38,743 research outputs found

    Temperature Dependence of Thermopower in Strongly Correlated Multiorbital Systems

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    Temperature dependence of thermopower in the multiorbital Hubbard model is studied by using the dynamical mean-field theory with the non-crossing approximation impurity solver. It is found that the Coulomb interaction, the Hund coupling, and the crystal filed splitting bring about non-monotonic temperature dependence of the thermopower, including its sign reversal. The implication of our theoretical results to some materials is discussed.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure

    Study on contraction and relaxation of experimentally denervated and immobilized muscles: Comparison with dystrophic muscles

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    The contraction-relaxation mechanism of experimentally denervated and immobilized muscles of the rabbit is examined. Results are compared with those of human dystrophic muscles, in order to elucidate the role and extent of the neurotrophic factor, and the role played by the intrinsic activity of muscle in connection with pathogenesis and pathophysiology of this disease

    Multi-Orbital Molecular Compound (TTM-TTP)I_3: Effective Model and Fragment Decomposition

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    The electronic structure of the molecular compound (TTM-TTP)I_3, which exhibits a peculiar intra-molecular charge ordering, has been studied using multi-configuration ab initio calculations. First we derive an effective Hubbard-type model based on the molecular orbitals (MOs) of TTM-TTP; we set up a two-orbital Hamiltonian for the two MOs near the Fermi energy and determine its full parameters: the transfer integrals, the Coulomb and exchange interactions. The tight-binding band structure obtained from these transfer integrals is consistent with the result of the direct band calculation based on density functional theory. Then, by decomposing the frontier MOs into two parts, i.e., fragments, we find that the stacked TTM-TTP molecules can be described by a two-leg ladder model, while the inter-fragment Coulomb energies are scaled to the inverse of their distances. This result indicates that the fragment picture that we proposed earlier [M.-L. Bonnet et al.: J. Chem. Phys. 132 (2010) 214705] successfully describes the low-energy properties of this compound.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, published versio

    The \gamma-ray production in neutral-current neutrino oxygen interaction in the energy range above 100 MeV

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    We calculate the cross section of the gamma-ray production from neutral-current neutrino-oxygen quasi-elastic interaction, ν+16ˆO→ν+p+15N∗\nu+\^{16}O \rightarrow \nu +p+^{15}N*, or ν+16O→ν+n+15O∗\nu+^{16}O \rightarrow \nu+n+^{15}O*, in which the residual nuclei (15N* or 15O*) lead to the gamma-ray emission with gamma-ray energy >6 MeV at the branching ratio of 41%. Above 200 MeV, this cross section dominates over that of gamma-ray production from the inelastic reaction, ν+16O−>ν+16O∗\nu+^{16}O->\nu+^{16}O*. In the present calculation, spectral function and the spectroscopic factors of 1p1/2,1p3/2and1s1/21p_{1/2}, 1p_{3/2} and 1s_{1/2} states are essential. The gamma-ray production is dominated by the deexcitation of 1p3/21p_{3/2} state of the residual nucleus

    Interplay between elastic fields due to gravity and a partial dislocation for a hard-sphere crystal coherently grown under gravity: driving force for defect disappearance

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    We previously observed that an intrinsic staking fault shrunk through a glide of a Shockley partial dislocation terminating its lower end in a hard-sphere crystal under gravity coherently grown in by Monte Carlo simulations [Mori et al., Molec. Phys. 105, 1377 (2007)]; it was an answer to a one-decade long standing question why the stacking disorder in colloidal crystals reduced under gravity [Zhu et al., Nature 387, 883 (1997)]. Here, we present an elastic energy calculation; in addition to the self-energy of the partial dislocation [Mori et al., Prog. Theor. Phys. Suppl. 178, 33 (2009)] we calculate the cross-coupling term between elastic field due to gravity and that due to a Shockley partial dislocation. The cross term is a increasing function of the linear dimension R over which the elastic field expands, showing that a driving force arises for the partial dislocation moving toward the upper boundary of a grain.Comment: 8pages, 4figures, to be published in Molecular Physic
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