2,308 research outputs found
Orientational order on curved surfaces - the high temperature region
We study orientational order, subject to thermal fluctuations, on a fixed
curved surface. We derive, in particular, the average density of zeros of
Gaussian distributed vector fields on a closed Riemannian manifold. Results are
compared with the density of disclination charges obtained from a Coulomb gas
model. Our model describes the disordered state of two dimensional objects with
orientational degrees of freedom, such as vector ordering in Langmuir
monolayers and lipid bilayers above the hexatic to fluid transition.Comment: final version, 13 Pages, 2 figures, uses iopart.cl
Quantum critical phenomena of long-range interacting bosons in a time-dependent random potential
We study the superfluid-insulator transition of a particle-hole symmetric
system of long-range interacting bosons in a time-dependent random potential in
two dimensions, using the momentum-shell renormalization-group method. We find
a new stable fixed point with non-zero values of the parameters representing
the short- and long-range interactions and disorder when the interaction is
asymptotically logarithmic. This is contrasted to the non-random case with a
logarithmic interaction, where the transition is argued to be first-order, and
to the Coulomb interaction case, where either a first-order transition or
an XY-like transition is possible depending on the parameters. We propose that
our model may be relevant in studying the vortex liquid-vortex glass transition
of interacting vortex lines in point-disordered type-II superconductors.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Psychological interventions in asthma
Asthma is a multifactorial chronic respiratory disease characterised by recurrent episodes of airway obstruction. The current management of asthma focuses principally on pharmacological treatments, which have a strong evidence base underlying their use. However, in clinical practice, poor symptom control remains a common problem for patients with asthma. Living with asthma has been linked with psychological co-morbidity including anxiety, depression, panic attacks and behavioural factors such as poor adherence and suboptimal self-management. Psychological disorders have a higher-than-expected prevalence in patients with difficult-to-control asthma. As psychological considerations play an important role in the management of people with asthma, it is not surprising that many psychological therapies have been applied in the management of asthma. There are case reports which support their use as an adjunct to pharmacological therapy in selected individuals, and in some clinical trials, benefit is demonstrated, but the evidence is not consistent. When findings are quantitatively synthesised in meta-analyses, no firm conclusions are able to be drawn and no guidelines recommend psychological interventions. These inconsistencies in findings may in part be due to poor study design, the combining of results of studies using different interventions and the diversity of ways patient benefit is assessed. Despite this weak evidence base, the rationale for psychological therapies is plausible, and this therapeutic modality is appealing to both patients and their clinicians as an adjunct to conventional pharmacological treatments. What are urgently required are rigorous evaluations of psychological therapies in asthma, on a par to the quality of pharmaceutical trials. From this evidence base, we can then determine which interventions are beneficial for our patients with asthma management and more specifically which psychological therapy is best suited for each patient
Editorial: Integrated cardiovascular and neural system processes as potential mechanisms of behavior change
Variational theory of flux-line liquids
We formulate a variational (Hartree like) description of flux line liquids
which improves on the theory we developed in an earlier paper [A.M. Ettouhami,
Phys. Rev. B 65, 134504 (2002)]. We derive, in particular, how the massive term
confining the fluctuations of flux lines varies with temperature and show that
this term vanishes at high enough temperatures where the vortices behave as
freely fluctuating elastic lines.Comment: 10 pages, 1 postscript figur
Thinking beyond the hybrid:“actually-existing” cities “after neoliberalism” in Boyle <i>et al.</i>
In their article, ‘The spatialities of actually existing neoliberalism in Glasgow, 1977 to present’, Mark Boyle, Christopher McWilliams and Gareth Rice (2008) usefully problematise our current understanding of neoliberal urbanism. Our response is aimed at developing a sympathetic but critical approach to Boyle et al's understanding of neoliberal urbanism as illustrated by the Glasgow example. In particular, the counterposing by Boyle et al of a 'hybrid, mutant' model to a 'pure' model of neoliberalism for us misrepresents existing models of neoliberalism as a perfectly finished object rather than a roughly mottled process. That they do not identify any ‘pure’ model leads them to create a straw construct against which they can claim a more sophisticated, refined approach to the messiness of neoliberal urbanism. In contrast, we view neoliberalism as a contested and unstable response to accumulation crises at various scales of analysis
Interaction effects in non-Hermitian models of vortex physics
Vortex lines in superconductors in an external magnetic field slightly tilted
from randomly-distributed parallel columnar defects can be modeled by a system
of interacting bosons in a non-Hermitian vector potential and a random scalar
potential. We develop a theory of the strongly-disordered non-Hermitian boson
Hubbard model using the Hartree-Bogoliubov approximation and apply it to
calculate the complex energy spectra, the vortex tilt angle and the tilt
modulus of (1+1)-dimensional directed flux line systems. We construct the phase
diagram associated with the flux-liquid to Bose-glass transition and find that,
close to the phase boundary, the tilted flux liquid phase is characterized by a
band of localized excitations, with two mobility edges in its low-energy
spectrum.Comment: 19 pages, 19 figures, To appear in Phys. Rev.
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