4,546 research outputs found
Modelling colossal magnetoresistance manganites
I briefly survey here attempts to model the rich and strange behaviour of
colossal magnetoresistance manganites, after outlining some of the phenomena
observed in them, and describing the three relevant strong local interactions
of the e_g electrons (in two different orbital states at each site), namely
with Jahn-Teller phonon modes (strength g), with resident t_2g spins
(ferromagnetic Hund's rule coupling J_H) and amongst each other (the Mott
Hubbard correlation U) . A new two fluid model of nearly localized l polarons
and band (b) electrons for low energy behaviour emerges for large g; some of
its applications are mentioned here. I describe some results of strong coupling
U, J_H calculations in single site DMFT (Dynamical Mean Field Theory), and show
that in the wide orbital liquid regime many characteristic manganite phenomena
such as an insulating ferromagnetic ground state, thermal insulator metal
transition, colossal magnetoresistance (cmr), materials systematics and the
observed low effective carrier density can all be understood qualitatively and
quantitatively. We also discuss the two 'phase' coexistence frequently found in
these systems, and show that electrostatic coulomb interactions mute lb phase
separation into nanoscale electronic inhomogeneity with l regions and b
puddles. Finally, some problems of current interest as well as general ones
arising, eg polarons and the physics of large electron phonon coupling g in the
adiabatic regime, are mentioned
Ribosome Structure and the Mechanism of Translation
AbstractThe publication of crystal structures of the 50S and 30S ribosomal subunits and the intact 70S ribosome is revolutionizing our understanding of protein synthesis. This review is an attempt to correlate the structures with biochemical and genetic data to identify the gaps and limits in our current knowledge of the mechanisms involved in translation
Multi-wavelength observations of the gamma-ray flaring quasar S4 1030+61 in 2009-2014
We present a study of the parsec-scale multi-frequency properties of the
quasar S4 1030+61 during a prolonged radio and gamma-ray activity. Observations
were performed within Fermi gamma-ray telescope, OVRO 40-m telescope and MOJAVE
VLBA monitoring programs, covering five years from 2009. The data are
supplemented by four-epoch VLBA observations at 5, 8, 15, 24, and 43 GHz, which
were triggered by the bright gamma-ray flare, registered in the quasar in 2010.
The S4 1030+61 jet exhibits an apparent superluminal velocity of (6.4+-0.4)c
and does not show ejections of new components in the observed period, while
decomposition of the radio light curve reveals nine prominent flares. The
measured variability parameters of the source show values typical for
Fermi-detected quasars. Combined analysis of radio and gamma-ray emission
implies a spatial separation between emitting regions at these bands of about
12 pc and locates the gamma-ray emission within a parsec from the central
engine. We detected changes in the value and direction of the linear
polarization and the Faraday rotation measure. The value of the intrinsic
brightness temperature of the core is above the equipartition state, while its
value as a function of distance from the core is well approximated by the
power-law. Altogether these results show that the radio flaring activity of the
quasar is accompanied by injection of relativistic particles and energy losses
at the jet base, while S4 1030+61 has a stable, straight jet well described by
standard conical jet theories.Comment: accepted by MNRAS, 16 pages, 14 figures, 8 tables, 5 pages of
supplementary materia
Some open problems in the physics of disordered systems
Some problems in the physics of disordered systems are pointed out; most of these arise from experiments
Strongly correlated electrons in solids
In this review, phenomena and ideas connected with strongly interacting electrons in condensed matter systems will be outlined. A simple picture which regards electrons as basically a free gas of quantum particles is the basis of our understanding of all electronic behaviour of metals and insulators. In the last few decades, families of systems have been explored in which the interaction energy is much larger than the energy of free motion, or kinetic energy. These include transition metal oxides with unfilled d electron shells, rare earth intermetallics with f electrons, etc. Their behaviour is rich and not well understood in terms of existing paradigms. I point out some experimental features common to these, e.g. that they are ‘bad’ metals with unusually low quantum coherence temperatures. I also briefly give illustrative examples such as cuprates (which are high temperature superconductors), man-ganites (exhibiting colossal magnetoresistance) and heavy fermions (rare earth intermetallics). Some of the ideas, theories and methods available for describing these sysytems are outlined. It is suggested that a new general approach may be needed for this qualitatively different regime of many electron behaviour
Doping and Field-Induced Insulator-Metal Transitions in Half-Doped Manganites
We argue that many properties of the half-doped manganites may be understood
in terms of a new two-(eg electron)-fluid description, which is energetically
favorable at intermediate Jahn-Teller (JT) coupling. This emerges from a
competition between canting of the core spins of Mn promoting mobile carriers
and polaronic trapping of carriers by JT defects, in the presence of CE,
orbital and charge order. We show that this explains several features of the
doping and magnetic field induced insulator-metal transitions, as the
particle-hole asymmetry and the smallness of the transition fields.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Modelling colossal magnetoresistance manganites
I briefly survey here attempts to model the rich and strange behaviour of
colossal magnetoresistance manganites, after outlining some of the phenomena
observed in them, and describing the three relevant strong local interactions
of the e_g electrons (in two different orbital states at each site), namely
with Jahn-Teller phonon modes (strength g), with resident t_2g spins
(ferromagnetic Hund's rule coupling J_H) and amongst each other (the Mott
Hubbard correlation U) . A new two fluid model of nearly localized l polarons
and band (b) electrons for low energy behaviour emerges for large g; some of
its applications are mentioned here. I describe some results of strong coupling
U, J_H calculations in single site DMFT (Dynamical Mean Field Theory), and show
that in the wide orbital liquid regime many characteristic manganite phenomena
such as an insulating ferromagnetic ground state, thermal insulator metal
transition, colossal magnetoresistance (cmr), materials systematics and the
observed low effective carrier density can all be understood qualitatively and
quantitatively. We also discuss the two 'phase' coexistence frequently found in
these systems, and show that electrostatic coulomb interactions mute lb phase
separation into nanoscale electronic inhomogeneity with l regions and b
puddles. Finally, some problems of current interest as well as general ones
arising, eg polarons and the physics of large electron phonon coupling g in the
adiabatic regime, are mentioned
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