645 research outputs found
Magnetic Transformations in the Organic Conductor kappa-(BETS)2Mn[N(CN)2]3 at the Metal-Insulator Transition
A complex study of magnetic properties including dc magnetization, 1H NMR and
magnetic torque measurements has been performed for the organic conductor
kappa-(BETS)2Mn[N(CN)2]3 which undergoes a metal-insulator transition at
T_MI~25K. NMR and the magnetization data indicate a transition in the manganese
subsystem from paramagnetic to a frozen state at T_MI, which is, however, not a
simple Neel type order. Further, a magnetic field induced transition resembling
a spin flop has been detected in the torque measurements at temperatures below
T_MI. This transition is most likely related to the spins of pi-electrons
localized on the organic molecules BETS and coupled with the manganese 3d spins
via exchange interaction.Comment: 6 pages, 5 Figures, 1 Table; Submitted to Phys.Rev.B (Nov.2010
Discourse and identity in a corpus of lesbian erotica
This article uses corpus linguistic methodologies to explore representations of lesbian desires and identities in a corpus of lesbian erotica from the 1980s and 1990s. We provide a critical examination of the ways in which “lesbian gender,” power, and desire are represented, (re-)produced, and enacted, often in ways that challenge hegemonic discourses of gender and sexuality. By examining word frequencies and collocations, we critically analyze some of the themes, processes, and patterns of representation in the texts. Although rooted in linguistics, we hope this article provides an accessible, interdisciplinary, and timely contribution toward developing understandings of discursive practices surrounding gender and sexuality
Thermally Activated Magnetization and Resistance Decay during Near Ambient Temperature Aging of Co Nanoflakes in a Confining Semi-metallic Environment
We report the observation of magnetic and resistive aging in a self assembled
nanoparticle system produced in a multilayer Co/Sb sandwich. The aging decays
are characterized by an initial slow decay followed by a more rapid decay in
both the magnetization and resistance. The decays are large accounting for
almost 70% of the magnetization and almost 40% of the resistance for samples
deposited at 35 . For samples deposited at 50 the magnetization
decay accounts for of the magnetization and 50% of the resistance.
During the more rapid part of the decay, the concavity of the slope of the
decay changes sign and this inflection point can be used to provide a
characteristic time. The characteristic time is strongly and systematically
temperature dependent, ranging from x at 400K to x at 320K in samples deposited at . Samples deposited at 50
displayed a 7-8 fold increase in the characteristic time (compared to the samples) for a given aging temperature, indicating that this timescale may
be tunable. Both the temperature scale and time scales are in potentially
useful regimes. Pre-Aging, Scanning Tunneling Microscopy (STM) reveals that the
Co forms in nanoscale flakes. During aging the nanoflakes melt and migrate into
each other in an anisotropic fashion forming elongated Co nanowires. This aging
behavior occurs within a confined environment of the enveloping Sb layers. The
relationship between the characteristic time and aging temperature fits an
Arrhenius law indicating activated dynamics
Evidence for magnetic clusters in BaCoO
Magnetic properties of the transition metal oxide BaCoO are analyzed on
the basis of the experimental and theoretical literature available via ab inito
calculations. These can be explained by assuming the material to be formed by
noninteracting ferromagnetic clusters of about 1.2 nm in diameter separated by
about 3 diameters. Above about 50 K, the so-called blocking temperature,
superparamagnetic behavior of the magnetic clusters occurs and, above 250 K,
paramagnetism sets in.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Giant Magnetoelastic Effects in BaTiO3-based Extrinsic Multiferroic Hybrids
Extrinsic multiferroic hybrid structures consisting of ferromagnetic and
ferroelectric layers elastically coupled to each other are promising due to
their robust magnetoelectric effects even at room temperature. For a
quantitative analysis of these magnetoelectric effects, a detailed knowledge of
the piezoelectric and magnetoelastic behavior of both constituents as well as
their mutual elastic coupling is mandatory. We here report on a theoretical and
experimental study of the magnetic behavior of BaTiO3-based extrinsic
multiferroic structures. An excellent agreement between molecular dynamics
simulations and the experiments was found for Fe50Co50/BaTiO3 and Ni/BaTiO3
hybrid structures. This demonstrates that the magnetic behavior of extrinsic
multiferroic hybrid structures can be determined by means of ab-initio
calculations, allowing for the design of novel multiferroic hybrids
Thermal Casimir Force between Magnetic Materials
We investigate the Casimir pressure between two parallel plates made of
magnetic materials at nonzero temperature. It is shown that for real
magnetodielectric materials only the magnetic properties of ferromagnets can
influence the Casimir pressure. This influence is accomplished through the
contribution of the zero-frequency term of the Lifshitz formula. The
possibility of the Casimir repulsion through the vacuum gap is analyzed
depending on the model used for the description of the dielectric properties of
the metal plates.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures. Contribution to the Proceedings of QFEXT09,
Norman, OK, September 21-25, 200
First principles study of the multiferroics BiFeO, BiFeCrO, and BiCrO: Structure, polarization, and magnetic ordering temperature
We present results of an {\it ab initio} density functional theory study of
three bismuth-based multiferroics, BiFeO, BiFeCrO, and
BiCrO. We disuss differences in the crystal and electronic structure of
the three systems, and we show that the application of the LDA+ method is
essential to obtain realistic structural parameters for BiFeCrO. We
calculate the magnetic nearest neighbor coupling constants for all three
systems and show how Anderson's theory of superexchange can be applied to
explain the signs and relative magnitudes of these coupling constants. From the
coupling constants we then obtain a mean-field approximation for the magnetic
ordering temperatures. Guided by our comparison of these three systems, we
discuss the possibilities for designing a multiferroic material with large
magnetization above room temperature.Comment: 8 Pages, 4 Figure
Factors influencing haemodialysis arteriovenous fistula patency after balloon angioplasty: a systematic review
Aim: Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) is an established treatment for haemodialysis fistula stenosis. This study aimed to systematically review evidence for factors associated with patency after percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA).
Background: The effects of patient comorbidity, demographic, biochemical and anatomical characteristics, with initial PTA success and post-intervention patency have not previously been summarised.
Methods: We searched databases to identify studies assessing patency after PTA in haemodialysis fistulae. Studies of immature or thrombosed fistulae or other dialysis access were excluded. Quality of studies was assessed using a modified validated checklist. Outcomes assessed were post-intervention primary and secondary patency, restenosis at 6 months, technical and clinical success, assisted primary patency and mean interval or frequency of endovascular interventions during follow up. Findings were summarized descriptively.
Results: We included 12 single-centre studies of 1 120 participants with 1281 fistulae. Follow-up ranged from 3 days-10years. Shorter primary patency was seen with more recent fistulae (4 studies), longer stenosis length, upper arm fistulae (2 studies), small inflow artery diameter, arteriovenous anastomotic site and history of previous endovascular interventions (1 study each). Shorter secondary patency was seen with increased patient age (2 studies), and more recent fistulae (1 study). Early restenosis was associated with diabetes (3 studies), HbA1c, low-density lipoprotein, and asymmetric dimethylarginine (1 study each). Technical success was reduced for upper arm fistulae and high-grade stenoses (1 study), while clinical success of PTA was more likely in stenotic compared to thrombosed fistulae (1 study).
Conclusion: Fistula characteristics and diabetes may be associated with poor PTA outcomes, however evidence is inconclusive, and the role of metabolic and inflammatory markers is unclear
Telomere-associated endonuclease-deficient Penelope-like retroelements in diverse eukaryotes
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2007. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of National Academy of Sciences of the USA for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of the United States of America 104 (2007): 9352-9357, doi:10.1073/pnas.0702741104.The evolutionary origin of telomerases, enzymes that maintain the ends of linear
chromosomes in most eukaryotes, is a subject of debate. Penelope-like elements
(PLEs) are a recently described class of eukaryotic retroelements characterized by
a GIY-YIG endonuclease domain and by a reverse transcriptase domain with
similarity to telomerases and group II introns. Here we report that a subset of
PLEs found in bdelloid rotifers, basidiomycete fungi, stramenopiles, and plants,
representing four different eukaryotic kingdoms, lack the endonuclease domain
and are located at telomeres. The 5' truncated ends of these elements are telomereoriented
and typically capped by species-specific telomeric repeats. Most of them
also carry several shorter stretches of telomeric repeats at or near their 3’ ends,
which could facilitate utilization of the telomeric G-rich 3’ overhangs to prime
reverse transcription. Many of these telomere-associated PLEs occupy a basal
phylogenetic position close to the point of divergence from the telomerase-PLE
common ancestor, and may descend from the missing link between early
eukaryotic retroelements and present-day telomerases.Financial support from NIH and the
U.S. National Science Foundation (MCB-0614142
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