11,924 research outputs found
Temperature dependence of magnetism near defects in SrB_6
The T-dependence of magnetic moments in SrB_6 is studied through
spin-polarized band calculations for a supercell of Sr_{27}B_{156} containing a
B_6 vacancy. The magnetic moment decays rather quickly with T despite the fact
that only electronic Fermi-Dirac effects are included. This result and the
T-dependence of moments near a La impurity can hardly explain the reports of a
very high Curie temperature in hexaborides, but suggest that the magnetism is
caused by some other type of impurity.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figure
A Multiscale Approach for Modeling Crystalline Solids
In this paper we present a modeling approach to bridge the atomistic with
macroscopic scales in crystalline materials. The methodology combines
identification and modeling of the controlling unit processes at microscopic
level with the direct atomistic determination of fundamental material
properties. These properties are computed using a many body Force Field derived
from ab initio quantum-mechanical calculations. This approach is exercised to
describe the mechanical response of high-purity Tantalum single crystals,
including the effect of temperature and strain-rate on the hardening rate. The
resulting atomistically informed model is found to capture salient features of
the behavior of these crystals such as: the dependence of the initial yield
point on temperature and strain rate; the presence of a marked stage I of easy
glide, specially at low temperatures and high strain rates; the sharp onset of
stage II hardening and its tendency to shift towards lower strains, and
eventually disappear, as the temperature increases or the strain rate
decreases; the parabolic stage II hardening at low strain rates or high
temperatures; the stage II softening at high strain rates or low temperatures;
the trend towards saturation at high strains; the temperature and strain-rate
dependence of the saturation stress; and the orientation dependence of the
hardening rate.Comment: 25 pages, 15 figures, LaTe
Water-ice driven activity on Main-Belt Comet P/2010 A2 (LINEAR) ?
The dust ejecta of Main-Belt Comet P/2010 A2 (LINEAR) have been observed with
several telescopes at the at the Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos on La
Palma, Spain. Application of an inverse dust tail Monte Carlo method to the
images of the dust ejecta from the object indicates that a sustained, likely
water-ice driven, activity over some eight months is the mechanism responsible
for the formation of the observed tail. The total amount of dust released is
estimated to be 5E7 kg, which represents about 0.3% of the nucleus mass. While
the event could have been triggered by a collision, this cannot be decided from
the currently available data.Comment: Accepted for ApJ Letter
Ferromagnetism below the Stoner limit in La-doped SrB_6
Spin-polarized band calculations for LaSr_7B_{48} show a weak ferro-magnetic
state. This is despite a low density-of-states (DOS) and a low Stoner factor.
The reason for the magnetic state is found to be associated with a gain in
potential energy in addition to the exchange energy, as a spin-splitting is
imposed. An impurity like La DOS is essential for this effect. It makes a
correction to the Stoner factor, and provides an explanation of the recently
observed weak ferro-magnetism in doped hexaborides.Comment: 6 pages, 2 tables, 1 figur
A diffusive system driven by a battery or by a smoothly varying field
We consider the steady state of a one dimensional diffusive system, such as
the symmetric simple exclusion process (SSEP) on a ring, driven by a battery at
the origin or by a smoothly varying field along the ring. The battery appears
as the limiting case of a smoothly varying field, when the field becomes a
delta function at the origin. We find that in the scaling limit, the long range
pair correlation functions of the system driven by a battery turn out to be
very different from the ones known in the steady state of the SSEP maintained
out of equilibrium by contact with two reservoirs, even when the steady state
density profiles are identical in both models
High prevalence of scrapie in a dairy goat herd: tissue distribution of disease-associated PrP and effect of PRNP genotype and age
Following a severe outbreak of clinical scrapie in 2006–2007, a
large dairy goat herd was culled
and 200 animals were selected for post-mortem examinations in order to
ascertain the prevalence of infection,
the effect of age, breed and PRNP genotype on the susceptibility to scrapie,
the tissue distribution of diseaseassociated
PrP (PrP), and the comparative efficiency of different diagnostic methods.
As determined by immunohistochemical (IHC) examinations with Bar224 PrP antibody, the
prevalence of preclinical infection
was very high (72/200; 36.0%), with most infected animals being positive
for PrP in lymphoreticular system
(LRS) tissues (68/72; 94.4%) compared to those that were positive in
brain samples (38/72; 52.8%). The
retropharyngeal lymph node and the palatine tonsil showed the highest
frequency of PrP accumulation (87.3%
and 84.5%, respectively), while the recto-anal mucosa-associated lymphoid
tissue (RAMALT) was positive in
only 30 (41.7%) of the infected goats. However, the efficiency of rectal
and palatine tonsil biopsies taken
shortly before necropsy was similar. The probability of brain and RAMALT
being positive directly
correlated with the spread of PrP within the LRS. The prevalence of
infection was influenced by PRNP
genetics at codon 142 and by the age of the goats: methionine carriers older
than 60 months showed a much
lower prevalence of infection (12/78; 15.4%) than those younger than 60 months (20/42; 47.6%); these last
showed prevalence values similar to isoleucine homozygotes of any age
(40/80; 50.0%). Two of seven goats
with definite signs of scrapie were negative for PrP in brain but positive
in LRS tissues, and one goat showed
biochemical and IHC features of PrP different from all other infected
goats. The results of this study have
implications for surveillance and control policies for scrapie in goats
Long range correlations and phase transition in non-equilibrium diffusive systems
We obtain explicit expressions for the long range correlations in the ABC
model and in diffusive models conditioned to produce an atypical current of
particles.In both cases, the two-point correlation functions allow to detect
the occurrence of a phase transition as they become singular when the system
approaches the transition
Simulating `Complex' Problems with Quantum Monte Carlo
We present a new quantum Monte Carlo algorithm suitable for generically
complex problems, such as systems coupled to external magnetic fields or anyons
in two spatial dimensions. We find that the choice of gauge plays a nontrivial
role, and can be used to reduce statistical noise in the simulation.
Furthermore, it is found that noise can be greatly reduced by approximate
cancellations between the phases of the (gauge dependent) statistical flux and
the external magnetic flux.Comment: Revtex, 11 pages. 3 postscript files for figures attache
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