1,211 research outputs found
Investigation of the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction and room temperature skyrmions in W/CoFeB/MgO thin films and microwires
Recent studies have shown that material structures, which lack structural
inversion symmetry and have high spin-orbit coupling can exhibit chiral
magnetic textures and skyrmions which could be a key component for next
generation storage devices. The Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya Interaction (DMI) that
stabilizes skyrmions is an anti-symmetric exchange interaction favoring
non-collinear orientation of neighboring spins. It has been shown that material
systems with high DMI can lead to very efficient domain wall and skyrmion
motion by spin-orbit torques. To engineer such devices, it is important to
quantify the DMI for a given material system. Here we extract the DMI at the
Heavy Metal (HM) /Ferromagnet (FM) interface using two complementary
measurement schemes namely asymmetric domain wall motion and the magnetic
stripe annihilation. By using the two different measurement schemes, we find
for W(5 nm)/Co20Fe60B20(0.6 nm)/MgO(2 nm) the DMI to be 0.68 +/- 0.05 mJ/m2 and
0.73 +/- 0.5 mJ/m2, respectively. Furthermore, we show that this DMI stabilizes
skyrmions at room temperature and that there is a strong dependence of the DMI
on the relative composition of the CoFeB alloy. Finally we optimize the layers
and the interfaces using different growth conditions and demonstrate that a
higher deposition rate leads to a more uniform film with reduced pinning and
skyrmions that can be manipulated by Spin-Orbit Torques
Cultural and Strategic Factors in South Asian Nuclear Arms Control
Future efforts at arms control are shifting to LDCs. We believe future agreements is could look very different from their cold war predecessors because third world decision making processes are influenced by many unaddressed factors, ranging from culture to historical antagonism, in addition to strategic and technical concerns. Utilizing game theory as well as historical and cultural analysis, we examine likely possibilities for arms control agreements in South Asia as a case study, and then analyze the logic behind these possibilities. Our findings about the cultural mind set and political preferences of leaders and their constituents lead us toward a specific hypothesis about how these factors influence the decision making process, a direction for the future study of other regions
Topsoil Selling - extreme anthropogenic erosion and its consequences for paddy soil quality (Mekong Delta, Vietnam)
Increasing urbanization and industrialization leads to rising demands for construction material, particularly in low-income countries. Thus, agricultural topsoil is sometimes removed and used as raw material e.g. for brick production. Topsoil selling (TSS) is practiced around the world from America, Europe, and Afrika to Asia. In the Mekong, Delta farmers sell the topsoil from their paddy fields to contractors.
The temporal effects of topsoil removal on soil quality are not yet fully understood. We hypothesized that after soil removal, soil quality is significantly lower compared to the original topsoil. To test this hypothesis, we sampled paddy soil chronosequences in two different provinces, ranging between 1 and 8 years after TSS.
Soil organic carbon (Corg) stocks at TSS sites were up to 20 t/ha lower than at control sites (control: 50 t/ha) in Sóc Trăng and up to 15 t/ha lower in Trà Vinh (control: 30 t/ha). The C/N ratio was nearly constant around 10. Analysis of inorganic nutrients (e.g. P, K, Na, S, Zn, Cu) showed that changes are variable in space, time and among nutrients. Annual average changes ranged from less than a kg per hectare and year for micronutrients (e.g. Cu, Zn) to several tens and hundreds of kg for macronutrients (e.g. P, S).
The so far available data revealed that TSS induces mainly a dramatic loss of soil organic matter. It was ongoing up to the 8th year of the chronosequences but was not necessarily accompanied by losses in inorganic nutrients. As a result, there appears to be a chance for farmers in the Mekong Delta to overcome risks of soil quality decline after topsoil removal.
Within the next months, we will receive the results from P- and S fractionation and also results from lignin analysis (lignin-derived phenols) will complement to the available data. Thus, we will gain further insights into soil evolution after topsoil selling shortly
Stellar ArAr reactions and their effect on light neutron-rich nuclide synthesis
The ArAr ( = 35 d) and
ArAr (269 y) reactions were studied for the first time
with a quasi-Maxwellian ( keV) neutron flux for Maxwellian Average
Cross Section (MACS) measurements at stellar energies. Gas samples were
irradiated at the high-intensity Soreq applied research accelerator
facility-liquid-lithium target neutron source and the Ar/Ar and
Ar/Ar ratios in the activated samples were determined by
accelerator mass spectrometry at the ATLAS facility (Argonne National
Laboratory). The Ar activity was also measured by low-level counting at
the University of Bern. Experimental MACS of Ar and Ar, corrected
to the standard 30 keV thermal energy, are 1.9(3) mb and 1.3(2) mb,
respectively, differing from the theoretical and evaluated values published to
date by up to an order of magnitude. The neutron capture cross sections of
Ar are relevant to the stellar nucleosynthesis of light neutron-rich
nuclides; the two experimental values are shown to affect the calculated mass
fraction of nuclides in the region A=36-48 during the weak -process. The new
production cross sections have implications also for the use of Ar and
Ar as environmental tracers in the atmosphere and hydrosphere.Comment: 18 pages + Supp. Mat. (13 pages) Accepted for publication in Phys.
Rev. Let
OperA/ALIVE/OperettA
Comprehensive models for organizations must, on the one hand, be able to specify global goals and requirements but, on the other hand, cannot assume that particular actors will always act according to the needs and expectations of the system design. Concepts as organizational rules (Zambonelli 2002), norms and institutions (Dignum and Dignum 2001; Esteva et al. 2002), and social structures (Parunak and Odell 2002) arise from the idea that the effective engineering of organizations needs high-level, actor-independent concepts and abstractions that explicitly define the organization in which agents live (Zambonelli 2002).Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
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Enzyme-level interconversion of nitrate and nitrite in the fall mixed layer of the Antarctic Ocean
In the Southern Ocean, the nitrogen (N) isotopes of organic matter and the N and oxygen (O) isotopes of nitrate (NO_3^−) have been used to investigate NO_3^− assimilation and N cycling in the summertime period of phytoplankton growth, both today and in the past. However, recent studies indicate the significance of processes in other seasons for producing the annual cycle of N isotope changes. This study explores the impact of fall conditions on the ^(15)N/^(14)N (δ^(15)N) and ^(18)O/^(16)O (δ^(18)O) of NO_3^− and nitrite (NO_2^−) in the Pacific Antarctic Zone using depth profiles from late summer/fall of 2014. In the mixed layer, the δ^(15)N and δ^(18)O of NO_3^− + NO_2^− increase roughly equally, as expected for NO_3^− assimilation; however, the δ^(15)N of NO_3^−-only (measured after NO_2− removal) increases more than does NO_3^− -only δ^(18)O. Differencing indicates that NO_2^− has an extremely low δ^(15)N, often < −70‰ versus air. These observations are consistent with the expression of an equilibrium N isotope effect between NO_3^− and NO_2^−, likely due to enzymatic NO_3^- - NO_2^− interconversion. Specifically, we propose reversibility of the nitrite oxidoreductase (NXR) enzyme of nitrite oxidizers that, having been entrained from the subsurface during late summer mixed layer deepening, are inhibited by light. Our interpretation suggests a role for NO_3^- - NO_2^− interconversion where nitrifiers are transported into environments that discourage NO_2^− oxidation. This may apply to surface regions with upwelling, such as the summertime Antarctic. It may also apply to oxygen-deficient zones, where NXR-catalyzed interconversion may explain previously reported evidence of NO_2^− oxidation
Lifting D-Instanton Zero Modes by Recombination and Background Fluxes
We study the conditions under which D-brane instantons in Type II orientifold
compactifications generate a non-perturbative superpotential. If the instanton
is non-invariant under the orientifold action, it carries four instead of the
two Goldstone fermions required for superpotential contributions. Unless these
are lifted, the instanton can at best generate higher fermionic F-terms of
Beasley-Witten type. We analyse two strategies to lift the additional zero
modes. First we discuss the process of instantonic brane recombination in Type
IIA orientifolds. We show that in some cases charge invariance of the measure
enforces the presence of further zero modes which, unlike the Goldstinos,
cannot be absorbed. In other cases, the instanton exhibits reparameterisation
zero modes after recombination and a superpotential is generated if these are
lifted by suitable closed or open string couplings. In the second part of the
paper we address lifting the extra Goldstinos of D3-brane instantons by
supersymmetric three-form background fluxes in Type IIB orientifolds. This
requires non-trivial gauge flux on the instanton. Only if the part of the
fermionic action linear in the gauge flux survives the orientifold projection
can the extra Goldstinos be lifted.Comment: 38 pages, 3 figures, 5 tables; v2: Appendix B slightly expanded,
minor rewordin
Supersymmetric (non-)Abelian Bundles in the Type I and SO(32) Heterotic String
We discuss perturbative four-dimensional compactifications of both the SO(32)
heterotic and the Type I string on smooth Calabi-Yau manifolds endowed with
general non-abelian and abelian bundles. We analyse the generalized
Green-Schwarz mechanism for multiple anomalous U(1) factors and derive the
generically non-universal one-loop threshold corrections to the gauge kinetic
function as well as the one-loop corrected Fayet-Iliopoulos terms. The latter
can be interpreted as a stringy one-loop correction to the
Donaldson-Uhlenbeck-Yau condition. Applying S-duality, for the Type I string we
obtain the perturbative Pi-stability condition for non-abelian bundles on
curved spaces. Some simple examples are given, and we qualitatively discuss
some generic phenomenological aspects of this kind of string vacua. In
particular, we point out that in principle an intermediate string scale
scenario with TeV scale large extra dimensions might be possible for the
heterotic string.Comment: LaTeX, 32 pages, v2: refs adde
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