3,813 research outputs found
The radiation-induced rotation of cosmic dust particles: A feasibility study
A crossed beam, horizontal optical trap, used to achieve laser levitation of particles in an effort to determine how solar radiation produces high spin rate in interplanetary dust particles, is described. It is suggested that random variations in albedo and geometry give rise to a nonzero effective torque when the influence of a unidrectional source of radiaton (due to the Sun) over the surface of a interplanetary dust particle is averaged. This resultant nonzero torque is characterized by an asymmetry factor which is the ratio of the effective moment arm to the maximum linear dimension of the body and is estimated to be 5 X 10 to the minus four power. It is hoped that this symmetry factor, which stabilizes the nonstatistical response of the particle, can be measured in a future Spacelab experiment
Fragment Approach to Constrained Density Functional Theory Calculations using Daubechies Wavelets
In a recent paper we presented a linear scaling Kohn-Sham density functional
theory (DFT) code based on Daubechies wavelets, where a minimal set of
localized support functions is optimized in situ and therefore adapted to the
chemical properties of the molecular system. Thanks to the systematically
controllable accuracy of the underlying basis set, this approach is able to
provide an optimal contracted basis for a given system: accuracies for ground
state energies and atomic forces are of the same quality as an uncontracted,
cubic scaling approach. This basis set offers, by construction, a natural
subset where the density matrix of the system can be projected. In this paper
we demonstrate the flexibility of this minimal basis formalism in providing a
basis set that can be reused as-is, i.e. without reoptimization, for
charge-constrained DFT calculations within a fragment approach. Support
functions, represented in the underlying wavelet grid, of the template
fragments are roto-translated with high numerical precision to the required
positions and used as projectors for the charge weight function. We demonstrate
the interest of this approach to express highly precise and efficient
calculations for preparing diabatic states and for the computational setup of
systems in complex environments
Spin and Lattice Structure of Single Crystal SrFe2As2
We use neutron scattering to study the spin and lattice structure on single
crystals of SrFe2As2, the parent compound of the FeAs based superconductor
(Sr,K)Fe2As2. We find that SrFe2As2 exhibits an abrupt structural phase
transitions at 220K, where the structure changes from tetragonal with lattice
parameters c > a = b to orthorhombic with c > a > b. At almost the same
temperature, Fe spins in SrFe2As2 develop a collinear antiferromagnetic
structure along the orthorhombic a-axis with spin direction parallel to this
a-axis. These results are consistent with earlier work on the RFeAsO (R = rare
earth elements) families of materials and on BaFe2As2, and therefore suggest
that static antiferromagnetic order is ubiquitous for the parent compound of
these FeAs-based high-transition temperature superconductors.Comment: 14 pages with 4 figure
Magnetic form factor of SrFeAs
Neutron diffraction measurements have been carried out to investigate the
magnetic form factor of the parent SrFe2As2 system of the iron-based
superconductors. The general feature is that the form factor is approximately
isotropic in wave vector, indicating that multiple d-orbitals of the iron atoms
are occupied as expected based on band theory. Inversion of the diffraction
data suggests that there is some elongation of the spin density toward the As
atoms. We have also extended the diffraction measurements to investigate a
possible jump in the c-axis lattice parameter at the structural phase
transition, but find no detectable change within the experimental
uncertainties
Closed-form approximations of first-passage distributions for a stochastic decision making model
In free response choice tasks, decision making is often modeled as a first-passage problem for a stochastic differential equation. In particular, drift-diffusion processes with constant or time-varying drift rates and noise can reproduce behavioral data (accuracy and response-time distributions) and neuronal firing rates. However, no exact solutions are known for the first-passage problem with time-varying data. Recognizing the importance of simple closed-form expressions for modeling and inference, we show that an interrogation or cued-response protocol, appropriately interpreted, can yield approximate first-passage (response time) distributions for a specific class of time-varying processes used to model evidence accumulation. We test these against exact expressions for the constant drift case and compare them with data from a class of sigmoidal functions. We find that both the direct interrogation approximation and an error-minimizing interrogation approximation can capture a variety of distribution shapes and mode numbers but that the direct approximation, in particular, is systematically biased away from the correct free response distribution
Structural Anomalies at the Magnetic and Ferroelectric Transitions in (R=Tb, Dy, Ho)
Strong anomalies of the thermal expansion coefficients at the magnetic and
ferroelectric transitions have been detected in multiferroic . Their
correlation with anomalies of the specific heat and the dielectric constant is
discussed. The results provide evidence for the magnetic origin of the
ferroelectricity mediated by strong spin-lattice coupling in the compounds.
Neutron scattering data for indicate a spin reorientation at the
two low-temperature phase transitions
Statistical properties of thermodynamically predicted RNA secondary structures in viral genomes
By performing a comprehensive study on 1832 segments of 1212 complete genomes
of viruses, we show that in viral genomes the hairpin structures of
thermodynamically predicted RNA secondary structures are more abundant than
expected under a simple random null hypothesis. The detected hairpin structures
of RNA secondary structures are present both in coding and in noncoding regions
for the four groups of viruses categorized as dsDNA, dsRNA, ssDNA and ssRNA.
For all groups hairpin structures of RNA secondary structures are detected more
frequently than expected for a random null hypothesis in noncoding rather than
in coding regions. However, potential RNA secondary structures are also present
in coding regions of dsDNA group. In fact we detect evolutionary conserved RNA
secondary structures in conserved coding and noncoding regions of a large set
of complete genomes of dsDNA herpesviruses.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
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