2,907 research outputs found
Viola pubescens Aiton
https://thekeep.eiu.edu/herbarium_specimens_byname/20531/thumbnail.jp
Viola rafinesquii Greene
https://thekeep.eiu.edu/herbarium_specimens_byname/20532/thumbnail.jp
Viola pubescens Aiton
https://thekeep.eiu.edu/herbarium_specimens_byname/20531/thumbnail.jp
Enhancement of ferromagnetism by p-wave Cooper pairing in superconducting ferromagnets
In superconducting ferromagnets for which the Curie temperature
exceeds the superconducting transition temperature , it was suggested
that ferromagnetic spin fluctuations could lead to superconductivity with
p-wave spin triplet Cooper pairing. Using the Stoner model of itinerant
ferromagnetism, we study the feedback effect of the p-wave superconductivity on
the ferromagnetism. Below , the ferromagnetism is enhanced by the p-wave
superconductivity. At zero temperature, the critical Stoner value for itinerant
ferromagnetism is reduced by the strength of the p-wave pairing potential, and
the magnetization increases correspondingly. More important, our results
suggest that once Stoner ferromagnetism is established, is unlikely to
ever be below . For strong and weak ferromagnetism, three and two peaks in
the temperature dependence of the specific heat are respectively predicted, the
upper peak in the latter case corresponding to a first-order transition.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Foreign correspondents: a case study of China in the digital and globalization age
While Western foreign correspondence is retreating, Chinese central media and correspondents, resourced by the government’s financial backing for media’s role in public diplomacy, are taking the opportunities to expand overseas bureaus, hire experienced local employees, enhance the quantity and quality of international news reporting, use digital technologies in newsgathering and dissemination, and receive Western-style trainings. Against this backdrop, this paper studies the identities, media cultures, and journalistic practices of Chinese foreign correspondents, as well as the international news output, and media–audience and media–foreign policy relationships. In doing so, we propose a new six-level theoretical model: (1) journalists’ identities; (2) cultures; (3) practices; (4) news output; (5) news dissemination, reception, and audiences’ interactions; and (6) the impacts of international news coverage. Based on semi-structured interviews with Chinese resident journalists over eight years, we argue that the media–audience and media–foreign policy relationships in China have become more interactive, dynamic, and complex
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