702 research outputs found
The effect of uniaxial pressure on the magnetic anomalies of the heavy-fermion metamagnet CeRu2Si2
The effect of uniaxial pressure (P_u) on the magnetic susceptibility (X),
magnetization (M), and magnetoresistance (MR) of the heavy-fermion metamagnet
CeRu2Si2 has been investigated. For the magnetic field along the tetragonal c
axis, it is found that characteristic physical quantities, i.e., the
temperature of the susceptibility maximum (T_max), the pagamagnetic Weiss
temperature (Q_p), 1/X at 2 K, and the magnetic field of the metamagnetic
anomaly (H_M), scale approximately linearly with P_u, indicating that all the
quantities are related to the same energy scale, probably of the Kondo
temperature. The increase (decrease) of the quantities for P_u || c axis (P_u
|| a axis) can be attributed to a decrease (increase) in the nearest Ce-Ru
distance. Consistently in MR and X, we observed a sign that the anisotropic
nature of the hybridization, which is believed to play an important role in the
metamagnetic anomaly, can be controlled by applying the uniaxial pressure.
PACS numbers: 75.20.Hr, 71.27.+a, 74.62.FjComment: 7 pages, ReVTeX, 6 EPS figures : Will appear in Phys. Rev.
Pressure Evolution of the Magnetic Field induced Ferromagnetic Fluctuation through the Pseudo-Metamagnetism of CeRu2Si2
Resistivity measurements performed under pressure in the paramagnetic ground
state of CeRu2Si2 are reported. They demonstrate that the relative change of
effective mass through the pseudo metamagnetic transition is invariant under
pressure. The results are compared with the first order metamagnetic transition
due to the antiferromagnetism of Ce0.9La0.1Ru2Si2 which corresponds to the
"negative" pressure of CeRu2Si2 by volume expansion. Finally, we describe the
link between the spin-depairing of quasiparticles on CeRu2Si2 and that of
Cooper pairs on the unconventional heavy fermion superconductor CeCoIn5.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
The critical dimension for a 4th order problem with singular nonlinearity
We study the regularity of the extremal solution of the semilinear biharmonic
equation \bi u=\f{\lambda}{(1-u)^2}, which models a simple
Micro-Electromechanical System (MEMS) device on a ball B\subset\IR^N, under
Dirichlet boundary conditions on . We complete
here the results of F.H. Lin and Y.S. Yang \cite{LY} regarding the
identification of a "pull-in voltage" \la^*>0 such that a stable classical
solution u_\la with 0 exists for \la\in (0,\la^*), while there is
none of any kind when \la>\la^*. Our main result asserts that the extremal
solution is regular provided while is singular () for , in which case
on the unit ball, where
and .Comment: 19 pages. This paper completes and replaces a paper (with a similar
title) which appeared in arXiv:0810.5380. Updated versions --if any-- of this
author's papers can be downloaded at this http://www.birs.ca/~nassif
Association of narcolepsy-cataplexy with HLA-DRB1 and DQB1 in Mexican patients: A relationship between HLA and gender is suggested
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Narcolepsy-cataplexy is characterized by excessive daytime sleepiness with recurrent episodes of irresistible sleep, cataplexy, hallucinations and sleep paralysis. Its aetiology is unknown, but it is positively associated with the human leukocyte antigens (HLA) in all studied populations. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the association of HLA class II <it>DRB1</it>/<it>DQB1 </it>alleles with narcolepsy-cataplexy in Mexican Mestizo patients.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>This is a case-control study of consecutive patients and ethnically matched controls. We included 32 patients diagnosed with typical narcolepsy-cataplexy, of the National Institute of Neurology, of the Institute of Psychiatry and at the Center of Narcolepsy at Stanford University. As healthy controls, 203 Mexican Mestizos were included. <it>DRB1 </it>alleles were identified using sequence based typing. A PCR-SSOP reverse dot blot was used for <it>DQB1 </it>typing. Allele frequency was calculated by direct counting and the significance of the differences was assessed using the Yates Chi square. Odds ratio and confidence intervals were evaluated.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>HLA-<it>DRB1</it>*1501 (OR = 8.2; pc < 0.0001) and <it>DQB1</it>*0602 (OR = 8.4; pc < 0.0001) were found positively associated with narcolepsy. When deleting <it>DQB1</it>*0602+ patients from the analysis, <it>DQB1</it>*0301 was also found increased (OR = 2.7; p = 0.035; pc = NS). <it>DQB1</it>*0602/<it>DQB1</it>*0301 genotype was present in 15.6% of the cases (OR = 11.5; p = 0.00035), conferring a high risk. <it>DRB1</it>*0407 (OR = 0.2; p = 0.016 pc = NS) and <it>DQB1</it>*0302(OR = 0.4; p = 0.017, pc = NS) were found decreased in the patients. The gender stratification analysis showed a higher risk in females carrying <it>DRB1</it>*1501 (OR = 15.8, pc < 0.0001) and <it>DQB1</it>*0602 (OR = 19.8, pc < 0.0001) than in males (OR = 5.0 for both alleles; p = 0.012, pc = NS for <it>DRB1 </it>& p = 0.0012, pc = 0.017 for <it>DQB1</it>). The susceptibility alleles found in Mexicans with narcolepsy are also present in Japanese and Caucasians; <it>DRB1</it>*04 linked protection has also been shown in Koreans. A stronger HLA association is suggested in females, in accordance with the sexual dimorphism claimed previously.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>This knowledge may contribute to a better understanding of the disease pathogenesis in different populations. The evaluation of the risk to develop narcolepsy-cataplexy in carriers of the described alleles/genotypes may also be possible. A larger sample should be analysed in Mexican and in other Hispanic patients to confirm these results.</p
Multipole tensor analysis of the resonant x-ray scattering by quadrupolar and magnetic order in DyB2C2
Resonant x-ray scattering (RXS) experiment has been performed for the (3 0
1.5) superlattice reflection in the antiferroquadrupolar and antiferromagnetic
phase of DyB2C2. Azimuthal-angle dependence of the resonance enhanced
intensities for both dipolar (E1) and quadrupolar (E2) resonant processes has
been measured precisely with polarization analysis. Every scattering channel
exhibits distinctive azimuthal dependence, differently from the symmetric
reflection at (0 0 0.5) which was studied previously. We have analyzed the
results using a theory developed by Lovesey et al., which directly connects
atomic tensors with the cross-section of RXS. The fitting results indicate that
the azimuthal dependences can be explained well by the atomic tensors up to
rank 2. Rank 3 and rank 4 tensors are reflected in the data very little. In
addition, The coupling scheme among the 4f quadrupolar moment, 5d ortitals, and
the lattice has been determined from the interference among the Thomson
scattering from the lattice distortion and the resonant scatterings of E1 and
E2 processes. It has also been established from the RXS of the (3 0 1.5)
reflection that the canting of the 4f quadrupolar moments exists up to T_Q. We
also discuss a possible wavefunction of the ground state from the point-charge
model calculation.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
Studies on X-ray Thomson Scattering from Antiferroquadrupolar Order in TmTe
We study Thomson scattering from the antiferroquadrupole ordering phase in
TmTe. On the basis of the group theoretical treatment, we classify the
selection rules of the scattering intensity governed by the orientation of the
scattering vector G. Then, numerical verification is performed by invoking the
ground states which are deduced from a J=7/2 multiplet model. The obtained
intensity varies drastically depending on the magnitude and direction of G. We
also calculate the scattering intensities under the applied field for H//(001)
and (110). Their results behave differently when the orientation of G is
changed, which is ascribed to the difference of their primary order parameters;
O_{2}^{0} and O_{2}^{2} for H // (001) and (110), respectively. We make
critical comparisons between our results for TmTe and the experimental ones for
CeB_6. First, we assert that the intensities expected from TmTe at several
forbidden Bragg spots are sufficient enough to be experimentally detected.
Second, their intensities at (7/2,1/2,1/2) differ significantly and may be
attributed to the difference of the order parametersbetween the \Gamma_3-type
(O_{2}^{2} and O_{2}^{0}) and \Gamma_5-type (O_{yz}, O_{zx}, and O_{xy})
components, respectively.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Local origin of the strong field-space anisotropy in the magnetic phase diagrams of CeLaB measured in a rotating magnetic field
Cubic f-electron compounds commonly exhibit highly anisotropic magnetic phase
diagrams consisting of multiple long-range ordered phases. Field-driven
metamagnetic transitions between them may depend not only on the magnitude, but
also on the direction of the applied magnetic field. Examples of such behavior
are plentiful among rare-earth borides, such as RB or RB ( = rare
earth). In this work, for example, we use torque magnetometry to measure
anisotropic field-angular phase diagrams of La-doped cerium hexaborides,
CeLaB ( = 0, 0.18, 0.28, 0.5). One expects that
field-directional anisotropy of phase transitions must be impossible to
understand without knowing the magnetic structures of the corresponding
competing phases and being able to evaluate their precise thermodynamic energy
balance. However, this task is usually beyond the reach of available
theoretical approaches, because the ordered phases can be noncollinear, possess
large magnetic unit cells, involve higher-order multipoles of 4f ions rather
than simple dipoles, or just lack sufficient microscopic characterization. Here
we demonstrate that the anisotropy under field rotation can be qualitatively
understood on a much more basic level of theory, just by considering the
crystal-electric-field scheme of a pair of rare-earth ions in the lattice,
coupled by a single nearest-neighbor exchange interaction. Transitions between
different crystal-field ground states, calculated using this minimal model for
the parent compound CeB6, possess field-directional anisotropy that strikingly
resembles the experimental phase diagrams. This implies that the anisotropy of
phase transitions is of local origin and is easier to describe than the ordered
phases themselves.Comment: To be published in Phys. Rev. B; v2: minor typographic correction
Excitonic Bound State in the Extended Anderson Model with c-f Coulomb Interaction
The Anderson model with the Coulomb interaction between the local and
conduction electrons is studied in the semiconducting phase. Based on a
perturbation theory from the atomic limit, leading contributions for the c-f
Coulomb interaction are incorporated as a vertex correction to hybridization.
An analytical solution shows that the effective attraction in the intermediate
states leads to a bound state localized at the local electron site.
Self-consistent equations are constructed as an extension of the non-crossing
approximation (NCA) to include the vertex part yielding the bound state. A
numerical calculation demonstrates the excitonic bound state inside the
semiconducting gap for single-particle excitations, and a discontinuity at the
gap edge for magnetic excitations.Comment: 15 pages, 20 figures, submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp
A Bacterial Ras-Like Small GTP-Binding Protein and Its Cognate GAP Establish a Dynamic Spatial Polarity Axis to Control Directed Motility
Directional control of bacterial motility is regulated by dynamic polarity inversions driven by pole-to-pole oscillation of a Ras family small G-protein and its associated GTPase-activating protein
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