6,529 research outputs found

    Spin melting and refreezing driven by uniaxial compression on a dipolar hexagonal plate

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    We investigate freezing characteristics of a finite dipolar hexagonal plate by the Monte Carlo simulation. The hexagonal plate is cut out from a piled triangular lattice of three layers with FCC-like (ABCABC) stacking structure. In the present study an annealing simulation is performed for the dipolar plate uniaxially compressed in the direction of layer-piling. We find spin melting and refreezing driven by the uniaxial compression. Each of the melting and refreezing corresponds one-to-one with a change of the ground states induced by compression. The freezing temperatures of the ground-state orders differ significantly from each other, which gives rise to the spin melting and refreezing of the present interest. We argue that these phenomena are originated by a finite size effect combined with peculiar anisotropic nature of the dipole-dipole interaction.Comment: Proceedings of the Highly Frustrated Magnetism (HFM2006) conference. To appear in a special issue of J. Phys. Condens. Matte

    STRUCTURE OF BENZ[A]ANTHRACENE-7,12-DIONE

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    C18H1002, monoclinic, C2/c, a = 10.918 (1), b = 11.369(1), c = 19.850(1)A, /~= 97.224(7) ° , U = 2444.4 A 3, Z = 8, D,n = 1.41 (2), D c = 1.403 Mg m -3, F(000) = 1072, 2(CuKa) = 1.5418/~, ~t = 0.742 mm -1. 2253 reflections were measured, of which 1039 had significant intensities. Refinement converged to a final R of 0.045. The molecule is approximately planar. Ring C is significantly non-delocalized. Bonds C(3)-C(4) and C(5)-C(6) are short, and indicate pronounced olefinic character for these bonds

    THE STRUCTURE OF 5-AMINO-4-METHYL-1-ISOQUINOLINECARBALDEHYDE THIOSEMICARBAZONE HYDROCHLORIDE, C12H14N5S+.CL-

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    Mr=295.80 , P21/n , a=8.284(1), b= 13.906 (1), c= 12.040 (2) A, fl= 92.95 (1) °, V= 1385.0 (5) ,/k 3, Z = 4, D m = 1.42, D x = 1.418 Mg m -3, 2(Cu K~t) = 1.54178 A,, g = 3.8134 mm -~, F(000) = 616, R =0.061 for 628 unique significant reflections measured at 298 K. The structure was compared with that of other active/inactive thiosemicarbazone derivatives, in the search for a structure-activity relationship. It was also compared with the structure of a related metal complex

    Exact dynamics of a reaction-diffusion model with spatially alternating rates

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    We present the exact solution for the full dynamics of a nonequilibrium spin chain and its dual reaction-diffusion model, for arbitrary initial conditions. The spin chain is driven out of equilibrium by coupling alternating spins to two thermal baths at different temperatures. In the reaction-diffusion model, this translates into spatially alternating rates for particle creation and annihilation, and even negative ``temperatures'' have a perfectly natural interpretation. Observables of interest include the magnetization, the particle density, and all correlation functions for both models. Two generic types of time-dependence are found: if both temperatures are positive, the magnetization, density and correlation functions decay exponentially to their steady-state values. In contrast, if one of the temperatures is negative, damped oscillations are observed in all quantities. They can be traced to a subtle competition of pair creation and annihilation on the two sublattices. We comment on the limitations of mean-field theory and propose an experimental realization of our model in certain conjugated polymers and linear chain compounds.Comment: 13 pages, 1 table, revtex4 format (few minor typos fixed). Published in Physical Review

    High-altitude gravity waves in the Martian thermosphere observed by MAVEN/NGIMS and modeled by a gravity wave scheme

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    First high-altitude observations of gravity wave (GW)-induced CO2_2 density perturbations in the Martian thermosphere retrieved from NASA's NGIMS instrument on board the MAVEN satellite are presented and interpreted using the extended GW parameterization of Yi\u{g}it et al. [2008] and the Mars Climate Database as an input. Observed relative density perturbations between 180-220 km of 20-40 % demonstrate appreciable local time, latitude, and altitude variations. Modeling for the spatiotemporal conditions of the MAVEN observations suggests that GWs can directly propagate from the lower atmosphere to the thermosphere, produce appreciable dynamical effects, and likely contribute to the observed fluctuations. Modeled effects are somewhat smaller than the observed but their highly variable nature is in qualitative agreement with observations. Possible reasons for discrepancies between modeling and measurements are discussed.Comment: Accepted for publication in Geophysical Research Letters (GRL). Special section: First Results from the MAVEN Mission to Mar

    Nucleosynthesis in 2D Core-Collapse Supernovae of 11.2 and 17.0 M_{\odot} Progenitors: Implications for Mo and Ru Production

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    Core-collapse supernovae are the first polluters of heavy elements in the galactic history. As such, it is important to study the nuclear compositions of their ejecta, and understand their dependence on the progenitor structure (e.g., mass, compactness, metallicity). Here, we present a detailed nucleosynthesis study based on two long-term, two-dimensional core-collapse supernova simulations of a 11.2 M_{\odot} and a 17.0 M_{\odot} star. We find that in both models nuclei well beyond the iron group (up to Z44Z \approx 44) can be produced, and discuss in detail also the nucleosynthesis of the p-nuclei 92,94^{92,94}Mo and 96,98^{96,98}Ru. While we observe the production of 92^{92}Mo and 94^{94}Mo in slightly neutron-rich conditions in both simulations, 96,98^{96,98}Ru can only be produced efficiently via the ν\nup-process. Furthermore, the production of Ru in the ν\nup-process heavily depends on the presence of very proton-rich material in the ejecta. This disentanglement of production mechanisms has interesting consequences when comparing to the abundance ratios between these isotopes in the solar system and in presolar grains.Comment: 48 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in: J. Phys. G: Nucl. Part. Phy

    The Proton Gluon Distribution from the Color Dipole Picture

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    Employing the representation of the experimental data on deep inelastic electron-proton scattering (DIS) in the color-dipole picture (CDP), we determine the gluon distribution of the proton at small Bjorken xx. At sufficiently large momentum transfer, Q2Q^2, the extracted gluon distribution fulfills the evolution equation for the proton structure function. For low values of Q2Q^2, e.g. for Q2=1.9GeV2Q^2 = 1.9 {\rm GeV}^2, the evolution equation for the proton structure function requires a strong modification of predicted magnitude. The standard procedure of adopting a low-Q2Q^2 input scale for the extraction of the gluon density is highly questionable. Without modification at low Q2Q^2, the evolution is inconsistent with the required low-Q2Q^2 decrease of the longitudinal structure function with decreasing momentum transfer Q2Q^2

    Simulations of slow positron production using a low energy electron accelerator

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    Monte Carlo simulations of slow positron production via energetic electron interaction with a solid target have been performed. The aim of the simulations was to determine the expected slow positron beam intensity from a low energy, high current electron accelerator. By simulating (a) the fast positron production from a tantalum electron-positron converter and (b) the positron depth deposition profile in a tungsten moderator, the slow positron production probability per incident electron was estimated. Normalizing the calculated result to the measured slow positron yield at the present AIST LINAC the expected slow positron yield as a function of energy was determined. For an electron beam energy of 5 MeV (10 MeV) and current 240 μ\muA (30 μ\muA) production of a slow positron beam of intensity 5 ×\times 106^{6} s1^{-1} is predicted. The simulation also calculates the average energy deposited in the converter per electron, allowing an estimate of the beam heating at a given electron energy and current. For low energy, high-current operation the maximum obtainable positron beam intensity will be limited by this beam heating.Comment: 11 pages, 15 figures, submitted to Review of Scientific Instrument

    Ferromagnetic (Ga,Mn)N epilayers versus antiferromagnetic GaMn3_3N clusters

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    Mn-doped wurtzite GaN epilayers have been grown by nitrogen plasma-assisted molecular beam epitaxy. Correlated SIMS, structural and magnetic measurements show that the incorporation of Mn strongly depends on the conditions of the growth. Hysteresis loops which persist at high temperature do not appear to be correlated to the presence of Mn. Samples with up to 2% Mn are purely substitutional Ga1x_{1-x}Mnx_xN epilayers, and exhibit paramagnetic properties. At higher Mn contents, precipitates are formed which are identified as GaMn3_3N clusters by x-ray diffraction and absorption: this induces a decrease of the paramagnetic magnetisation. Samples co-doped with enough Mg exhibit a new feature: a ferromagnetic component is observed up to Tc175T_c\sim175 K, which cannot be related to superparamagnetism of unresolved magnetic precipitates.Comment: Revised versio
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