2,589 research outputs found
A Embrapa e a comunicação para a Agricultura Familiar: uma pesquisa exploratória no Distrito Federal.
Este artigo tem como propósito apresentar os resultados de uma pesquisa exploratória realizada com agricultores familiares do Distrito Federal acerca da imagem da Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária (Embrapa) no que se refere à relação e a comunicação com a agricultura familiar, tendo como ponto inicial a identificação de entraves na comunicação da empresa com esse segmento de agricultores
Influence of non-local exchange on RKKY interactions in III-V diluted magnetic semiconductors
The RKKY interaction between substitutional Mn local moments in GaAs is both
spin-direction-dependent and spatially anisotropic. In this Letter we address
the strength of these anisotropies using a semi-phenomenological tight-binding
model which treats the hybridization between Mn d-orbitals and As p-orbitals
perturbatively and accounts realistically for the non-local exchange
interaction between their spins. We show that exchange non-locality,
valence-band spin-orbit coupling, and band-structure anisotropy all play a role
in determining the strength of both effects. We use these results to estimate
the degree of ground-state magnetization suppression due to frustrating
interactions between randomly located Mn ions.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX, 2 figures included, v2: replacement because of font
proble
Clustering in disordered ferromagnets: The Curie temperature in diluted magnetic semiconductors
We theoretically investigate impurity correlation and magnetic clustering
effects on the long-range ferromagnetic ordering in diluted magnetic
semiconductors, such as , using
analytical arguments and direct Monte Carlo simulations. We obtain an analytic
formula for the ferromagnetic transition temperature which becomes
asymptotically exact in the strongly disordered, highly dilute (i.e. small )
regime. We establish that impurity correlations have only small effects on
with the neutrally correlated random disorder producing the nominally
highest . We find that the ferromagnetic order is approached from the
high temperature paramagnetic side through a random magnetic clustering
phenomenon consistent with the percolation transition scenario.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Doping dependence of the Neel temperature in Mott-Hubbard antiferromagnets: Effect of vortices
The rapid destruction of long-range antiferromagnetic order upon doping of
Mott-Hubbard antiferromagnetic insulators is studied within a generalized
Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless renormalization group theory in accordance with
recent calculations suggesting that holes dress with vortices. We calculate the
doping-dependent Neel temperature in good agreement with experiments for
high-Tc cuprates. Interestingly, the critical doping where long-range order
vanishes at zero temperature is predicted to be xc ~ 0.02, independently of any
energy scales of the system.Comment: 4 pages with 3 figures included, minor revisions, to be published in
PR
Mathieu Moonshine and N=2 String Compactifications
There is a `Mathieu moonshine' relating the elliptic genus of K3 to the
sporadic group M_{24}. Here, we give evidence that this moonshine extends to
part of the web of dualities connecting heterotic strings compactified on K3
\times T^2 to type IIA strings compactified on Calabi-Yau threefolds. We
demonstrate that dimensions of M_{24} representations govern the new
supersymmetric index of the heterotic compactifications, and appear in the
Gromov--Witten invariants of the dual Calabi-Yau threefolds, which are elliptic
fibrations over the Hirzebruch surfaces F_n.Comment: 28 pages; v2: minor changes, published versio
Resonant and Kondo tunneling through molecular magnets
Transport through molecular magnets is studied in the regime of strong
coupling to the leads. We consider a resonant-tunneling model where the
electron spin in a quantum dot or molecule is coupled to an additional local,
anisotropic spin via exchange interaction. The two opposite regimes dominated
by resonant tunneling and by Kondo transport, respectively, are considered. In
the resonant-tunneling regime, the stationary state of the impurity spin is
calculated for arbitrarily strong molecule-lead coupling using a
master-equation approach, which treats the exchange interaction perturbatively.
We find that the characteristic fine structure in the differential conductance
persists even if the hybridization energy exceeds thermal energies. Transport
in the Kondo regime is studied within a diagrammatic approach. We show that
magnetic anisotropy gives rise to a splitting of the Kondo peak at low bias
voltages.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, version as publishe
Quantum Monte Carlo simulation of thin magnetic films
The stochastic series expansion quantum Monte Carlo method is used to study
thin ferromagnetic films, described by a Heisenberg model including local
anisotropies. The magnetization curve is calculated, and the results compared
to Schwinger boson and many-body Green's function calculations. A transverse
field is introduced in order to study the reorientation effect, in which the
magnetization changes from out-of-plane to in-plane. Since the approximate
theoretical approaches above differ significantly from each other, and the
Monte Carlo method is free of systematic errors, the calculation provides an
unbiased check of the approximate treatments. By studying quantum spin models
with local anisotropies, varying spin size, and a transverse field, we also
demonstrate the general applicability of the recent cluster-loop formulation of
the stochastic series expansion quantum Monte Carlo method.Comment: 9 pages, 12 figure
Stochastic Assembly of Bacteria in Microwell Arrays Reveals the Importance of Confinement in Community Development
Citation: Hansen, R. H., Timm, A. C., Timm, C. M., Bible, A. N., Morrell-Falvey, J. L., Pelletier, D. A., . . . Retterer, S. T. (2016). Stochastic Assembly of Bacteria in Microwell Arrays Reveals the Importance of Confinement in Community Development. Plos One, 11(5), 18. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0155080The structure and function of microbial communities is deeply influenced by the physical and chemical architecture of the local microenvironment and the abundance of its community members. The complexity of this natural parameter space has made characterization of the key drivers of community development difficult. In order to facilitate these characterizations, we have developed a microwell platform designed to screen microbial growth and interactions across a wide variety of physical and initial conditions. Assembly of microbial communities into microwells was achieved using a novel biofabrication method that exploits well feature sizes for control of innoculum levels. Wells with incrementally smaller size features created populations with increasingly larger variations in inoculum levels. This allowed for reproducible growth measurement in large (20 mu m diameter) wells, and screening for favorable growth conditions in small (5, 10 mu m diameter) wells. We demonstrate the utility of this approach for screening and discovery using 5 mu m wells to assemble P. aeruginosa colonies across a broad distribution of innoculum levels, and identify those conditions that promote the highest probability of survivial and growth under spatial confinement. Multi-member community assembly was also characterized to demonstrate the broad potential of this platform for studying the role of member abundance on microbial competition, mutualism and community succession
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