365 research outputs found
Statistical Gaussian Model of Image Regions in Stochastic Watershed Segmentation
International audienceStochastic watershed is an image segmentation technique based on mathematical morphology which produces a probability density function of image contours. Estimated probabilities depend mainly on local distances between pixels. This paper introduces a variant of stochastic watershed where the probabilities of contours are computed from a Gaussian model of image regions. In this framework, the basic ingredient is the distance between pairs of regions, hence a distance between normal distributions. Hence several alternatives of statistical distances for normal distributions are compared, namely Bhattacharyya distance, Hellinger metric distance and Wasserstein metric distance
Signature of nonlinear damping in geometric structure of a nonequilibrium process
We investigate the effect of nonlinear interaction on the geometric structure of a nonequilibrium process.
Specifically, by considering a driven-dissipative system where a stochastic variable x is damped either linearly
(∝x) or nonlinearly (∝x3) while driven by a white noise, we compute the time-dependent probability density
functions (PDFs) during the relaxation towards equilibrium from an initial nonequilibrium state. From these
PDFs, we quantify the information change by the information length L, which is the total number of statistically
distinguishable states which the system passes through from the initial state to the final state. By exploiting
different initial PDFs and the strength D of the white-noise forcing, we show that for a linear system, L increases
essentially linearly with an initial mean value y0 of x as L ∝ y0, demonstrating the preservation of a linear
geometry. In comparison, in the case of a cubic damping, L has a power-law scaling as L ∝ ym
0 , with the
exponent m depending on D and the width of the initial PDF. The rate at which information changes also exhibits
a robust power-law scaling with time for the cubic damping
Magnetization plateaus in weakly coupled dimer spin system
I study a spin system consisting of strongly coupled dimers which are in turn
weakly coupled in a plane by zigzag interactions. The model can be viewed as
the strong-coupling limit of a two-dimensional zigzag chain structure typical,
e.g., for the -planes of KCuCl_3. It is shown that the magnetization
curve in this model has plateaus at 1/3 and 2/3 of the saturation
magnetization, and an additional plateau at 1/2 can appear in a certain range
of the model parameters; the critical fields are calculated perturbatively. It
is argued that for the three-dimensional lattice structure of the KCuCl_3
family the plateaus at 1/4 and 3/4 of the saturation can be favored in a
similar way, which might be relevant to the recent experiments on NH_4CuCl_3 by
Shiramura et al., J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. {\bf 67}, 1548 (1998).Comment: serious changes in Sect. II,III, final version to appear in PR
Fermi surface of PtCoO2 from quantum oscillations and electronic structure calculations
The authors would like to acknowledge the financial support from the Max-Planck Society. E.H. and M.N. acknowledge support from Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) through the Project No. 107745057 (TRR80: From Electronic Correlations to Functionality). This work is also supported by JSPS KAKENHI (No. 18K04715). A portion of this work was performed at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, which is supported by the National Science Foundation Cooperative Agreements No. DMR-1157490 and No. DMR-1644779 and the State of Florida.The delafossite series of layered oxides includes some of the highest conductivity metals ever discovered. Of these, PtCoO2, with a room-temperature resistivity of 1.8 μΩcm for in-plane transport, is the most conducting of all. The high conduction takes place in triangular lattice Pt layers, separated by layers of Co-O octahedra, and the electronic structure is determined by the interplay of the two types of layers. We present a detailed study of quantum oscillations in PtCoO2, at temperatures down to 35 mK and magnetic fields up to 30 T. As for PdCoO2 and PdRhO2, the Fermi surface consists of a single cylinder with mainly Pt character and an effective mass close to the free-electron value. Due to Fermi-surface warping, two close-lying high frequencies are observed. Additionally, a pronounced difference frequency appears. By analyzing the detailed angular dependence of the quantum-oscillation frequencies, we establish the warping parameters of the Fermi surface. We compare these results to the predictions of first-principles electronic-structure calculations including spin-orbit coupling on Pt and Co and on-site correlation U on Co, and hence demonstrate that electronic correlations in the Co-O layers play an important role in determining characteristic features of the electronic structure of PtCoO2.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Specific heat of an S=1/2 Heisenberg ladder compound Cu(CHN)Cl under magnetic fields
Specific heat measurements down to 0.5 K have been performed on a single
crystal sample of a spin-ladder like compound
Cu(CHN)Cl under magnetic fields up to 12
T. The temperature dependence of the observed data in a magnetic field below 6
T is well reproduced by numerical results calculated for the S=1/2 two-leg
ladder with /=5. In the gapless region above 7 T
(), the agreement between experiment and calculation is good above
about 2 K and a sharp and a round peak were observed below 2 K in a magnetic
field around 10 T, but the numerical data show only a round peak, the magnitude
of which is smaller than that of the observed one. The origin of the sharp peak
and the difference between the experimental and numerical round peak are
discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, Submitted to PR
Laboratory investigation of lateral dispersion within dense arrays of randomly distributed cylinders at transitional Reynolds number
Published versio
Field- and pressure-induced magnetic quantum phase transitions in TlCuCl_3
Thallium copper chloride is a quantum spin liquid of S = 1/2 Cu^2+ dimers.
Interdimer superexchange interactions give a three-dimensional magnon
dispersion and a spin gap significantly smaller than the dimer coupling. This
gap is closed by an applied hydrostatic pressure of approximately 2kbar or by a
magnetic field of 5.6T, offering a unique opportunity to explore the both types
of quantum phase transition and their associated critical phenomena. We use a
bond-operator formulation to obtain a continuous description of all disordered
and ordered phases, and thus of the transitions separating these. Both
pressure- and field-induced transitions may be considered as the Bose-Einstein
condensation of triplet magnon excitations, and the respective phases of
staggered magnetic order as linear combinations of dimer singlet and triplet
modes. We focus on the evolution with applied pressure and field of the
magnetic excitations in each phase, and in particular on the gapless
(Goldstone) modes in the ordered regimes which correspond to phase fluctuations
of the ordered moment. The bond-operator description yields a good account of
the magnetization curves and of magnon dispersion relations observed by
inelastic neutron scattering under applied fields, and a variety of
experimental predictions for pressure-dependent measurements.Comment: 20 pages, 17 figure
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