19,260 research outputs found
Resummations in Hot Scalar Electrodynamics
The gauge-boson sector of perturbative scalar electrodynamics is investigated
in detail as a testing ground for resummation methods in hot gauge theories. It
also serves as a simple non-trivial reference system for the non-Abelian gluon
plasma. The complete next-to-leading order contributions to the polarization
tensor are obtained within the resummation scheme of Braaten and Pisarski. The
simpler scheme proposed recently by Arnold and Espinosa is shown to apply to
static quantities only, whereas Braaten-Pisarski resummation turns out to need
modification for collective phenomena close to the light-cone. Finally, a
recently proposed resummation of quasi-particle damping contributions is
assessed critically.Comment: 53 p. LaTeX, 7 figs. (2 in LaTeX, 5 EPS appended as uu-encoded file),
ITP-UH-01/94 & DESY 94-03
On the metal-insulator transition in the two-chain model of correlated fermions
The doping-induced metal-insulator transition in two-chain systems of
correlated fermions is studied using a solvable limit of the t-J model and the
fact that various strong- and weak-coupling limits of the two-chain model are
in the same phase, i.e. have the same low-energy properties. It is shown that
the Luttinger-liquid parameter K_\rho takes the universal value unity as the
insulating state (half-filling) is approached, implying dominant d-type
superconducting fluctuations, independently of the interaction strength. The
crossover to insulating behavior of correlations as the transition is
approached is discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
Human complement factor H
We isolated cDNA clones coding for the functionally important tryptic N-terminal38-
kDa fragment of human complement control protein factor H using polyclonal and
monoclonal antibodies to screen a human liver cDNA library cloned in a bacterial
expression vector, PEX-1. By testing the reactivity of antibodies specific for the
recombinant proteins produced by individual clones with proteolytic fragments of
serum H the exact position of these cDNA clones within H was mapped. One clone,
H-19, coding for the 38-kDa fragment of H was sequenced and found to code for 289
amino acids derived from the 38-kDa N-terminal fragment as well as for the first 108
amino acids belonging to the complementary 142-kDa tryptic fragment. The derived
protein sequence could be arranged in 6 highly homologous repeats of about 60 amino
acids each, the homology between the repeats being determined by the characteristic
position of cysteine, proline, glycine, tyrosine and tryptophane residues. The region
coding for the epitope recognized by one of our monoclonal antibodies was localized
by subcloning restriction fragments of H-19 into the expression plasmid and testing
for the expression of this epitope
Weakly correlated electrons on a square lattice: a renormalization group theory
We study the weakly interacting Hubbard model on the square lattice using a
one-loop renormalization group approach. The transition temperature T_c between
the metallic and (nearly) ordered states is found. In the parquet regime, (T_c
>> |mu|), the dominant correlations at temperatures below T_c are
antiferromagnetic while in the BCS regime (T_c << |mu|) at T_c the d-wave
singlet pairing susceptibility is most divergent.Comment: 12 pages, REVTEX, 3 figures included, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Finite-Temperature Charge-Ordering Transition and Fluctuation Effects in Quasi-One-Dimensional Electron Systems at Quarter Filling
Finite-temperature charge-ordering phase transition in quasi one-dimensional
(1D) molecular conductors is investigated theoretically, based on a quasi 1D
extended Hubbard model at quarter filling with interchain Coulomb repulsion
. The interchain term is treated within mean-field approximation
whereas the 1D fluctuations in the chains are fully taken into account by the
bosonization theory. Three regions are found depending on how the charge
ordered state appears at finite temperature when is introduced:
(i) weak-coupling region where the system transforms from a metal to a charge
ordered insulator with finite transition temperature at a finite critical value
of ,
(ii) an intermediate region where this transition occurs by infinitesimal
due to the stability of inherent 1D fluctuation, and
(iii) strong-coupling region where the charge ordered state is realized
already in the purely 1D case, of which the transition temperature becomes
finite with infinitesimal . Analytical formula for the
dependence of the transition temperature is derived for each region.Comment: 4 pages, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp
A Frustrated 3-Dimensional Antiferromagnet: Stacked Layers
We study a frustrated 3D antiferromagnet of stacked layers. The
intermediate 'quantum spin liquid' phase, present in the 2D case, narrows with
increasing interlayer coupling and vanishes at a triple point. Beyond this
there is a direct first-order transition from N{\' e}el to columnar order.
Possible applications to real materials are discussed.Comment: 11 pages,7 figure
On the classifier performance for simulation based debris detection in sar imagery
Urban areas struck by disasters such as earthquakes are in need of a fast damage detection assessment. A post-event SAR image often is the first available image, most likely with no matching pre-event image to perform change detection. In previous work we have introduced a debris detection algorithm for this scenario that is trained exclusively with synthetically generated training data. A classification step is employed to separate debris from similar textures such as vegetation. In order to verify the use of a random forest classifier for this context, we conduct a performance comparison with two alternative popular classifiers, a support vector machine and a convolutional neural network. With the direct comparison revealing the random forest classifier to be best suited, the effective performance on the prospect of debris detection is investigated for the post-earthquake Christchurch scene. Results show a good separation of debris from vegetation and gravel, thus reducing the false alarm rate in the damage detection operation considerably
Writing Across the Chemical Engineering Curriculum at the University of North Dakota
In Order to Prepare Engineering Graduates with the Written and Oral Communication Skills Needed in their Professional Careers a Coordinated Writing Across the Curriculum (WAC) Program Has Developed in the Chemical Engineering Department at the University of North Dakota. the Students Practice and Develop their Skills with Writing Assignments in Both Lecture and Laboratory Courses from the First‐year Level through the Fourth‐year Capstone Design Course. the Coordinated Approach, especially in the Four‐semester Laboratory Sequence, Allows the Students to Develop their Skills by Building on Communication Experiences in Previous Courses. the WAC Program at UND Including Writing and Public Speaking Assignments is Described. 1994 American Society for Engineering Educatio
Renormalization of impurity scattering in one-dimensional interacting electron systems in magnetic field
We study the renormalization of a single impurity potential in
one-dimensional interacting electron systems in the presence of magnetic field.
Using the bosonization technique and Bethe ansatz solutions, we determine the
renormalization group flow diagram for the amplitudes of scattering of up- and
down-spin electrons by the impurity in a quantum wire at low electron density
and in the Hubbard model at less than half filling. In the absence of magnetic
field the repulsive interactions are known to enhance backscattering and make
the impurity potential impenetrable in the low-energy limit. On the contrary,
we show that in a strong magnetic field the interaction may suppress the
backscattering of majority-spin electrons by the impurity potential in the
vicinity of the weak-potential fixed point. This implies that in a certain
temperature range the impurity becomes almost transparent for the majority-spin
electrons while it is impenetrable for the minority-spin ones. The impurity
potential can thus have a strong spin-filtering effect.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures; v2: a typo corrected and a reference added; v3:
published version, Sec.II revised with an additional explanatory subsection,
comments on the case of more than half-filling added, typos corrected, a
reference update
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