1,755 research outputs found
Evidence for a dynamic phase transition in [Co/Pt]_3 magnetic multilayers
A dynamic phase transition (DPT) with respect to the period P of an applied
alternating magnetic field has been observed previously in numerical
simulations of magnetic systems. However, experimental evidence for this DPT
has thus far been limited to qualitative observations of hysteresis loop
collapse in studies of hysteresis loop area scaling. Here, we present
significantly stronger evidence for the experimental observation of this DPT,
in a [Co(4 A)/Pt(7 A)]_3-multilayer system with strong perpendicular
anisotropy. We applied an out-of-plane, time-varying (sawtooth) field to the
[Co/Pt]_3 multilayer, in the presence of a small additional constant field,
H_b. We then measured the resulting out-of-plane magnetization time series to
produce nonequilibrium phase diagrams (NEPDs) of the cycle-averaged
magnetization, Q, and its variance, Var(Q), as functions of P and H_b. The
experimental NEPDs are found to strongly resemble those calculated from
simulations of a kinetic Ising model under analagous conditions. The similarity
of the experimental and simulated NEPDs, in particular the presence of a
localized peak in the variance Var(Q) in the experimental results, constitutes
strong evidence for the presence of this DPT in our magnetic multilayer
samples. Technical challenges related to the hysteretic nature and response
time of the electromagnet used to generate the time-varying applied field
precluded us from extracting meaningful critical scaling exponents from the
current data. However, based on our results, we propose refinements to the
experimental procedure which could potentially enable the determination of
critical exponents in the future.Comment: substantial revision; 26 pages, 9 figures; to appear in Phys. Rev.
Conjugate field and fluctuation-dissipation relation for the dynamic phase transition in the two-dimensional kinetic Ising model
The two-dimensional kinetic Ising model, when exposed to an oscillating
applied magnetic field, has been shown to exhibit a nonequilibrium,
second-order dynamic phase transition (DPT), whose order parameter Q is the
period-averaged magnetization. It has been established that this DPT falls in
the same universality class as the equilibrium phase transition in the
two-dimensional Ising model in zero applied field. Here we study for the first
time the scaling of the dynamic order parameter with respect to a nonzero,
period-averaged, magnetic `bias' field, H_b, for a DPT produced by a
square-wave applied field. We find evidence that the scaling exponent,
\delta_d, of H_b at the critical period of the DPT is equal to the exponent for
the critical isotherm, \delta_e, in the equilibrium Ising model. This implies
that H_b is a significant component of the field conjugate to Q. A finite-size
scaling analysis of the dynamic order parameter above the critical period
provides further support for this result. We also demonstrate numerically that,
for a range of periods and values of H_b in the critical region, a
fluctuation-dissipation relation (FDR), with an effective temperature
T_{eff}(T, P, H_0) depending on the period, and possibly the temperature and
field amplitude, holds for the variables Q and H_b. This FDR justifies the use
of the scaled variance of Q as a proxy for the nonequilibrium susceptibility,
\partial / \partial H_b, in the critical region.Comment: revised version; 31 pages, 12 figures; accepted by Phys. Rev.
When New Life Meets Death: Three Hermeneutic Case Studies From Switzerland.
Pregnant women in Switzerland expect safe and healthy birth outcomes for themselves and their babies. However, in 2018, 691 died in infancy with gaps identified in the provision of services to parents in such circumstances. Our study aims to illustrate these gaps and how, from participants' perspectives, they were addressed. A hermeneutic method was employed to analyze three cases: one from each major language region was via primary health-care providers. A thematic analysis was carried out with individual participants followed by a cross-case comparison which showed a hermeneutic of rupture, the juxtaposition of time and reshaping the family. This article shows the unique journeys experienced by parents whose baby dies before or shortly after birth in one country where neither the language nor experience is shared. The derivation of three hermeneutic themes may resonate with other parents or health professionals
Diversification history in the Dendrocincla fuliginosa complex (Aves: Dendrocolaptidae): insights from broad geographic sampling
Dendrocincla woodcreepers are ant-following birds widespread throughout tropical America. Species in the genus are widely distributed and show little phenotypic variation. Notwithstanding, several subspecies have been described, but the validity of some of these taxa and the boundaries among them have been discussed for decades. Recent genetic evidence based on limited sampling has pointed to the paraphyly of D. fuliginosa, showing that its subspecies constitute a complex that also includes D. anabatina and D. turdina. In this study we sequenced nuclear and mitochondrial markers for over two hundred individuals belonging to the D. fuliginosa complex to recover phylogenetic relationships, describe intraspecific genetic diversity and provide historical biogeographic scenarios of diversification. Our results corroborate the paraphyly of D. fuliginosa, with D. turdina and D. anabatina nested within its recognized subspecies. Recovered genetic lineages roughly match the distributions of described subspecies and congruence among phylogenetic structure, phenotypic diagnosis and distribution limits were used to discuss current systematics and taxonomy within the complex, with special attention to Northern South America. Our data suggest the origin of the complex in western Amazonia, associated with the establishment of upland forests in the area during the early Pliocene. Paleoclimatic cycles and river rearrangements during the Pleistocene could have, at different times, both facilitated dispersal across large Amazonian rivers and the Andes and isolated populations, likely playing an important role in differentiation of extant species. Previously described hybridization in the headwaters of the Tapajós river represents a secondary contact of non-sister lineages that cannot be used to test the role of the river as primary source of diversification. Based on comparisons of D. fuliginosa with closely related understory upland forest taxa, we suggest that differential habitat use could influence diversification processes in a historically changing landscape, and should be considered for proposing general mechanisms of diversification.Peer reviewe
Stationary State Solutions of a Bond Diluted Kinetic Ising Model: An Effective-Field Theory Analysis
We have examined the stationary state solutions of a bond diluted kinetic
Ising model under a time dependent oscillating magnetic field within the
effective-field theory (EFT) for a honeycomb lattice . Time evolution of
the system has been modeled with a formalism of master equation. The effects of
the bond dilution, as well as the frequency and amplitude of
the external field on the dynamic phase diagrams have been discussed in detail.
We have found that the system exhibits the first order phase transition with a
dynamic tricritical point (DTCP) at low temperature and high amplitude regions,
in contrast to the previously published results for the pure case \cite{Ling}.
Bond dilution process on the kinetic Ising model gives rise to a number of
interesting and unusual phenomena such as reentrant phenomena and has a
tendency to destruct the first-order transitions and the DTCP. Moreover, we
have investigated the variation of the bond percolation threshold as functions
of the amplitude and frequency of the oscillating field.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Rb and p130 control cell cycle gene silencing to maintain the postmitotic phenotype in cardiac myocytes
Both Rb and p130 are required for the recruitment of heterochromatin proteins that mediate silencing of proliferation genes in adult cardiac myocytes
Maternal emotions during the first three postnatal months: Gaining an hermeneutic understanding.
BACKGROUND: Maternal emotions in the first three postnatal months are rarely explored yet in the German context despite it is known that they play an important role in the complexity of maternal health and well-being. AIM: Gaining understanding of maternal emotions and how the developmental process of the infant circadian rhythm influences them during the first three months of the postnatal period. METHODS: A Gadamerian-based research method was used to explore the experiences of 15 mothers in Germany. FINDINGS: 'Being needed' and 'being in need' emerged as the first two themes and were further explored hermeneutically. This resulted in the findings of 'emotional balance and conflicting emotions' as underlying maternal emotions during the first three months following birth. DISCUSSION: Understanding maternal emotions during the first three months of the postnatal period has the potential of opening new pathways for improving maternal health and well-being. CONCLUSION: A spectrum of maternal emotions, maternal uncertainties and maternal needs exists in the first three months of the postnatal period
Determination of the freeze-out temperature by the isospin thermometer
The high-resolution spectrometer FRS at GSI Darmstadt provides the full
isotopic and kinematical identification of fragmentation residues in
relativistic heavy-ion collisions. Recent measurements of the isotopic
distribution of heavy projectile fragments led to a very surprising new
physical finding: the residue production does not lose the memory of the N/Z of
the projectile ending up in a universal de-excitation corridor; an ordering of
the residues in relation to the neutron excess of the projectile has been
observed. These unexpected features can be interpreted as a new manifestation
of multifragmentation. We have found that at the last stage of the reaction the
temperature of the big clusters subjected to evaporation is limited to a
universal value. The thermometer to measure this limiting temperature is the
neutron excess of the residues.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, corrected some misprints in the abstract, to be
published in "Yadernaya Fizika" as a proceeding of the "VII International
School Seminar on Heavy-Ion Phyics", Dubna (Russia), May 27 - June 1, 200
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