12,671 research outputs found
Polaronic behavior of undoped high-Tc cuprates
We present angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) data on undoped
La2CuO4, indicating polaronic coupling between bosons and charge carriers.
Using a shell model, we calculate the electron-phonon coupling and find that it
is strong enough to give polarons. We develop an efficient method for
calculating ARPES spectra in undoped systems. Using the calculated couplings,
we find the width of the phonon side band in good agreement with experiment. We
analyze reasons for the observed dependence of the width on the binding energy.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX, 5 eps figures, more material available at
http://www.fkf.mpg.de/andersen/phonons
MOTIFATOR: detection and characterization of regulatory motifs using prokaryote transcriptome data
Summary: Unraveling regulatory mechanisms (e.g. identification of motifs in cis-regulatory regions) remains a major challenge in the analysis of transcriptome experiments. Existing applications identify putative motifs from gene lists obtained at rather arbitrary cutoff and require additional manual processing steps. Our standalone application MOTIFATOR identifies the most optimal parameters for motif discovery and creates an interactive visualization of the results. Discovered putative motifs are functionally characterized, thereby providing valuable insight in the biological processes that could be controlled by the motif.
Resonant Cyclotron Radiation Transfer Model Fits to Spectra from Gamma-Ray Burst GRB870303
We demonstrate that models of resonant cyclotron radiation transfer in a
strong field (i.e. cyclotron scattering) can account for spectral lines seen at
two epochs, denoted S1 and S2, in the Ginga data for GRB870303. Using a
generalized version of the Monte Carlo code of Wang et al. (1988,1989b), we
model line formation by injecting continuum photons into a static
plane-parallel slab of electrons threaded by a strong neutron star magnetic
field (~ 10^12 G) which may be oriented at an arbitrary angle relative to the
slab normal. We examine two source geometries, which we denote "1-0" and "1-1,"
with the numbers representing the relative electron column densities above and
below the continuum photon source plane. We compare azimuthally symmetric
models, i.e. models in which the magnetic field is parallel to the slab normal,
with models having more general magnetic field orientations. If the bursting
source has a simple dipole field, these two model classes represent line
formation at the magnetic pole, or elsewhere on the stellar surface. We find
that the data of S1 and S2, considered individually, are consistent with both
geometries, and with all magnetic field orientations, with the exception that
the S1 data clearly favor line formation away from a polar cap in the 1-1
geometry, with the best-fit model placing the line-forming region at the
magnetic equator. Within both geometries, fits to the combined (S1+S2) data
marginally favor models which feature equatorial line formation, and in which
the observer's orientation with respect to the slab changes between the two
epochs. We interpret this change as being due to neutron star rotation, and we
place limits on the rotation period.Comment: LaTeX2e (aastex.cls included); 45 pages text, 17 figures (on 21
pages); accepted by ApJ (to be published 1 Nov 1999, v. 525
The Formation and Fragmentation of Disks around Primordial Protostars
The very first stars to form in the Universe heralded an end to the cosmic
dark ages and introduced new physical processes that shaped early cosmic
evolution. Until now, it was thought that these stars lived short, solitary
lives, with only one extremely massive star, or possibly a very wide binary
system, forming in each dark matter minihalo. Here we describe numerical
simulations that show that these stars were, to the contrary, often members of
tight multiple systems. Our results show that the disks that formed around the
first young stars were unstable to gravitational fragmentation, possibly
producing small binary and higher-order systems that had separations as small
as the distance between the Earth and the Sun.Comment: This manuscript has been accepted for publication in Science. This
version has not undergone final editing. Please refer to the complete version
of record at http://www.sciencemag.org
Nuclear Mass Dependence of Chaotic Dynamics in Ginocchio Model
The chaotic dynamics in nuclear collective motion is studied in the framework
of a schematic shell model which has only monopole and quadrupole degrees of
freedom. The model is shown to reproduce the experimentally observed global
trend toward less chaotic motion in heavier nuclei. The relation between
current approach and the earlier studies with bosonic models is discussed.Comment: 11 Page REVTeX file, 2 postscript figures, uuencode
Magnetization Process of Kagome-Lattice Heisenberg Antiferromagnet
The magnetization process of the isotropic Heisenberg antiferromagnet on the
kagome lattice is studied. Data obtained from the numerical-diagonalization
method are reexamined from the viewpoint of the derivative of the magnetization
with respect to the magnetic field. We find that the behavior of the derivative
at approximately one-third of the height of the magnetization saturation is
markedly different from that for the cases of typical magnetization plateaux.
The magnetization process of the kagome-lattice antiferromagnet reveals a new
phenomenon, which we call the "magnetization ramp".Comment: 4 pages, 5figures, accepted in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn
Large magnetoresistance at room-temperature in semiconducting polymer sandwich devices
We report on the discovery of a large, room temperature magnetoresistance
(MR) effect in polyfluorene sandwich devices in weak magnetic fields. We
characterize this effect and discuss its dependence on voltage, temperature,
film thickness, electrode materials, and (unintentional) impurity
concentration. We usually observed negative MR, but positive MR can also be
achieved under high applied electric fields. The MR effect reaches up to 10% at
fields of 10mT at room temperature. The effect shows only a weak temperature
dependence and is independent of the sign and direction of the magnetic field.
We find that the effect is related to the hole current in the devices.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figure
r-modes in Relativistic Superfluid Stars
We discuss the modal properties of the -modes of relativistic superfluid
neutron stars, taking account of the entrainment effects between superfluids.
In this paper, the neutron stars are assumed to be filled with neutron and
proton superfluids and the strength of the entrainment effects between the
superfluids are represented by a single parameter . We find that the
basic properties of the -modes in a relativistic superfluid star are very
similar to those found for a Newtonian superfluid star. The -modes of a
relativistic superfluid star are split into two families, ordinary fluid-like
-modes (-mode) and superfluid-like -modes (-mode). The two
superfluids counter-move for the -modes, while they co-move for the
-modes. For the -modes, the quantity is
almost independent of the entrainment parameter , where and
are the azimuthal wave number and the oscillation frequency observed by an
inertial observer at spatial infinity, respectively. For the -modes, on
the other hand, almost linearly increases with increasing . It
is also found that the radiation driven instability due to the -modes is
much weaker than that of the -modes because the matter current associated
with the axial parity perturbations almost completely vanishes.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures. To appear in Physical Review
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