2,940 research outputs found
Seniority in quantum many-body systems. I. Identical particles in a single shell
A discussion of the seniority quantum number in many-body systems is
presented. The analysis is carried out for bosons and fermions simultaneously
but is restricted to identical particles occupying a single shell. The emphasis
of the paper is on the possibility of {\em partial} conservation of seniority
which turns out to be a peculiar property of spin-9/2 fermions but prevalent in
systems of interacting bosons of any spin. Partial conservation of seniority is
at the basis of the existence of seniority isomers, frequently observed in
semi-magic nuclei, and also gives rise to peculiar selection rules in
one-nucleon transfer reactions.Comment: 41 pages, 7 figures, 1 tables, submitted to Annals of Physic
Research 2.0 : improving participation in online research communities
Web 2.0 thinking and technologies create a number of new opportunities to conduct research broadly labeled as Research 2.0. Research 2.0 is a growing area of academic and commercial interest, which includes research undertaken in online research communities. This research in progress paper explores the practice of online research communities using a case study example operated by the commercial market research company Virtual Surveys Limited (VSL) in the UK on behalf of their client United Biscuits UK Ltd.
The preliminary findings are based on VSL and academics working together to improve the online research community participantsâ response rate and the quality of contributions. Data collected for this study is based on meetings, participant observation, and a pilot survey of United Biscuits online research community (snackrs.com) members.
Using the responses of 112 snackrs.com community members, a preliminary typology of motivational factors is proposed. This can be used to refine the recruitment and development of activities in an online research community. Also, a model for supporting online research communities to ensure longitudinal engagement based on an adaptation of Salmonâs (2004) 5 Stage Model for e-moderation is proposed, extending the 5 stages to 7 â adding the stages of selection and disengagemen
Worker policing by egg eating in the ponerine ant Pachycondyla inversa
We investigated worker policing by egg eating in the ponerine ant Pachycondyla inversa, a species with
morphologically distinct queens and workers. Colonies were split into one half with the queen and one
half without. Workers in queenless colony fragments started laying unfertilized male eggs after three weeks.
Worker-laid eggs and queen-laid eggs were introduced into five other queenright colonies with a single
queen and three colonies with multiple queens, and their fate was observed for 30 min. Significantly more
worker-laid eggs (range of 35â62%, mean of 46%) than queen-laid eggs (range of 5â31%, mean of 15%)
were eaten by workers in single-queen colonies, and the same trend was seen in multiple-queen colonies.
This seems to be the first well-documented study of ants with a distinct caste polymorphism to show that
workers kill worker-laid eggs in preference to queen-laid eggs. Chemical analyses showed that the surfaces
of queen-laid and worker-laid eggs have different chemical profiles as a result of different relative proportions
of several hydrocarbons. Such differences might provide the information necessary for differential
treatment of eggs. One particular alkane, 3,11-dimeC27, was significantly more abundant on the surfaces
of queen-laid eggs. This substance is also the most abundant compound on the cuticles of egg layers
Weather on Other Worlds. IV. H emission and photometric variability are not correlated in L0T8 dwarfs
Recent photometric studies have revealed that surface spots that produce flux
variations are present on virtually all L and T dwarfs. Their likely magnetic
or dusty nature has been a much-debated problem, the resolution to which has
been hindered by paucity of diagnostic multi-wavelength observations. To test
for a correlation between magnetic activity and photometric variability, we
searched for H emission among eight L3T2 ultra-cool dwarfs with
extensive previous photometric monitoring, some of which are known to be
variable at 3.6 m or 4.5 m. We detected H only in the
non-variable T2 dwarf 2MASS J125453930122474. The remaining seven objects do
not show H emission, even though six of them are known to vary
photometrically. Combining our results with those for 86 other L and T dwarfs
from the literature show that the detection rate of H emission is very
high (94) for spectral types between L0 and L3.5 and much smaller (20)
for spectral types L4, while the detection rate of photometric variability
is approximately constant (3055) from L0 to T8 dwarfs. We conclude
that chromospheric activity, as evidenced by H emission, and
large-amplitude photometric variability are not correlated. Consequently, dust
clouds are the dominant driver of the observed variability of ultra-cool dwarfs
at spectral types at least as early as L0.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Hippocampal characteristics and invariant sequence elements distribution of GLRA2 and GLRA3 C-to-U editing
Glycine receptor α2 and α3 subunit (GLRA2/GLRA3) high-affinity variants, of which the subjacent amino acid substitutions issue from C-to-U RNA editing, are thought to influence tonic inhibition and pathophysiology. In light of the detection of GLRA3 NM_006529:r.1157C>U and GLRA2 NM-002063:r.1416C>U exchanges in hippocampus explants of temporal lobe epilepsy patients, we now examine the healthy situation and relate it to the epileptic situation by ascertaining controls in a legitimate reanalysis. The GLRA2 and GLRA3 editing events that would ultimately result in a glycine receptor with increased affinity occur in the postmortem nonepileptic hippocampus. Most notably, their relative amounts do not significantly differ from those in increased damaged hippocampus explants, whereas curbed relative amounts in epileptic explants without cell loss come out statistically significant. Local sequence alignment reveals invariant sequence stretches consistent in GLRA2/ GLRA3 and other edited transcripts that coincide with known APOB sequence elements. Concerning the essential mooring element, GLRA2/GLRA3 comply strictly only with the motif's 5' part. While this lack of canonical mooring elements and uncertain action of the famous deaminase APOBEC1 suggest a specific regulation of GLRA2/GLRA3 editing, its reduction in the less-damaged epileptic hippocampus could be attributed to anomalous epileptic neurogenesis
Magnetic Phase Control in Monolayer Films by Substrate Tuning
We propose to tailor exchange interactions in magnetic monolayer films by
tuning the adjacent non-magnetic substrate. As an example, we demonstrate a
ferromagnetic-antiferromagnetic phase transition for one monolayer Fe on a
Ta(x)W(1-x)(001) surface as a function of the Ta concentration. At the critical
Ta concentration, the nearest-neighbor exchange interaction is small and the
magnetic phase space is dramatically broadened. Complex magnetic order such as
spin-spirals, multiple-Q, or even disordered local moment states can occur,
offering the possibility to store information in terms of ferromagnetic dots in
an otherwise zero-magnetization state matrix.Comment: after minor changes, 5 pages, 5 figures, revtex
Partial conservation of seniority and nuclear isomerism
We point out the possibility of the {\em partial} conservation of the
seniority quantum number when most eigenstates are mixed in seniority but some
remain pure. This situation occurs in nuclei for the and
shells where it is at the origin of the existence of seniority isomers in the
ruthenium and palladium isotopes. It also occurs for bosons.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter
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