357 research outputs found
Bernoulli Potential, Hall Constant and Cooper Pairs Effective Masses in Disordered BCS Superconductors
It is analyzed what fundamental new information for the properties of the
superconductors can be obtained by systematic investigation of the Bernoulli
effect. It is shown that it is a tool to determine the effective mass of Cooper
pairs, the volume density of charge carriers, the temperature dependence of the
penetration depth and condensation energy. The theoretical results for
disordered and anisotropic gap superconductors are systematized for this aim.
For clean-anisotropic-gap superconductors is presented a simple derivation for
the temperature dependence of the penetration depthComment: 13 pages, 3 figures, LaTeX 2e, New figure and reference
Relation between first lactation milk yield and functional traits in dairy cows
The aim of the study was to analyze the relationship between first lactation milk yield
(FLMY) and age at first calving (AFC), longevity and productive life in dairy cows. The study
covered 944 Holstein cows housed in 5 dairy cattle farms in Bulgaria. All cows from the five
farms culled in the period 2012–2018 with FLMY data were included. The average AFC for all
culled cows included in the study was relatively high for the Holstein-Friesian breed - 29.75
months. The average FLMY of the herds included in the study was 7,660.94 kg with significant
herd variation from 5,899.09 kg to 8,646.0 kg. Significant effect of the herd (P < 0.001), AFC
and the associated effect of the herd and AFC (P < 0.05) on the average FLMY were found. The
highest FLMY was reported in primiparous with AFC of 28–30 months – 7,860.8 kg, and the
lowest in those with AFC ≤ 24 months – 7322.8 kg. In the herd with the lowest average FLMY -
5,899.09 kg 27.5% of the heifers had calved at age over 34 months. A statistically significant
effect of AFC (P < 0.001) was found on longevity, whereas the productive life was significantly
influenced by FLMY (P < 0.05). A tendency for higher longevity for cows with higher AFC of
34–37 months and over 37 months – 5.9 and 5.8 years, respectively was observed. The lowest
were the longevity values for cows calved at age up to 24 months – 4.9 years. The cows with the
lowest average FLMY (up to 4,000 kg) had the shortest productive. Both very low and high AFC
were associated with lower first lactation cow productivity and shorter productive life. The losses
for farmers were greater when keeping a high AFC in heifers, which increases the cost for housing
them, and the lower productivity and longer productive life reduce the probability
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GeD spline estimation of multivariate Archimedean copulas
A new multivariate Archimedean copula estimation method is proposed in a non-parametric setting. The method uses the so-called Geometrically Designed splines (GeD splines) to represent the cdf of a random variable Wθ, obtained through the probability integral transform of an Archimedean copula with parameter θ. Sufficient conditions for the GeD spline estimator to possess the properties of the underlying theoretical cdf, K(θ,t), of Wθ, are given. The latter conditions allow for defining a three-step estimation procedure for solving the resulting non-linear regression problem with linear inequality constraints. In the proposed procedure, finding the number and location of the knots and the coefficients of the unconstrained GeD spline estimator and solving the constraint least-squares optimisation problem are separated. Thus, the resulting spline estimator View the MathML source is used to recover the generator and the related Archimedean copula by solving an ordinary differential equation. The proposed method is truly multivariate, it brings about numerical efficiency and as a result can be applied with large volumes of data and for dimensions d≥2, as illustrated by the numerical examples presented
The 3d-to-4s-by-2p highway to superconductivity in cuprates
High-temperature superconductors are nowadays found in great variety and hold
technological promise. It is still an unsolved mystery that the critical
temperature T_c of the basic cuprates is so high. The answer might well be
hidden in a conventional corner of theoretical physics, overlooked in the
recent hunt for exotic explanations of new effects in these materials. A
forgotten intra-atomic s-d two-electron exchange in the Cu atom is found to
provide a strong (~eV) electron pairing interaction. A
Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer approach can explain the main experimental
observations and predict the correct d_{x^2-y^2} symmetry of the gap.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, LaTeX2
The data paper: a mechanism to incentivize data publishing in biodiversity science
<p/> <p>Background</p> <p>Free and open access to primary biodiversity data is essential for informed decision-making to achieve conservation of biodiversity and sustainable development. However, primary biodiversity data are neither easily accessible nor discoverable. Among several impediments, one is a lack of incentives to data publishers for publishing of their data resources. One such mechanism currently lacking is recognition through conventional scholarly publication of enriched metadata, which should ensure rapid discovery of 'fit-for-use' biodiversity data resources.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>We review the state of the art of data discovery options and the mechanisms in place for incentivizing data publishers efforts towards easy, efficient and enhanced publishing, dissemination, sharing and re-use of biodiversity data. We propose the establishment of the 'biodiversity data paper' as one possible mechanism to offer scholarly recognition for efforts and investment by data publishers in authoring rich metadata and publishing them as citable academic papers. While detailing the benefits to data publishers, we describe the objectives, work flow and outcomes of the pilot project commissioned by the Global Biodiversity Information Facility in collaboration with scholarly publishers and pioneered by Pensoft Publishers through its journals <it>Zookeys</it>, <it>PhytoKeys</it>, <it>MycoKeys</it>, <it>BioRisk</it>, <it>NeoBiota</it>, <it>Nature Conservation</it> and the forthcoming <it>Biodiversity Data Journal</it>. We then debate further enhancements of the data paper beyond the pilot project and attempt to forecast the future uptake of data papers as an incentivization mechanism by the stakeholder communities.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>We believe that in addition to recognition for those involved in the data publishing enterprise, data papers will also expedite publishing of fit-for-use biodiversity data resources. However, uptake and establishment of the data paper as a potential mechanism of scholarly recognition requires a high degree of commitment and investment by the cross-sectional stakeholder communities.</p
The Mass-Radius Relationship for Very Low Mass Stars: Four New Discoveries from the HATSouth Survey
We report the discovery of four transiting F-M binary systems with companions
between 0.1-0.2 Msun in mass by the HATSouth survey. These systems have been
characterised via a global analysis of the HATSouth discovery data, combined
with high-resolution radial velocities and accurate transit photometry
observations. We determined the masses and radii of the component stars using a
combination of two methods: isochrone fitting of spectroscopic primary star
parameters, and equating spectroscopic primary star rotation velocity with
spin-orbit synchronisation. These new very low mass companions are HATS550-016B
(0.110 -0.006/+0.005 Msun, 0.147 -0.004/+0.003 Rsun), HATS551-019B (0.17
-0.01/+0.01 Msun, 0.18 -0.01/+0.01 Rsun), HATS551-021B (0.132 -0.005/+0.014
Msun, 0.154 -0.008/+0.006 Rsun), HATS553-001B (0.20 -0.02/+0.01 Msun, 0.22
-0.01/+0.01 Rsun). We examine our sample in the context of the radius anomaly
for fully-convective low mass stars. Combining our sample with the 13 other
well-studied very low mass stars, we find a tentative 5% systematic deviation
between the measured radii and theoretical isochrone models.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
HATS-17b: A Transiting Compact Warm Jupiter in a 16.3 Days Circular Orbit
We report the discovery of HATS-17b, the first transiting warm Jupiter of the
HATSouth network. HATS-17b transits its bright (V=12.4) G-type
(M=1.131 0.030 M,
R=1.091 R) metal-rich ([Fe/H]=+0.3 dex)
host star in a circular orbit with a period of P=16.2546 days. HATS-17b has a
very compact radius of 0.777 0.056 R given its Jupiter-like mass of
1.338 0.065 M. Up to 50% of the mass of HATS-17b may be composed of
heavy elements in order to explain its high density with current models of
planetary structure. HATS-17b is the longest period transiting planet
discovered to date by a ground-based photometric survey, and is one of the
brightest transiting warm Jupiter systems known. The brightness of HATS-17b
will allow detailed follow-up observations to characterize the orbital geometry
of the system and the atmosphere of the planet.Comment: 12 page, 8 figures, submitted to A
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