8,758 research outputs found
Phase diagram of the one-dimensional Holstein model of spinless fermions
The one-dimensional Holstein model of spinless fermions interacting with
dispersionless phonons is studied using a new variant of the density matrix
renormalisation group. By examining various low-energy excitations of finite
chains, the metal-insulator phase boundary is determined precisely and agrees
with the predictions of strong coupling theory in the anti-adiabatic regime and
is consistent with renormalisation group arguments in the adiabatic regime. The
Luttinger liquid parameters, determined by finite-size scaling, are consistent
with a Kosterlitz-Thouless transition.Comment: Minor changes. 4 pages, 4 figures. To appear in Physical Review
Letters 80 (1998) 560
Low-Altitude Reconnection Inflow-Outflow Observations during a 2010 November 3 Solar Eruption
For a solar flare occurring on 2010 November 3, we present observations using
several SDO/AIA extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) passbands of an erupting flux rope
followed by inflows sweeping into a current sheet region. The inflows are soon
followed by outflows appearing to originate from near the termination point of
the inflowing motion - an observation in line with standard magnetic
reconnection models. We measure average inflow plane-of-sky speeds to range
from ~150-690 km/s with the initial, high-temperature inflows being the
fastest. Using the inflow speeds and a range of Alfven speeds, we estimate the
Alfvenic Mach number which appears to decrease with time. We also provide
inflow and outflow times with respect to RHESSI count rates and find that the
fast, high-temperature inflows occur simultaneously with a peak in the RHESSI
thermal lightcurve. Five candidate inflow-outflow pairs are identified with no
more than a minute delay between detections. The inflow speeds of these pairs
are measured to be 10^2 km/s with outflow speeds ranging from 10^2-10^3 km/s -
indicating acceleration during the reconnection process. The fastest of these
outflows are in the form of apparently traveling density enhancements along the
legs of the loops rather than the loop apexes themselves. These flows could
either be accelerated plasma, shocks, or waves prompted by reconnection. The
measurements presented here show an order of magnitude difference between the
retraction speeds of the loops and the speed of the density enhancements within
the loops - presumably exiting the reconnection site.Comment: 31 pages, 13 figures, 1 table, Accepted to ApJ (expected publication
~July 2012
Magnetic-field-induced superconductivity in layered organic molecular crystals with localized magnetic moments
The synthetic organic compound lambda-(BETS)2FeCl4 undergoes successive
transitions from an antiferromagnetic insulator to a metal and then to a
superconductor as a magnetic field is increased. We use a Hubbard-Kondo model
to clarify the role of the Fe(3+) magnetic ions in these phase transitions. In
the high-field regime, the magnetic field acting on the electron spins is
compensated by the exchange field He due to the magnetic ions. This suggests
that the field-induced superconducting state is the same as the zero-field
superconducting state which occurs under pressure or when the Fe(3+) ions are
replaced by non-magnetic Ga(3+) ions. We show how He can be extracted from the
observed splitting of the Shubnikov-de Haas frequencies. Furthermore, we use
this method of extracting He to predict the field range for field-induced
superconductivity in other materials.Comment: 5 page
The experiences of women with polycystic ovary syndrome on a very low-calorie diet
The research was funded by an educational grant from LighterLife. Broom was the Medical Director for LighterLife at the time of the research. Johnson is the Head of Nutrition and Research at LighterLife. The authors report no other conflicts of interest in this work.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Simulation of dark lanes in post--flare supra--arcades
Using two simulations of 1.5D, for the first time, in Costa et al. (2009) and
Shulz et al. (2010) we numerically reproduce the observational dark inflows
described in Verwichte et al. (2005). We show that the dark tracks can be
explained as hot plasma vacuums generated upstream of a slow magnetoacoustic
shock wave produced by a localized deposition of energy. In this work, we show
that the overall 2D results are in agreement with the observational behaviour.
However they show a slight shift in the characteristic parameter with respect
to those found previously. Also, we confirm qualitatively the behaviour found
in the previous papers, i.e. for a given numerical domain the period of the
kink--like structure is a function of the magnetic field intensity: larger
periods are associated with lower magnetic field intensities. Contrary to the
1D result -where the sunward dynamic is independent of the magnetic field
intensity due to its exclusively waveguide role- in the 2D simulation the
sunward speed is larger for larger values of the magnetic field. This can be
interpreted as the capability of the low coronal plasma to collimate the
deposition of energy into the magnetic field direction. The moving features
consistent of low--density and high--temperature plasma cavities have larger
inside values of the structuring parameter beta than the neighboring media.
Thus, the voids seem to be the emergence structures of a whole nonlinear
interacting plasma context of shocks and waves more than voided plasma loops
magnetically structured.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Another short-burst host galaxy with an optically obscured high star formation rate: The case of GRB 071227
We report on radio continuum observations of the host galaxy of the short
gamma-ray burst 071227 (z=0.381) with the Australia Telescope Compact Array
(ATCA). We detect the galaxy in the 5.5 GHz band with an integrated flux
density of Fnu = 43 +/- 11 microJy, corresponding to an unobscured
star-formation rate (SFR) of about 24 Msun/yr, forty times higher than what was
found from optical emission lines. Among the ~30 well-identified and studied
host galaxies of short bursts this is the third case where the host is found to
undergo an episode of intense star formation. This suggests that a fraction of
all short-burst progenitors hosted in star-forming galaxies could be physically
related to recent star formation activity, implying a relatively short merger
time scale.Comment: 6 pages, ApJ, accepted for publicatio
A Critical Analysis of the Theoretical Basis of Ultrasonic Scattering Measurements
There are three elements involved in the backscattering from inhomogeneous media; the scattering properties of a single particle or scattering element, the scattering associated with a group of such particles and the relationship of the scattered wave to the measured signal. Ideally it should be possible to obtain information about the material microstructure from ultrasonic backscattering measurements. However, a number of assumptions and approximations must be made before the problem becomes tractable, and it is the purpose of the present investigation to compare the various approaches available in the literature in an attempt to quantify the errors involved with some of these approximations
Temperature dependence of the interlayer magnetoresistance of quasi-one-dimensional Fermi liquids at the magic angles
The interlayer magnetoresistance of a quasi-one-dimensional Fermi liquid is
considered for the case of a magnetic field that is rotated within the plane
perpendicular to the most-conducting direction. Within semi-classical transport
theory dips in the magnetoresistance occur at integer amgic angles only when
the electronic dispersion parallel to the chains is nonlinear. If the field
direction is fixed at one of the magic angles and the temperature is varied the
resulting variation of the scattering rate can lead to a non-monotonic
variation of the interlayer magnetoresistance with temperature. Although the
model considered here gives a good description of some of the properties of the
Bechgaard salts, (TMTSF)2PF6 for pressures less than 8kbar and (TMTSF)2ClO4 it
gives a poor description of their properties when the field is parallel to the
layers and of the intralayer transport.Comment: 10pages, RevTeX + epsf, 3 figure
Magnetoresistance and magnetic breakdown in the quasi-two-dimensional conductors (BEDT-TTF)MHg(SCN)[M=K,Rb,Tl]
The magnetic field dependence of the resistance of
(BEDT-TTF)MHg(SCN)[M=K,Rb,Tl] in the density-wave phase is explained in
terms of a simple model involving magnetic breakdown and a reconstructed Fermi
surface. The theory is compared to measurements in pulsed magnetic fields up to
51 T. The value implied for the scattering time is consistent with independent
determinations. The energy gap associated with the density-wave phase is
deduced from the magnetic breakdown field. Our results have important
implications for the phase diagram.Comment: 5 pages, RevTeX + epsf, 3 figures. To appear in Physical Review B,
Rapid Communications, September 15, 199
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