120 research outputs found
Localized to extended states transition for two interacting particles in a two-dimensional random potential
We show by a numerical procedure that a short-range interaction induces
extended two-particle states in a two-dimensional random potential. Our
procedure treats the interaction as a perturbation and solve Dyson's equation
exactly in the subspace of doubly occupied sites. We consider long bars of
several widths and extract the macroscopic localization and correlation lengths
by an scaling analysis of the renormalized decay length of the bars. For ,
the critical disorder found is , and the critical
exponent . For two non-interacting particles we do not find any
transition and the localization length is roughly half the one-particle value,
as expected.Comment: 4 two-column pages, 4 eps figures, Revtex, to be published in
Europhys. Let
Critical Spectral Statistics at the Metal-Insulator Transition in Interacting Fermionic Systems
The spectral properties of a disordered system with few interacting
three-dimensional spinless fermions are investigated. We show the existence of
a critical spacings distribution which is invariant upon increase of the system
size, but strongly depends on the number of particles. At the critical point,
we report a substantial decrease of the degree of level repulsion as the number
of particles increases indicating a decrease of nearest level correlations
associated with the sparsity of the Hamiltonian matrix.Comment: Revtex, 4 pages, 3 encapsulated postscript figures appended Final
version as accepted for publication in PR
Do interactions increase or reduce the conductance of disordered electrons? It depends!
We investigate the influence of electron-electron interactions on the
conductance of two-dimensional disordered spinless electrons. By using an
efficient numerical method which is based on exact diagonalization in a
truncated basis of Hartree-Fock states we are able to determine the exact
low-energy properties of comparatively large systems in the diffusive as well
as in the localized regimes. We find that weak interactions increase the d.c.
conductance in the localized regime while they decrease the d.c. conductance in
the diffusive regime. Strong interactions always decrease the conductance. We
also study the localization of single-particle excitations close to the Fermi
energy which turns out to be only weakly influenced by the interactions.Comment: final version as publsihed, 4 pages REVTEX, 6 EPS figures include
Environmental predictability drives adaptive within- and transgenerational plasticity of heat tolerance across life stages and climatic regions
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in this recordData availability statement: Data generated in the current study were deposited in Appendix S3
of Supporting InformationAlthough environmental variability and predictability have been proposed as the underlying ecological context in which transgenerational plasticity (TGP) arises, the adaptive significance and interaction with withinâgeneration plasticity (WGP) in such scenarios is still poorly understood. To investigate these questions, we considered the tolerance to upper thermal limits of larvae and adults of the desert endemic Drosophila mojavensis adapted to different climatic regions (Desert vs. Mediterranean climate).
Thermal plasticity was investigated by acclimating parents and offspring at 36°C (vs. at 25°C). We then used historical temperature variation data from both regions to perform individualâbased simulations by modelling expected components of adaptive plasticity in multiple life stages.
Our results indicated that thermal response to ramping heat shocks was more pronounced in larvae, where acclimation treatments in parents and offspring increased their heatâshock performance, while heat knockdown in adults was only increased by offspring acclimation of adults. The relative contribution of WGP and TGP was greater for the population from the more thermally variable Sonoran Desert.
Similarly, individualâbased simulations of evolving maternal effects indicated that variation in tolerance to upper thermal limits across life stages and climates is expected from its adaptive significance in response to environmental predictability.
Our approach offers a new perspective and interpretation of adaptive plasticity, demonstrating that environmental predictability can drive thermal responses across generations and life stages in a scenario with regional climate variability.University of ArizonaNational Science Foundation (NSF)Leverhulme Trus
Magnetic Field Effect for Two Electrons in a Two Dimensional Random Potential
We study the problem of two particles with Coulomb repulsion in a
two-dimensional disordered potential in the presence of a magnetic field. For
the regime, when without interaction all states are well localized, it is shown
that above a critical excitation energy electron pairs become delocalized by
interaction. The transition between the localized and delocalized regimes goes
in the same way as the metal-insulator transition at the mobility edge in the
three dimensional Anderson model with broken time reversal symmetry.Comment: revtex, 7 pages, 6 figure
Severe Psychiatric Problems in Right Hepatic Lobe Donors for Living Donor Liver Transplantation
The morbidity and mortality from donation of a right hepatic lobe for living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) is an important issue for this procedure. We report the prevalence of severe psychiatric postoperative complications from the Adult-to-Adult Living Donor Liver Transplantation Cohort study (A2ALL), which was established to define the risks and benefits of LDLT for donors and recipients
Dynamics of short time--scale energy relaxation of optical excitations due to electron--electron scattering in the presence of arbitrary disorder
A non--equilibrium occupation distribution relaxes towards the Fermi--Dirac
distribution due to electron--electron scattering even in finite Fermi systems.
The dynamic evolution of this thermalization process assumed to result from an
optical excitation is investigated numerically by solving a Boltzmann equation
for the carrier populations using a one--dimensional disordered system. We
focus on the short time--scale behavior. The logarithmically long time--scale
associated with the glassy behavior of interacting electrons in disordered
systems is not treated in our investigation.
For weak disorder and short range interaction we recover the expected result
that disorder enhances the relaxation rate as compared to the case without
disorder. For sufficiently strong disorder, however, we find an opposite trend
due to the reduction of scattering probabilities originating from the strong
localization of the single--particle states. Long--range interaction in this
regime produces a similar effect. The relaxation rate is found to scale with
the interaction strength, however, the interplay between the implicit and the
explicit character of the interaction produces an anomalous exponent.Comment: 4 pages, 3 EPS figure
Assessment of Elder Mistreatment in Two American Indian Samples: Psychometric Characteristics of the HS-EAST and the Native Elder LifeâFinancial Exploitation and âNeglect Measures
Although elder mistreatment among ethnic minorities is increasingly gaining attention, our empirical knowledge of this phenomenon among American Indians remains quite limited, especially with respect to measurement. The Shielding American Indian Elders (SAIE) Project used a collaborative approach to explore culturally informed measurement of elder mistreatment in two American Indian elder samples (a Northern Plains reservation and a South Central metropolitan area). The project sought to investigate the performance characteristics of the commonly used Hwalek-Sengstock Elder Abuse Screening Test (HS-EAST), as well as to examine the psychometric properties of a new measure developed to capture culturally salient aspects of mistreatment in American Indian contextsâthe Native Elder Life Scale (NELS). Using methods and samples comparable to those in the literature, the HS-EAST performed adequately in these Native samples. The NELS also shows promise for use with this population and assesses different aspects of elder mistreatment than does the HS-EAST.Yeshttps://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/manuscript-submission-guideline
Age and helium content of the open cluster NGC 6791 from multiple eclipsing binary members. II. age dependencies and new insights
Models of stellar structure and evolution can be constrained by measuring
accurate parameters of detached eclipsing binaries in open clusters. Multiple
binary stars provide the means to determine helium abundances in these old
stellar systems, and in turn, to improve estimates of their age. In the first
paper of this series, we demonstrated how measurements of multiple eclipsing
binaries in the old open cluster NGC6791 sets tighter constraints on the
properties of stellar models than has previously been possible, thereby
potentially improving both the accuracy and precision of the cluster age. Here
we add additional constraints and perform an extensive model comparison to
determine the best estimates of the cluster age and helium content, employing
as many observational constraints as possible. We improve our photometry and
correct empirically for differential reddening effects. We then perform an
extensive comparison of the CMDs and eclipsing binary measurements to Victoria
and DSEP isochrones to estimate cluster parameters. We also reanalyse a
spectrum of the star 2-17 to improve [Fe/H] constraints. We find a best
estimate of the age of ~8.3 Gyr while demonstrating that remaining age
uncertainty is dominated by uncertainties in the CNO abundances. The helium
mass fraction is well constrained at Y = 0.30 \pm 0.01 resulting in dY/dZ ~ 1.4
assuming that such a relation exists. During the analysis we firmly identify
blue straggler stars, including the star 2-17, and find indications for the
presence of their evolved counterparts. Our analysis supports the RGB mass-loss
found from asteroseismology and we determine precisely the absolute mass of
stars on the lower RGB, 1.15\pm0.02Msun. This will be an important consistency
check for the detailed asteroseismology of cluster stars.Comment: 18 Pages, 9 Figures, accepted for publication in A&
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