19,761 research outputs found
Performance Evaluation of Road Traffic Control Using a Fuzzy Cellular Model
In this paper a method is proposed for performance evaluation of road traffic
control systems. The method is designed to be implemented in an on-line
simulation environment, which enables optimisation of adaptive traffic control
strategies. Performance measures are computed using a fuzzy cellular traffic
model, formulated as a hybrid system combining cellular automata and fuzzy
calculus. Experimental results show that the introduced method allows the
performance to be evaluated using imprecise traffic measurements. Moreover, the
fuzzy definitions of performance measures are convenient for uncertainty
determination in traffic control decisions.Comment: The final publication is available at http://www.springerlink.co
The Kagome Antiferromagnet with Defects: Satisfaction, Frustration, and Spin Folding in a Random Spin System
It is shown that site disorder induces noncoplanar states, competing with the
thermal selection of coplanar states, in the nearest neighbor, classical kagome
Heisenberg antiferromagnet (AFM). For weak disorder, it is found that the
ground state energy is the sum of energies of separately satisfied triangles of
spins. This implies that disorder does not induce conventional spin glass
behavior. A transformation is presented, mapping ground state spin
configurations onto a folded triangular sheet (a new kind of ``spin origami'')
which has conformations similar to those of tethered membranes.Comment: REVTEX, 11 pages + 3 pictures upon reques
Theory of Impurity Effects on the Spin Nematic State
The effect of magnetic bond disorder in otherwise antiferro nematic ordered
system is investigated. We introduced triangular-shaped ferromagnetic bond
disorder in the S=1 bilinear-biquadratic model on a triangular lattice. It is
shown that the coupling between the impurity magnetic moment and nonmagnetic
excitation in the bulk yields single-moment anisotropy and long-range
anisotropic interaction between impurity magnetic moments. This interaction can
induce unconventional spin-freezing phenomena observed in triangular magnet,
NiGa2S4.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figure
Valence-Bond Crystal, and Lattice Distortions in a Pyrochlore Antiferromagnet with Orbital Degeneracy
We discuss the ground state properties of a spin 1/2 magnetic ion with
threefold orbital degeneracy on a highly frustrated pyrochlore
lattice, like Ti ion in B-spinel MgTiO. We formulate an
effective spin-orbital Hamiltonian and study its low energy sector by
constructing several exact-eigenstates in the limit of vanishing Hund's
coupling. We find that orbital degrees of freedom modulate the spin-exchange
energies, release the infinite spin-degeneracy of pyrochlore structure, and
drive the system to a non-magnetic spin-singlet manifold. The latter is a
collection of spin-singlet dimers and is, however, highly degenerate with
respect of dimer orientations. This ``orientational'' degeneracy is then lifted
by a magneto-elastic interaction that optimizes the previous energy gain by
distorting the bonds in suitable directions and leading to a tetragonal phase.
In this way a valence bond crystal state is formed, through the condensation of
dimers along helical chains running around the tetragonal c-axis, as actually
observed in MgTiO. The orbitally ordered pattern in the dimerized phase
is predicted to be of ferro-type along the helices and of antiferro-type
between them. Finally, through analytical considerations as well as numerical
ab-initio simulations, we predict a possible experimental tool for the
observation of such an orbital ordering, through resonant x-ray scattering.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figure
Spin phonon coupling in frustrated magnet CdCrO
The infrared phonon spectrum of the spinel CdCr2O4 is measured as a function
temperature from 6 K to 300K. The triply degenerate Cr phonons soften in the
paramagnetic phase as temperature is lowered below 100 K and then split into a
singlet and doublet in the low T antiferromagnetic phase which is tetragonally
distorted to relieve the geometric frustration in the pyrochlore lattice of
Cr ions. The phonon splitting is inconsistent with the simple increase
(decrease) in the force constants due to deceasing (increasing) bond lengths in
the tetragonal phase. Rather they correspond to changes in the force constants
due to the magnetic order in the antiferromagnetic state. The phonon splitting
in this system is opposite of that observed earlier in ZnCr2O4 as predicted by
theory. The magnitude of the splitting gives a measure of the spin phonon
coupling strength which is smaller than in the case of ZnCr2O4.Comment: 4.2 pages, 4 figures, 1 reference added, submmite
Pressure Induced Charge Disproportionation in LaMnO
We present a total energy study as a function of volume in the cubic phase of
LaMnO. A charge disproportionated state into planes of
MnO/MnO was found. It is argued that the pressure
driven localisation/delocalisation transition might go smoothly through a
region of Mn and Mn coexistence.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure, Conference Proceedings: Nanospintronics: Design
and Realization (Kyoto, Japan 24-28 May, 2004
Magnetic susceptibility of diluted pyrochlore and SCGO antiferromagnets
We investigate the magnetic susceptibility of the classical Heisenberg
antiferromagnet with nearest-neighbour interactions on the geometrically
frustrated pyrochlore lattice, for a pure system and in the presence of
dilution with nonmagnetic ions. Using the fact that the correlation length in
this system for small dilution is always short, we obtain an approximate but
accurate expression for the magnetic susceptibility at all temperatures. We
extend this theory to the compound SrCr_{9-9x}Ga_{3+9x}O_{19} (SCGO) and
provide an explanation of the phenomenological model recently proposed by
Schiffer and Daruka [Phys. Rev. B56, 13712 (1997)].Comment: 4 pages, Latex, 4 postscript figures automatically include
Green's function approach to the magnetic properties of the kagome antiferromagnet
The Heisenberg antiferromagnet is studied on the kagom\'e lattice by
using a Green's function method based on an appropriate decoupling of the
equations of motion. Thermodynamic properties as well as spin-spin correlation
functions are obtained and characterize this system as a two-dimensional
quantum spin liquid. Spin-spin correlation functions decay exponentially with
distance down to low temperature and the calculated missing entropy at T=0 is
found to be . Within the present scheme, the specific heat exhibits
a single peak structure and a dependence at low temperature.Comment: 6 (two-column revtex4) pages, 5 ps figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Critical behavior of repulsive linear -mers on triangular lattices
Monte Carlo (MC) simulations and finite-size scaling analysis have been
carried out to study the critical behavior in a submonolayer two-dimensional
gas of repulsive linear -mers on a triangular lattice at coverage
. A low-temperature ordered phase, characterized by a repetition of
alternating files of adsorbed -mers separated by adjacent empty sites,
is separated from the disordered state by a order-disorder phase transition
occurring at a finite critical temperature, . The MC technique was
combined with the recently reported Free Energy Minimization Criterion Approach
(FEMCA), [F. Rom\'a et al., Phys. Rev. B, 68, 205407, (2003)], to predict the
dependence of the critical temperature of the order-disorder transformation.
The dependence on of the transition temperature, , observed in MC
is in qualitative agreement with FEMCA. In addition, an accurate determination
of the critical exponents has been obtained for adsorbate sizes ranging between
and . For , the results reveal that the system does not belong
to the universality class of the two-dimensional Potts model with (,
monomers). Based on symmetry concepts, we suggested that the behavior observed
for and 3 could be generalized to include larger particle sizes ().Comment: 17 pages, 13 figure
Anti-ferromagnetic ordering in arrays of superconducting pi-rings
We report experiments in which one dimensional (1D) and two dimensional (2D)
arrays of YBa2Cu3O7-x-Nb pi-rings are cooled through the superconducting
transition temperature of the Nb in various magnetic fields. These pi-rings
have degenerate ground states with either clockwise or counter-clockwise
spontaneous circulating supercurrents. The final flux state of each ring in the
arrays was determined using scanning SQUID microscopy. In the 1D arrays,
fabricated as a single junction with facets alternating between alignment
parallel to a [100] axis of the YBCO and rotated 90 degrees to that axis,
half-fluxon Josephson vortices order strongly into an arrangement with
alternating signs of their magnetic flux. We demonstrate that this ordering is
driven by phase coupling and model the cooling process with a numerical
solution of the Sine-Gordon equation. The 2D ring arrays couple to each other
through the magnetic flux generated by the spontaneous supercurrents. Using
pi-rings for the 2D flux coupling experiments eliminates one source of disorder
seen in similar experiments using conventional superconducting rings, since
pi-rings have doubly degenerate ground states in the absence of an applied
field. Although anti-ferromagnetic ordering occurs, with larger negative bond
orders than previously reported for arrays of conventional rings, long-range
order is never observed, even in geometries without geometric frustration. This
may be due to dynamical effects. Monte-Carlo simulations of the 2D array
cooling process are presented and compared with experiment.Comment: 10 pages, 15 figure
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