7,897 research outputs found
Dynamical Susceptibility in KDP-type Crysals above and below Tc II
The path probability method (PPM) in the tetrahedron-cactus approximation is
applied to the Slater-Takagi model with dipole-dipole interaction for
KH2PO4-type hydrogen-bonded ferroelectric crystals in order to derive a small
dip structure in the real part of dynamical susceptibility observed at the
transition temperature Tc. The dip structure can be ascribed to finite
relaxation times of electric dipole moments responsible for the first order
transition with contrast to the critical slowing down in the second order
transition. The light scattering intensity which is related to the imaginary
part of dynamical susceptibility is also calculated above and below the
transition temperature and the obtained central peak structure is consistent
with polarization fluctuation modes in Raman scattering experiments.Comment: 8 pages, 11 figure
On Phase Transition of -Type Crystals by Cluster Variation Method
The Cluster Variation Method (CVM) is applied to the Ishibashi model for
ammonium dihydrogen phosphate () of a typical hydrogen
bonded anti-ferroelectric crystal. The staggered and the uniform susceptibility
without hysteresis are calculated at equilibrium. On the other hand, by making
use of the natural iteration method (NIM) for the CVM, hysteresis phenomena of
uniform susceptibility versus temperature observed in experiments is well
explained on the basis of local minimum in Landau type variational free energy.
The polarization curves against the uniform field is also calculated.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figure
Absence of contagious yawning in children with autism spectrum disorder
This study is the first to report the disturbance of contagious yawning in individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Twenty-four children with ASD as well as 25 age-matched typically developing (TD) children observed video clips of either yawning or control mouth movements. Yawning video clips elicited more yawns in TD children than in children with ASD, but the frequency of yawns did not differ between groups when they observed control video clips. Moreover, TD children yawned more during or after the yawn video clips than the control video clips, but the type of video clips did not affect the amount of yawning in children with ASD. Current results suggest that contagious yawning is impaired in ASD, which may relate to their impairment in empathy. It supports the claim that contagious yawning is based on the capacity for empathy
Continuum Electromechanical Modeling of Protein-Membrane Interaction
A continuum electromechanical model is proposed to describe the membrane
curvature induced by electrostatic interactions in a solvated protein-membrane
system. The model couples the macroscopic strain energy of membrane and the
electrostatic solvation energy of the system, and equilibrium membrane
deformation is obtained by minimizing the electro-elastic energy functional
with respect to the dielectric interface. The model is illustrated with the
systems with increasing geometry complexity and captures the sensitivity of
membrane curvature to the permanent and mobile charge distributions.Comment: 5 pages, 12 figure
Cultural background modulates how we look at other persons' gaze
The current study investigated the role of cultural norms on the development of face-scanning. British and Japanese adults’ eye movements were recorded while they observed avatar faces moving their mouth, and then their eyes toward or away from the participants. British participants fixated more on the mouth, which contrasts with Japanese participants fixating mainly on the eyes. Moreover, eye fixations of British participants were less affected by the gaze shift of the avatar than Japanese participants, who shifted their fixation to the corresponding direction of the avatar’s gaze. Results are consistent with the Western cultural norms that value the maintenance of eye contact, and the Eastern cultural norms that require flexible use of eye contact and gaze aversion
Specific heat of aluminium-doped superconducting silicon carbide
The discoveries of superconductivity in heavily boron-doped diamond, silicon
and silicon carbide renewed the interest in the ground states of charge-carrier
doped wide-gap semiconductors. Recently, aluminium doping in silicon carbide
successfully yielded a metallic phase from which at high aluminium
concentrations superconductivity emerges. Here, we present a specific-heat
study on superconducting aluminium-doped silicon carbide. We observe a clear
jump anomaly at the superconducting transition temperature 1.5 K indicating
that aluminium-doped silicon carbide is a bulk superconductor. An analysis of
the jump anomaly suggests BCS-like phonon-mediated superconductivity in this
system.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
A q-analogue of gl_3 hierarchy and q-Painleve VI
A q-analogue of the gl_3 Drinfel'd-Sokolov hierarchy is proposed as a
reduction of the q-KP hierarchy. Applying a similarity reduction and a
q-Laplace transformation to the hierarchy, one can obtain the q-Painleve VI
equation proposed by Jimbo and Sakai.Comment: 14 pages, IOP style, to appear in J. Phys. A Special issue "One
hundred years of Painleve VI
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