70 research outputs found
Genre Hybridization in Leonardo Sciascia’s The Day of the Owl and Vikram Chandra’s Sacred Games
The rise of an original Indian detective novel can be dated back to the 1950s. Like its European predecessor, the genre was initially considered strictly popular; books were sold at railway stations as cheap reading matter for commuters. During the Sixties, however, thanks to the rising importance of the middle class, detective novels became increasingly popular. For years the detective genre had been on the wane and it was only in the first decade of the 21st century that new detective and noir stories appeared
Extended Hernquist-Springel formalism for cosmic star formation
We present a revised and extended version of the analytic model for cosmic
star formation originally given by Hernquist & Springel in 2003. The key
assumption of this formalism is that star formation proceeds from cold gas, at
a rate that is limited by an internal consumption timescale at early times, or
by the rate of generation of gas via cooling at late times. These processes are
analysed as a function of the mass of dark matter haloes and integrated over
the halo population. We modify this approach in two main ways to make it more
general: (1) halo collapse times are included explicitly, so that the behaviour
is physically reasonable at late times; (2) allowance is made for a
mass-dependent baryon fraction in haloes, which incorporates feedback effects.
This model reproduces the main features of the observed baryonic Tully-Fisher
relationship, and is consistent with observational estimates of the baryon mass
fraction in the intergalactic medium. With minimal adjustment of parameters,
our approach reproduces the observed history of cosmic star formation within a
factor of two over the redshift range . This level of agreement is
comparable to that achieved by state-of-the-art cosmological simulations. Our
simplified apparatus has pedagogical value in illuminating the results of such
detailed calculations, and also serves as a means for rapid approximate
exploration of non-standard cosmological models.Comment: submitted to MNRA
A Comparative Study of the Valence Electronic Excitations of N_2 by Inelastic X-ray and Electron Scattering
Bound state, valence electronic excitation spectra of N_2 are probed by
nonresonant inelastic x-ray and electron scattering. Within the usual
theoretical treatments, dynamical structure factors derived from the two probes
should be identical. However, we find strong disagreements outside the dipole
scattering limit, even at high probe energies. This suggests an unexpectedly
important contribution from intra-molecular multiple scattering of the probe
electron from core electrons or the nucleus. These effects should grow
progressively stronger as the atomic number of the target species increases.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review Letters April 27, 2010. 12 pages
including 2 figure pages
Orbital Order and Spontaneous Orthorhombicity in Iron Pnictides
A growing list of experiments show orthorhombic electronic anisotropy in the
iron pnictides, in some cases at temperatures well above the spin density wave
transition. These experiments include neutron scattering, resistivity and
magnetoresistance measurements, and a variety of spectroscopies. We explore the
idea that these anisotropies stem from a common underlying cause: orbital order
manifest in an unequal occupation of and orbitals, arising
from the coupled spin-orbital degrees of freedom. We emphasize the distinction
between the total orbital occupation (the integrated density of states), where
the order parameter may be small, and the orbital polarization near the Fermi
level which can be more pronounced. We also discuss light-polarization studies
of angle-resolved photoemission, and demonstrate how x-ray absorption linear
dichroism may be used as a method to detect an orbital order parameter.Comment: Orig.: 4+ pages; Rev.: 4+ pages with updated content and reference
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