction, which could be very noisy. So far, cleaning knowledge graphs are often carried out by human experts and thus very inefficient. It is necessary to explore automatic methods for identifying and eliminating erroneous information. In order to achieve this, previous approaches primarily rely on internal information i.e. the knowledge graph itself. In this paper, we introduce an automatic approach, Triples Accuracy Assessment (TAA), for validating RDF triples (source triples) in a knowledge graph by finding consensus of matched triples (among target triples) from other knowledge graphs. TAA uses knowledge graph interlinks to find identical resources and apply different matching methods between the predicates of source triples and target triples. Then based on the matched triples, TAA calculates a confidence score to indicate the correctness of a source triple. In addition, we present an evaluation of our approach using the FactBench dataset for fact validation. Our findings show promising results for distinguishing between correct and wrong triples
Cluster Winds Blow along Supercluster Axes
Within Abell galaxy clusters containing wide-angle tailed radio sources,
there is evidence of a ``prevailing wind'' which directs the WAT jets. We study
the alignment of WAT jets and nearby clusters to test the idea that this wind
may be a fossil of drainage along large-scale supercluster axes. We also test
this idea with a study of the alignment of WAT jets and supercluster axes.
Statistical test neighbours indicate no alignment of WAT jets towards nearest
clusters, but do indicate approximately 98% confidence in alignment with the
long axis of the supercluster in which the cluster lies. We find a preferred
scale for such superclusters of order 25 Mpc .Comment: Latex, 5 pages, with 5 postscript figures. To be published in MNRAS.
Slight revisions to coincide with journal text. Linked to color image at
http://kusmos.phsx.ukans.edu/~melott/images/A2634SUW.jp
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