239 research outputs found
Quantum critical point in the spin glass-antiferromagnetism competition for fermionic Ising Models
The competition between spin glass () and antiferromagnetic order ()
is analyzed in two sublattice fermionic Ising models in the presence of a
transverse and a parallel magnetic fields. The exchange
interaction follows a Gaussian probability distribution with mean and
standard deviation , but only spins in different sublattices can
interact. The problem is formulated in a path integral formalism, where the
spin operators have been expressed as bilinear combinations of Grassmann
fields. The results of two fermionic models are compared. In the first one, the
diagonal operator has four states, where two eigenvalues vanish (4S
model), which are suppressed by a restriction in the two states 2S model. The
replica symmetry ansatz and the static approximation have been used to obtain
the free energy. The results are showing in phase diagrams ( is the
temperature) {\it versus} , , and . When is
increased, (transition temperature to a nonergodic phase) reduces and
the Neel temperature decreases towards a quantum critical point. The field
always destroys ; however, within a certain range, it favors the
frustration. Therefore, the presence of both fields, and , produces
effects that are in competition. The critical temperatures are lower for the 4S
model and it is less sensitive to the magnetic couplings than the 2S model.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, accepted in Physica
The Measurement of the Asymmetry of Tensor-Polarized Deuteron Electrodisintegration at 180 MeV Electron Energy
The nucleon emission asymmetry in d(e, pn)e' reaction was measured using the tensor-polarized deuterium jet target in the VEPP-2 electron storage ring. At the present experimental accuracy, the results for the proton energy interval Ep= 12-100 MeV do not contradict the nonrelativistic calculations.
Nanostructured metal-fullerene field emission cathode
One of the important properties of carbon nanostructures is their cold electron
emission ability. Carbon nanotubes and other nanostructures are capable of
emitting high currents at relatively low electrical fields. They are already
used in functional devices such as field emitters. The conventional method of
carbon nanostructured cathodes manufacturing is thin film nanocarbon deposition
using CVD process on electrically conducting substrate like metal or doped
silicon plates. The alternative way of manufacturing of carbon field emission
cathodes is based on a special processing of carbon microfibers or composite materials in metal holders. We used the similar approach to produce composite
metal-nanocarbon material which may be easily processed and shaped to
produce an effective field emission cathode which can be easily fixed an any
environment.
When you are citing the document, use the following link http://essuir.sumdu.edu.ua/handle/123456789/2058
Chemokine-Releasing Nanoparticles for Manipulation of Lymph Node Microenvironment
Chemokines (CKs) secreted by the host cells into surrounding tissue establish concentration gradients directing the migration of leukocytes. We propose an in vivo CK gradient remodeling approach based on sustained release of CKs by the crosslinked poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) hydrogel open meshwork nano-particles (NPs) containing internal crosslinked dye affinity baits for a reversible CK binding and release. The sustained release is based on a new principle of affinity off-rate tuning. The NPs with Cibacron Blue F3G-A and Reactive Blue-4 baits demonstrated a low-micromolar affinity binding to IL-8, MIP-2, and MCP-1 with a half-life of several hours at 37\ub0C. The capacity of NPs loaded with IL-8 and MIP-1\u3b1 to increase neutrophil recruitment to lymph nodes (LNs) was tested in mice after footpad injection. Fluorescently-labeled NPs used as tracers indicated the delivery into the sub-capsular compartment of draining LNs. The animals administered the CK-loaded NPs demonstrated a widening of the sub-capsular space and a strong lymph node influx of leukocytes, while mice injected with control NPs without CKs or bolus doses of soluble CKs alone showed only a marginal neutrophil response. This technology provides a new means therapeutically direct or restore immune cell traffic, and can also be employed for simultaneous therapy delivery
Gamma-ray strength function and pygmy resonance in rare earth nuclei
The gamma-ray strength function for gamma energies in the 1-7 MeV region has
been measured for 161,162-Dy and 171,172-Yb using the (3-He,alpha gamma)
reaction. Various models are tested against the observed gamma-ray strength
functions. The best description is based on the Kadmenskii, Markushev and
Furman E1 model with constant temperature and the Lorentzian M1 model. A
gamma-ray bump observed at E_gamma=3 MeV is interpreted as the so-called pygmy
resonance, which has also been observed previously in (n,gamma) experiments.
The parameters for this resonance have been determined and compared to the
available systematics.Comment: 11 pages, including 4 figures and 2 table
Observation of semileptonic decays with CMD-2 detector
The decay has been observed by the CMD-2 detector at
the e^+e^- collider VEPP-2M at Novosibirsk. Of 6 million produced
pairs, events of the decay were selected. The
corresponding branching ratio is . This result is consistent with the evaluation of from the semileptonic rate and lifetime
assuming .Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, LaTex2e. Submitted to Phys.Lett.
Study of the process e+e- to pi+pi-pi+pi-pi0 with CMD-2 detector
The process e+e- to pi+ pi- pi+ pi- pi0 has been studied in the center of
mass energy range 1280 -- 1380 MeV using 3.0 1/pb of data collected with the
CMD-2 detector in Novosibirsk. Analysis shows that the cross section of the
five pion production is dominated by the contributions of the eta pi+pi- and
omega pi+pi- intermediate states.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure. Submitted to Phys. Lett.
Study of the Process in the C.M.Energy Range 1.05-1.38 GeV with CMD-2
The process has been studied with the CMD-2 detector
using about 950 events detected in the center-of-mass energy range from 1.05 to
1.38 GeV. The cross section exceeds the expectation based on the contributions
of the rho(770), omega(782) and phi(1020) mesons only.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, uses elsart.cls, submitted to Physics Letters
High-statistics measurement of the pion form factor in the rho-meson energy range with the CMD-2 detector
We present a measurement of the pion form factor based on e+e- annihilation
data from the CMD-2 detector in the energy range 0.6<sqrt(s)<1.0 GeV with a
systematic uncertainty of 0.8%. A data sample is five times larger than that
used in our previous measurement.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures. Added comparison with KLOE measurement, minor
updates. Accepted by PL
- …