71 research outputs found

    Calculations of the Knight Shift Anomalies in Heavy Electron Materials

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    We have studied the Knight shift K(r,T)K(\vec r, T) and magnetic susceptibility χ(T)\chi(T) of heavy electron materials, modeled by the infinite U Anderson model with the NCA method. A systematic study of K(r,T)K(\vec r, T) and χ(T)\chi(T) for different Kondo temperatures T0T_0 (which depends on the hybridization width Γ\Gamma) shows a low temperature anomaly (nonlinear relation between KK and χ\chi) which increases as the Kondo temperature T0T_0 and distance rr increase. We carried out an incoherent lattice sum by adding the K(r)K(\vec r) of a few hundred shells of rare earth atoms around a nucleus and compare the numerically calculated results with the experimental results. For CeSn_3, which is a concentrated heavy electron material, both the ^{119}Sn NMR Knight shift and positive muon Knight shift are studied. Also, lattice coherence effects by conduction electron scattering at every rare earth site are included using the average-T matrix approximation. Also NMR Knight shifts for YbCuAl and the proposed quadrupolar Kondo alloy Y_{0.8}U_{0.2}Pd_{3} are studied.Comment: 31 pages of RevTex, 22 Postscript figures, submmitted to PRB, some figures are delete

    Pathogens and host immunity in the ancient human oral cavity.

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    Calcified dental plaque (dental calculus) preserves for millennia and entraps biomolecules from all domains of life and viruses. We report the first, to our knowledge, high-resolution taxonomic and protein functional characterization of the ancient oral microbiome and demonstrate that the oral cavity has long served as a reservoir for bacteria implicated in both local and systemic disease. We characterize (i) the ancient oral microbiome in a diseased state, (ii) 40 opportunistic pathogens, (iii) ancient human-associated putative antibiotic resistance genes, (iv) a genome reconstruction of the periodontal pathogen Tannerella forsythia, (v) 239 bacterial and 43 human proteins, allowing confirmation of a long-term association between host immune factors, 'red complex' pathogens and periodontal disease, and (vi) DNA sequences matching dietary sources. Directly datable and nearly ubiquitous, dental calculus permits the simultaneous investigation of pathogen activity, host immunity and diet, thereby extending direct investigation of common diseases into the human evolutionary past

    Magnetic properties of rare-earth transition-metal borides

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    The magnetic and structural properties of quaternary RCo4-xFexB alloys with R=Nd, Sm, Er have been examined with magnetometry and x-ray diffraction. The CeCo4B-type phase is found for all x in Er, for x≤3 in Sm, and for x=0, 1, and 2 in Nd. Maximum coercivities have been obtained in a crystallized SmFe2Co2B sample with Hc\u3e17 kOe at room temperature
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