2,990 research outputs found
Doping of inorganic materials in microreactors – preparation of Zn doped Fe₃O₄ nanoparticles
Microreactor systems are now used more and more for the continuous production of metal nanoparticles and metal oxide nanoparticles owing to the controllability of the particle size, an important property in many applications. Here, for the first time, we used microreactors to prepare metal oxide nanoparticles with controlled and varying metal stoichiometry. We prepared and characterised Zn-substituted Fe₃O₄ nanoparticles with linear increase of Zn content (ZnxFe₃−xO₄ with 0 ≤ x ≤ 0.48), which causes linear increases in properties such as the saturation magnetization, relative to pure Fe₃O₄. The methodology is simple and low cost and has great potential to be adapted to the targeted doping of a vast array of other inorganic materials, allowing greater control on the chemical stoichiometry for nanoparticles prepared in microreactors
APENet: LQCD clusters a la APE
Developed by the APE group, APENet is a new high speed, low latency,
3-dimensional interconnect architecture optimized for PC clusters running
LQCD-like numerical applications. The hardware implementation is based on a
single PCI-X 133MHz network interface card hosting six indipendent
bi-directional channels with a peak bandwidth of 676 MB/s each direction. We
discuss preliminary benchmark results showing exciting performances similar or
better than those found in high-end commercial network systems.Comment: Lattice2004(machines), 3 pages, 4 figure
Penetration depth study of LaOsSb: Multiband s-wave superconductivity
We measured the magnetic penetration depth in single crystals of
LaOsSb (=0.74 K) down to 85 mK using a tunnel diode
oscillator technique. The observed low-temperature exponential dependence
indicates a s-wave gap. Fitting the low temperature data to BCS s-wave
expression gives the zero temperature gap value which is significantly smaller than the BCS value of 1.76. In
addition, the normalized superfluid density shows an unusually long
suppression near , and are best fit by a two-band s-wave model.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Potentials for hyper-Kahler metrics with torsion
We prove that locally any hyper-K\"ahler metric with torsion admits an HKT
potential.Comment: 9 page
A -Vertex Kernel for Maximum Internal Spanning Tree
We consider the parameterized version of the maximum internal spanning tree
problem, which, given an -vertex graph and a parameter , asks for a
spanning tree with at least internal vertices. Fomin et al. [J. Comput.
System Sci., 79:1-6] crafted a very ingenious reduction rule, and showed that a
simple application of this rule is sufficient to yield a -vertex kernel.
Here we propose a novel way to use the same reduction rule, resulting in an
improved -vertex kernel. Our algorithm applies first a greedy procedure
consisting of a sequence of local exchange operations, which ends with a
local-optimal spanning tree, and then uses this special tree to find a
reducible structure. As a corollary of our kernel, we obtain a deterministic
algorithm for the problem running in time
Hall-Effect Sign Anomaly and Small-Polaronic Conduction in (La_{1-x}Gd_x)_{0.67}Ca_{0.33}MnO_3
The Hall coefficient of Gd-doped La_{2/3}Ca_{1/3}MnO_3 exhibits Arrhenius
behavior over a temperature range from 2T_c to 4T_c, with an activation energy
very close to 2/3 that of the electrical conductivity. Although both the doping
level and thermoelectric coefficient indicate hole-like conduction, the Hall
coefficient is electron-like. This unusual result provides strong evidence in
favor of small-polaronic conduction in the paramagnetic regime of the
manganites.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, uses revtex.st
Canonical transformations for hyperkahler structures and hyperhamiltonian dynamics
We discuss generalizations of the well known concept of canonical transformations fo symplectic structures to the case of hyperkahler structures. Different characterizations, which are equivalent in the symplectic case, give rise to non-equivalent notions in the hyperkahler ramework; we will thus distinguish between hyperkahler and canonical transformations. We also discuss the properties of hyperhamiltonian dynamics in this respect
A beginner's introduction to Fukaya categories
The goal of these notes is to give a short introduction to Fukaya categories
and some of their applications. The first half of the text is devoted to a
brief review of Lagrangian Floer (co)homology and product structures. Then we
introduce the Fukaya category (informally and without a lot of the necessary
technical detail), and briefly discuss algebraic concepts such as exact
triangles and generators. Finally, we mention wrapped Fukaya categories and
outline a few applications to symplectic topology, mirror symmetry and
low-dimensional topology. This text is based on a series of lectures given at a
Summer School on Contact and Symplectic Topology at Universit\'e de Nantes in
June 2011.Comment: 42 pages, 13 figure
Competing magnetic fluctuations in Sr3Ru2O7 probed by Ti doping
We report the effect of nonmagnetic Ti4+ impurities on the electronic and
magnetic properties of Sr3Ru2O7. Small amounts of Ti suppress the
characteristic peak in magnetic susceptibility near 16 K and result in a sharp
upturn in specific heat. The metamagnetic quantum phase transition and related
anomalous features are quickly smeared out by small amounts of Ti. These
results provide strong evidence for the existence of competing magnetic
fluctuations in the ground state of Sr3Ru2O7. Ti doping suppresses the low
temperature antiferromagnetic interactions that arise from Fermi surface
nesting, leaving the system in a state dominated by ferromagnetic fluctuations.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
Anomalous Paramagnetic Effects in the Mixed State of LuNi2B2C
Anomalous paramagnetic effects in dc magnetization were observed in the mixed
state of LuNi2B2C, unlike any reported previously. It appears as a kink-like
feature for H > 30 kOe and becomes more prominent with increasing field. A
specific heat jump at the corresponding temperature suggests that the anomaly
is due to a true bulk transition. A magnetic flux transition from a square to
an hexagonal lattice is consistent with the anomaly.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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