5,871 research outputs found
Three-dimensional elastic deformation of functionally graded isotropic plates under point loading
Acknowledgement Financial support of this research by The Royal Society (UK) under grant number JP090633 is gratefully acknowledged.Peer reviewedPostprin
Fight On! A Thirty Year History of the Sawmill Slough Conservation Club
A history of the Sawmill Slough Conservation Club from it\u27s beginnings to 2003https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/conservation_club/1000/thumbnail.jp
Study of the volume and spin collapse in orthoferrite LuFeO_3 using LDA+U
Rare earth (R) orthoferrites RFeO_3 exhibit large volume transitions
associated with a spin collapse. We present here ab initio calculations on
LuFeO_3. We show that taking into account the strong correlation among the
Fe-3d electrons is necessary. Indeed, with the LDA+U method in the Projector
Augmented Wave (PAW), we are able to describe the isostructural phase
transition at 50 GPa, as well as a volume discontinuity of 6.0% at the
transition and the considerable reduction of the magnetic moment on the Fe
ions. We further investigate the effect of the variation of U and J and find a
linear dependence of the transition pressure on these parameters. We give an
interpretation for the non-intuitive effect of J. This emphasizes the need for
a correct determination of these parameters especially when the LDA+U is
applied to systems (e.g in geophysical investigations) where the transition
pressure is a priori unknown
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Carbonates in Skeleton-poor Seas: New Insights From Cambrian and Ordovician Strata of Laurentia
Calcareous skeletons evolved as part of the greater EdiacaranāCambrian diversification of marine animals. Skeletons did not become permanent, globally important sources of carbonate sediment, however, until the Ordovician radiation. Representative carbonate facies in a Series 3 (510ā501 Ma) Cambrian to Tremadocian succession from western Newfoundland, Canada, and Ordovician successions from the Ibex area, Utah, USA, show that, on average, Cambrian and Tremadocian carbonates contain much less skeletal material than do post-Tremadocian sediments. Petrographic point counts of skeletal abundance within facies and proportional facies abundance in measured sections suggest that later Cambrian successions contain on average <5% skeletal material by volume, whereas the skeletal content of post-Tremadocian Ordovician sections is closer to ~15%. A compilation of carbonate stratigraphic sections from across Laurentia confirms that post-Tremadocian increase in skeletal content is a general pattern and not unique to the two basins studied. The long interval (~40 myr) between the initial Cambrian appearance of carbonate skeletons and the subsequent Ordovician diversification of heavily skeletonized organisms provides an important perspective on the Ordovician radiation. Geochemical data increasingly support the hypothesis that later Cambrian oceans were warm and, in subsurface water masses, commonly dysoxic to anoxic. We suggest that surface waters in such oceans would have been characterized by relatively low saturation states for calcite and aragonite. Mid-Ordovician cooling would have raised oxygen concentrations in subsurface water masses, establishing more highly oversaturated surface waters. If correct, these links could provide a proximal trigger for the renewed radiation of heavily skeletonized invertebrates and algae
Octahedral Tilt Instability of ReO_3-type Crystals
The octahedron tilt transitions of ABX_3 perovskite-structure materials lead
to an anti-polar (or antiferroelectric) arrangement of dipoles, with the low
temperature structure having six sublattices polarized along various
crystallographic directions. It is shown that an important mechanism driving
the transition is long range dipole-dipole forces acting on both displacive and
induced parts of the anion dipole. This acts in concert with short range
repulsion, allowing a gain of electrostatic (Madelung) energy, both
dipole-dipole and charge-charge, because the unit cell shrinks when the hard
ionic spheres of the rigid octahedron tilt out of linear alignment.Comment: 4 page with 3 figures included; new version updates references and
clarifies the argument
Longitudinal and Transverse Response Functions in ^(56)Fe(e,e') at Momentum Transfer near 1 GeV/c
Inclusive electron-scattering cross sections have been measured for ^(56)Fe in the quasielastic region at electron energies between 0.9 and 4.3 GeV, at scattering angles of 15Ā° and 85Ā°. Longitudinal and transverse response functions at a q of 1.14 GeV/c have been extracted using a Rosenbluth separation. The experimental Coulomb sum has been obtained with aid of an extrapolation. The longitudinal response function, after correction for Coulomb distortion, is lower than quasifree-scattering-model predictions at the quasielastic peak and on the high-Ļ side
South Africa, the arts and youth in conflict with the law
This paper describes the DIME (Diversion into Music Education) youth intervention program that originated in South Africa in 2001. DIME offers instruction in African marimba and djembe bands to juvenile offenders. Conceived as a community collaboration among organizations in the cities of Cape Town, SA and Tampa, USA (including the University of the Western Cape and the University of South
Florida), DIME offers a unique example of community music and multicultural music education.Web of Scienc
The Reconstruction Problem and Weak Quantum Values
Quantum Mechanical weak values are an interference effect measured by the
cross-Wigner transform W({\phi},{\psi}) of the post-and preselected states,
leading to a complex quasi-distribution {\rho}_{{\phi},{\psi}}(x,p) on phase
space. We show that the knowledge of {\rho}_{{\phi},{\psi}}(z) and of one of
the two functions {\phi},{\psi} unambiguously determines the other, thus
generalizing a recent reconstruction result of Lundeen and his collaborators.Comment: To appear in J.Phys.: Math. Theo
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