19,203 research outputs found
Multifractal Scaling of Thermally-Activated Rupture Processes
We propose a ``multifractal stress activation'' model combining thermally
activated rupture and long memory stress relaxation, which predicts that
seismic decay rates after mainshocks follow the Omori law with
exponents linearly increasing with the magnitude of the mainshock and
the inverse temperature. We carefully test this prediction on earthquake
sequences in the Southern California Earthquake catalog: we find power law
relaxations of seismic sequences triggered by mainshocks with exponents
increasing with the mainshock magnitude by approximately for each
magnitude unit increase, from to ,
in good agreement with the prediction of the multifractal model.Comment: four pages and 2 figure
Death after smoking of fentanyl, 5F-ADB, 5F-MDMB-P7AICA and other synthetic cannabinoids with a bucket bong
Purpose: We report a case of a polydrug user who consumed various synthetic cannabinoids and fentanyl from a transdermal patch via a bucket bong. Toxicological results from postmortem matrices with special focus on synthetic cannabinoids are discussed in terms of their relevance to the death. Methods: The samples were analyzed by toxicological screening procedures involving immunoassays and gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS) as well as quantitative analyses by means of GC–MS and high-performance liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS). Results: At the autopsy, coronary artery disease and signs of liver congestion were noted, in the absence of acute myocardial ischemic changes. Femoral blood concentrations of fentanyl and pregabalin were 14 ng/mL and 3,200 ng/mL, respectively. In addition, 2.7 ng/mL 5F-ADB and 13 ng/mL 5F-MDMB-P7AICA were detected together with relatively low amounts of 5 other synthetic cannabinoids in cardiac blood. A total number of up to 17 synthetic cannabinoids were detected in kidney, liver, urine and hair. Fentanyl and 5F-ADB were also detected in the water of the bucket bong. Conclusions: The cause of death could be attributed to an acute mixed intoxication by fentanyl and 5F-ADB (both Toxicological Significance Score (TSS) = 3) with a contribution of pregabalin and 5F-MDMB-P7AICA (TSS = 2), in a subject suffering from pre-existing heart damage. The most plausible mechanism of death consists in a respiratory depression. This case report demonstrates that use of opioids in combination with synthetic cannabinoids might be particularly dangerous
Critical temperature for kaon condensation in color-flavor locked quark matter
We study the behavior of Goldstone bosons in color-flavor-locked (CFL) quark
matter at nonzero temperature. Chiral symmetry breaking in this phase of cold
and dense matter gives rise to pseudo-Goldstone bosons, the lightest of these
being the charged and neutral kaons K^+ and K^0. At zero temperature,
Bose-Einstein condensation of the kaons occurs. Since all fermions are gapped,
this kaon condensed CFL phase can, for energies below the fermionic energy gap,
be described by an effective theory for the bosonic modes. We use this
effective theory to investigate the melting of the condensate: we determine the
temperature-dependent kaon masses self-consistently using the two-particle
irreducible effective action, and we compute the transition temperature for
Bose-Einstein condensation. Our results are important for studies of transport
properties of the kaon condensed CFL phase, such as bulk viscosity.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figures, v2: new section about effect of electric
neutrality on critical temperature added; references added; version to appear
in J.Phys.
Topological energy barrier for skyrmion lattice formation in MnSi
We report the direct measurement of the topological skyrmion energy barrier
through a hysteresis of the skyrmion lattice in the chiral magnet MnSi.
Measurements were made using small-angle neutron scattering with a custom-built
resistive coil to allow for high-precision minor hysteresis loops. The
experimental data was analyzed using an adapted Preisach model to quantify the
energy barrier for skyrmion formation and corroborated by the minimum-energy
path analysis based on atomistic spin simulations. We reveal that the skyrmion
lattice in MnSi forms from the conical phase progressively in small domains,
each of which consisting of hundreds of skyrmions, and with an activation
barrier of several eV.Comment: Final accepted versio
Evidence for core-hole-mediated inelastic x-ray scattering from metallic FeTe
We present a detailed analysis of resonant inelastic scattering (RIXS) from
FeTe with unprecedented energy resolution. In contrast to the sharp
peaks typically seen in insulating systems at the transition metal edge,
we observe spectra which show different characteristic features. For low energy
transfer, we experimentally observe theoretically predicted many-body effects
of resonant Raman scattering from a non-interacting gas of fermions.
Furthermore, we find that limitations to this many-body electron-only theory
are realized at high Raman shift, where an exponential lineshape reveals an
energy scale not present in these considerations. This regime, identified as
emission, requires considerations of lattice degrees of freedom to understand
the lineshape. We argue that both observations are intrinsic general features
of many-body physics of metals.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Theory of exciton-exciton correlation in nonlinear optical response
We present a systematic theory of Coulomb interaction effects in the
nonlinear optical processes in semiconductors using a perturbation series in
the exciting laser field. The third-order dynamical response consists of
phase-space filling correction, mean-field exciton-exciton interaction, and
two-exciton correlation effects expressed as a force-force correlation
function. The theory provides a unified description of effects of bound and
unbound biexcitons, including memory-effects beyond the Markovian
approximation. Approximations for the correlation function are presented.Comment: RevTex, 35 pages, 10 PostScript figs, shorter version submitted to
Physical Review
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