157 research outputs found

    Hardening mechanism of commercially pure Mg processed by high pressure torsion at room temperature

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    Coarse-grained Mg in the as-cast condition and fine-grained Mg in the extruded condition were processed by high pressure torsion (HPT) at room temperature for up to 16 turns. Microstructure observation and texture analysis indicate that to fulfil the Von Mises criterion, the non-basal slip is activated in the as-cast Mg and tension twinning is activated in the as-extruded Mg. Although the deformation mechanism is different in the as-cast Mg and the as-extruded Mg during HPT, their hardening evolutions are similar, i.e. after 1/8 turn of HPT, microhardness of the as-cast Mg and the extruded Mg both show a significant increase and further HPT processing does not significantly further increase the microhardness. Texture strengthening can explain the rapid hardening. Hardness anisotropy and texture data results suggest that texture strengthening plays an important role for both types of samples. Texture strengthening weakens with decreasing grain size

    Edge and Bulk of the Fractional Quantum Hall Liquids

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    An effective Chern-Simons theory for the Abelian quantum Hall states with edges is proposed to study the edge and bulk properties in a unified fashion. We impose a condition that the currents do not flow outside the sample. With this boundary condition, the action remains gauge invariant and the edge modes are naturally derived. We find that the integer coupling matrix KK should satisfy the condition ∑I(K−1)IJ=ν/m\sum_I(K^{-1})_{IJ} = \nu/m (ν\nu: filling of Landau levels, mm: the number of gauge fields ) for the quantum Hall liquids. Then the Hall conductance is always quantized irrespective of the detailed dynamics or the randomness at the edge.Comment: 13 pages, REVTEX, one figure appended as a postscript fil

    Finite-size effect on Néel temperature in antiferromagnetic nanoparticles

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    Muon spin relaxation/rotation (µSR) and magnetic susceptibility measurements were carried out on antiferromagnetic nanoparticles of CuO. Nanoparticles with center size of around 5 nm were prepared by ball-milling from single crystals of CuO and investigated using µSR measurements. In the ~5 nm assembly, the TN was reduced drastically to ~30 K, compared with the bulk TN=229 K. A similar effect was observed in a system of 2 to 3 nm diameter nanorods, which was synthesized by a direct solution reaction method, where TN was suppressed further to 13 K. The present work reports direct evidence of a dramatic finite-size effect on the magnetic transition temperature in antiferromagnetic systems

    Risk factors for Lyme disease : A scale-dependent effect of host species diversity and a consistent negative effect of host phylogenetic diversity

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    Biodiversity can influence disease risk. One example of a diversity-disease relationship is the dilution effect, which suggests higher host species diversity (often indexed by species richness) reduces disease risk. While numerous studies support the dilution effect, its generality remains controversial. Most studies of diversity-disease relationships have overlooked the potential importance of phylogenetic diversity. Furthermore, most studies have tested diversity-disease relationships at one spatial scale, even though such relationships are likely scale dependent. Using Lyme disease as a model system, we investigated the effects of host species richness and phylogenetic relatedness on the number of reported Lyme disease cases in humans in the U.S.A. at two spatial scales (the county level and the state level) using piecewise structural equation modelling. We also accounted for relevant climatic and habitat-related factors and tested their correlations with the number of Lyme disease cases. We found that species assemblages with more related species (i.e., host species in the order Rodentia) were associated with more Lyme disease cases in humans. Host species richness correlated negatively with the number of Lyme disease cases at the state level (i.e., a dilution effect), a pattern that might be explained by the higher number of reservoir-incompetent species at high levels of species richness at this larger spatial scale. In contrast, a positive correlation was found between species richness and the number of Lyme disease cases at the county level, where a higher proportion of rodent species was associated with higher levels of species richness, potentially amplifying the disease risk. Our results highlight that analyse at a single spatial scale can miss some impacts of biodiversity on human health. Thus, multi-scale analyses with consideration of host phylogenetic diversity are critical for improving our understanding of diversity-disease relationships.Peer reviewe

    Correlations, compressibility, and capacitance in double-quantum-well systems in the quantum Hall regime

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    In the quantum Hall regime, electronic correlations in double-layer two-dimensional electron systems are strong because the kinetic energy is quenched by Landau quantization. In this article we point out that these correlations are reflected in the way the partitioning of charge between the two-layers responds to a bias potential. We report on illustrative calculations based on an unrestricted Hartree-Fock approximation which allows for spontaneous inter-layer phase coherence. The possibility of studying inter-layer correlations by capacitive coupling to separately contacted two-dimensional layers is discussed in detail.Comment: RevTex style, 21 pages, 6 postscript figures in a separate file; Phys. Rev. B (in press

    Quantum Ferromagnetism and Phase Transitions in Double-Layer Quantum Hall Systems

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    Double layer quantum Hall systems have interesting properties associated with interlayer correlations. At ν=1/m\nu =1/m where mm is an odd integer they exhibit spontaneous symmetry breaking equivalent to that of spin 1/21/2 easy-plane ferromagnets, with the layer degree of freedom playing the role of spin. We explore the rich variety of quantum and finite temperature phase transitions in these systems. In particular, we show that a magnetic field oriented parallel to the layers induces a highly collective commensurate-incommensurate phase transition in the magnetic order.Comment: 4 pages, REVTEX 3.0, IUCM93-013, 1 FIGURE, hardcopy available from: [email protected]

    Spin symmetry breaking in bilayer quantum Hall systems

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    Based on the construction of generalized Halperin wave functions, we predict the possible existence of a large class of broken spin symmetry states in bilayer quantum Hall structures, generalizing the recently suggested canted antiferromgnetic phase to many fractional fillings. We develop the appropriate Chern-Simons theory, and establish explicitly that the low-lying neutral excitation is a Goldstone mode and that the charged excitations are bimerons with continuously tunable (through the canted antiferromagnetic order parameter) electric charge on the individual merons.Comment: 4 page

    Spin Susceptibility and Superexchange Interaction in the Antiferromagnet CuO

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    Evidence for the quasi one-dimensional (1D) antiferromagnetism of CuO is presented in a framework of Heisenberg model. We have obtained an experimental absolute value of the paramagnetic spin susceptibility of CuO by subtracting the orbital susceptibility separately from the total susceptibility through the 63^{63}Cu NMR shift measurement, and compared directly with the theoretical predictions. The result is best described by a 1D S=1/2S=1/2 antiferromagnetic Heisenberg (AFH) model, supporting the speculation invoked by earlier authors. We also present a semi-quantitative reason why CuO, seemingly of 3D structure, is unexpectedly a quasi 1D antiferromagnet.Comment: 7 pages including 4 tables and 9 figure

    Quasiparticles as composite objects in the RVB superconductor

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    We study the nature of the superconducting state, the origin of d-wave pairing, and elementary excitations of a resonating valence bond (RVB) superconductor. We show that the phase string formulation of the t-J model leads to confinement of bare spinon and holon excitations in the superconducting state, though the vacuum is described by the RVB state. Nodal quasiparticles are obtained as composite excitations of spinon and holon excitations. The d-wave pairing symmetry is shown to arise from short range antiferromagnetic correlations

    Spin-phonon interaction and band effects in the high-T_C superconductor HgBa_2CuO_4

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    Band calculations show that a stripe-like anti-ferromagnetic spin wave is enforced by a 'half-breathing' phonon distortion within the CuO plane of HgBa_2CuO_4. This spin-phonon coupling is increased further by shear distortion and by increased distance between Cu and apical oxygens. The effects from spin-phonon coupling are consistent with many observations in high-T_C materials. Spin-phonon coupling can be important for the mechanism of spin fluctuations and superconductivity, although the effects are quantitatively weak when using the local density potential.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
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