50,807 research outputs found
Poverty and Inequality in the UK: 2008
In this Commentary, we assess the changes to average incomes, inequality and poverty that have occurred under the first 10 years of the Labour government, with a particular focus on the changes that have occurred in the latest year of data. This analysis is based upon the latest figures from the DWP's Households Below Average Income (HBAI) series, published on 10 June 2008 (Department for Work and Pensions, 2008c). The HBAI series takes household income as its measure of living standards and is derived from the Family Resources Survey, a survey of around 28,000 households in the United Kingdom that asks detailed questions about income from a range of sources
Wigner surmise for Hermitian and non-Hermitian Chiral random matrices
We use the idea of a Wigner surmise to compute approximate distributions of the first eigenvalue in chiral Random Matrix Theory, for both real and complex eigenvalues. Testing against known results
for zero and maximal non-Hermiticity in the microscopic large-N limit we find an excellent agreement, valid for a small number of exact zero-eigenvalues. New compact expressions are derived for real eigenvalues in the orthogonal and symplectic classes, and at intermediate non-Hermiticity for the unitary and symplectic classes. Such individual Dirac eigenvalue
distributions are a useful tool in Lattice Gauge Theory and we illustrate this by showing that our new results can describe data from two-colour QCD simulations with chemical potential in the symplectic class
Poverty and inequality in the UK: 2009
In this Commentary, we assess the changes to average incomes, inequality and poverty that have occurred since Labour came to power in 1997, with a particular focus on the changes that have occurred in the latest year of data. This analysis is based upon the latest figures from the DWP's Households Below Average Income (HBAI) series, published on 7 May 2009 (Department for Work and Pensions, 2009). The HBAI series takes household income as its measure of living standards, and is derived from the Family Resources Survey, a survey of around 25,000 households in the United Kingdom that asks detailed questions about income from a range of sources
Gap probabilities in non-Hermitian random matrix theory
We compute the gap probability that a circle of
radius r around the origin contains exactly k complex eigenvalues. Four different ensembles of random matrices are considered: the Ginibre ensembles and their chiral complex counterparts, with both complex (beta=2) or quaternion real (beta=4) matrix elements. For general non-Gaussian weights we give a Fredholm determinant or Pfaffian representation respectively, depending on the non-Hermiticity parameter. At maximal non-Hermiticity, that is for rotationally invariant weights, the product of Fredholm eigenvalues for beta=4 follows from beta=2 by skipping every second factor, in contrast to the known relation for Hermitian ensembles. On additionally choosing Gaussian weights we give new explicit expressions for the Fredholm eigenvalues in the chiral case, in terms of Bessel-K and incomplete Bessel-I functions. This compares to known results for the Ginibre ensembles in terms of incomplete exponentials. Furthermore we present an asymptotic expansion of the logarithm of the gap probability for large argument r at large N in all four ensembles, up to including the third order linear term. We can provide strict upper and lower bounds and present numerical evidence for its conjectured values, depending on the number of exact zero eigenvalues in the chiral ensembles. For the Ginibre ensemble at beta=2 exact results were previously derived by Forrester
Finite-Temperature Quasicontinuum: Molecular Dynamics without All the Atoms
Using a combination of statistical mechanics and finite-element interpolation, we develop a coarse-grained (CG) alternative to molecular dynamics (MD) for crystalline solids at constant temperature. The new approach is significantly more efficient than MD and generalizes earlier work on the quasicontinuum method. The method is validated by recovering equilibrium properties of single crystal Ni as a function of temperature. CG dynamical simulations of nanoindentation reveal a strong dependence on temperature of the critical stress to nucleate dislocations under the indenter
Plasma Processing of Large Curved Surfaces for SRF Cavity Modification
Plasma based surface modification of niobium is a promising alternative to
wet etching of superconducting radio frequency (SRF) cavities. The development
of the technology based on Cl2/Ar plasma etching has to address several crucial
parameters which influence the etching rate and surface roughness, and
eventually, determine cavity performance. This includes dependence of the
process on the frequency of the RF generator, gas pressure, power level, the
driven (inner) electrode configuration, and the chlorine concentration in the
gas mixture during plasma processing. To demonstrate surface layer removal in
the asymmetric non-planar geometry, we are using a simple cylindrical cavity
with 8 ports symmetrically distributed over the cylinder. The ports are used
for diagnosing the plasma parameters and as holders for the samples to be
etched. The etching rate is highly correlated with the shape of the inner
electrode, radio-frequency (RF) circuit elements, chlorine concentration in the
Cl2/Ar gas mixtures, residence time of reactive species and temperature of the
cavity. Using cylindrical electrodes with variable radius, large-surface
ring-shaped samples and d.c. bias implementation in the external circuit we
have demonstrated substantial average etching rates and outlined the
possibility to optimize plasma properties with respect to maximum surface
processing effect
Nonlinear Transport Near a Quantum Phase Transition in Two Dimensions
The problem of non-linear transport near a quantum phase transition is solved
within the Landau theory for the dissipative insulator-superconductor phase
transition in two dimensions. Using the non-equilibrium Schwinger round-trip
Green function formalism, we obtain the scaling function for the non-linear
conductivity in the quantum disordered regime. We find that the conductivity
scales as at low field but crosses over at large fields to a universal
constant on the order of . The crossover between these two regimes
obtains when the length scale for the quantum fluctuations becomes comparable
to that of the electric field within logarithmic accuracy.Comment: 4.15 pages, no figure
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