4,064 research outputs found
The emergence of classical behavior in magnetic adatoms
A wide class of nanomagnets shows striking quantum behavior, known as quantum
spin tunneling (QST): instead of two degenerate ground states with opposite
magnetizations, a bonding-antibonding pair forms, resulting in a splitting of
the ground state doublet with wave functions linear combination of two
classically opposite magnetic states, leading to the quenching of their
magnetic moment. Here we study how QST is destroyed and classical behavior
emerges in the case of magnetic adatoms, as the strength of their coupling,
either to the substrate or to each other, is increased. Both spin-substrate and
spin-spin coupling renormalize the QST splitting to zero allowing the
environmental decoherence to eliminate superpositions between classical states,
leading to the emergence of spontaneous magnetization.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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NIF ICCS Test Controller for Automated & Manual Testing
The National Ignition Facility (NIF) Integrated Computer Control System (ICCS) is a large (1.5 MSLOC), hierarchical, distributed system that controls all aspects of the NIF laser [1]. The ICCS team delivers software updates to the NIF facility throughout the year to support shot operations and commissioning activities. In 2006, there were 48 releases of ICCS: 29 full releases, 19 patches. To ensure the quality of each delivery, thousands of manual and automated tests are performed using the ICCS Test Controller test infrastructure. The TestController system provides test inventory management, test planning, automated test execution and manual test logging, release testing summaries and test results search, all through a web browser interface. Automated tests include command line based frameworks server tests and Graphical User Interface (GUI) based Java tests. Manual tests are presented as a checklist-style web form to be completed by the tester. The results of all tests, automated and manual, are kept in a common repository that provides data to dynamic status reports. As part of the 3-stage ICCS release testing strategy, the TestController system helps plan, evaluate and track the readiness of each release to the NIF facility
Climatic impact of the A.D. 1783 Asama (Japan) Eruption was minimal: Evidence from the GISP2 Ice Core
Assessing the climatic impact of the A.D. 1783 eruption of Mt. Asama, Japan, is complicated by the concurrent eruption of Laki, Iceland. Estimates of the stratospheric loading of H2SO4 for the A.D. 1108 eruption of Asama derived from the SO42− time series in the GISP2 Greenland ice core indicate a loading of about 10.4 Tg H2SO4 with a resulting stratospheric optical depth of 0.087. Assuming sulfur emissions from the 1783 eruption were only one‐third of the 1108 event yields a H2SO4 loading value of 3.5 Tg and a stratospheric optical depth of only 0.029. These results suggest minimal climatic effects in the Northern Hemisphere from the 1783 Asama eruption, thus any volcanically‐induced cooling in the mid‐1780s is probably due to the Laki eruption
Pion and Kaon Polarizabilities and Radiative Transitions
CERN COMPASS plans measurements of gamma-pi and gamma-K interactions using
50-280 GeV pion (kaon) beams and a virtual photon target. Pion (kaon)
polarizabilities and radiative transitions will be measured via Primakoff
effect reactions such as pi+gamma->pi'+gamma and pi+gamma->meson. The former
can test a precise prediction of chiral symmetry; the latter for
pi+gamma->a1(1260) is important for understanding the polarizability. The
radiative transition of a pion to a low mass two-pion system, pi+gamma->pi+pi0,
can also be studied to measure the chiral anomaly amplitude F(3pi)
(characterizing gamma->3pi), arising from the effective Chiral Lagrangian. We
review here the motivation for the above physics program. We describe the beam,
target, detector, and trigger requirements for these experiments. We also
describe FNAL SELEX attempts to study related physics via the interaction of
600 GeV pions with target electrons. Data analysis in progress aims to identify
the reactions pi+e->pi'+e'+pi0 related to the chiral anomaly, and
pi+e->pi'+e'+gamma related to pion polarizabilities.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, Latex Springer-Verlag style Tel Aviv U. Preprint
TAUP-2469-97, Contribution to the Workshop on Chiral Dynamics Theory and
Experiment, U. of Mainz, Sept. 1-5, 1997, to be published in Springer-Verlag,
Eds. A. Bernstein, Th. Walcher, 199
Hierarchical Bayesian Spatial Models for Multispecies Conservation Planning and Monitoring
Biologists who develop and apply habitat models are often familiar with the statistical challenges posed by their data’s spatial structure but are unsure of whether the use of complex spatial models will increase the utility of model results in planning. We compared the relative performance of nonspatial and hierarchical Bayesian spatial models for three vertebrate and invertebrate taxa of conservation concern (Church’s sideband snails [Monadenia churchi], red tree voles [Arborimus longicaudus], and Pacific fishers [Martes pennanti pacifica]) that provide examples of a range of distributional extents and dispersal abilities. We used presence–absence data derived from regional monitoring programs to develop models with both landscape and site-level environmental covariates. We used Markov chain Monte Carlo algorithms and a conditional autoregressive or intrinsic conditional autoregressive model framework to fit spatial models. The fit of Bayesian spatial models was between 35 and 55% better than the fit of nonspatial analogue models. Bayesian spatialmodels outperformed analogousmodels developed with maximum entropy (Maxent) methods. Although the best spatial and nonspatial models included similar environmental variables, spatial models provided estimates of residual spatial effects that suggested how ecological processes might structure distribution patterns. Spatialmodels built from presence–absence data improved fit most for localized endemic species with ranges constrained by poorly known biogeographic factors and for widely distributed species suspected to be strongly affected by unmeasured environmental variables or population processes. By treating spatial effects as a variable of interest rather than a nuisance, hierarchical Bayesian spatial models, especially when they are based on a common broad-scale spatial lattice (here the national Forest Inventory and Analysis grid of 24 km2 hexagons), can increase the relevance of habitat models to multispecies conservation planning
Eliashberg-type equations for correlated superconductors
The derivation of the Eliashberg -- type equations for a superconductor with
strong correlations and electron--phonon interaction has been presented. The
proper account of short range Coulomb interactions results in a strongly
anisotropic equations. Possible symmetries of the order parameter include s, p
and d wave. We found the carrier concentration dependence of the coupling
constants corresponding to these symmetries. At low hole doping the d-wave
component is the largest one.Comment: RevTeX, 18 pages, 5 ps figures added at the end of source file, to be
published in Phys.Rev. B, contact: [email protected]
Microencapsulated Bovine Chromaffin Cells In Vitro: Effect of Density and Coseeding with a NGF-Releasing Cell Line
Immobilization of discrete cell clusters
within a partially crosslinked matrix prevents
reaggregation of primary tissues and may
provide a means for long-term maintenance of
encapsulated cells. Dissociated bovine adrenal
chromaffin (BAC) cells were suspended
throughout crosslinked polyanionic microspheres
previously shown to be selectively
permeable. Microcapsules approximately 500
µm in diameter were seeded with: 1) three
different densities of BAC cells; and 2) BAC
cells suspended in Matrigel®
or coseeded with a
genetically modified nerve growth factor (NGF)-
releasing fibroblast cell line. Each group was
analyzed in vitro at 1, 4 and 8 weeks for
spontaneous and potassium-evoked release of
catecholamines, and maintained in vitro for up
to 12 weeks for morphological observations.
Over time, release of norepinephrine (NE) and
epinephrine (EPI) diminished, while dopamine
(DA) remained constant from the monoseeded
capsules. In the coseeded group, an increase in
potassium-evoked release of DA was observed
from 1 to 4 weeks, and remained at that level up
to 8 weeks. Encapsulated chromaffin cells
retained a rounded morphology typical of
undifferentiated cells. Intact chromaffin cells
with well preserved and abundant secretory granules were observed ultrastructurally after 4
weeks in vitro. Small neurites from the chromaffin
cells in the coseeded group were observed at 4
weeks with light microscopy, and up to 12 weeks
with electron microscopy. Under static incubation
conditions, 1 mM D-amphetamine resulted
in a significant increase in the output of NE and
DA from the coseeded capsules 8 weeks postimplantation,
as compared to microcapsules
loaded with chromaffin cells alone. Encapsulation
within an immobilization matrix allows
manipulation of the internal environment,
thereby providing the ability to pre-treat cells
with various factors in a non-invasive manner,
which may enhance long-term cellular viability
Determination of the eta'-proton scattering length in free space
Taking advantage of both the high mass resolution of the COSY-11 detector and
the high energy resolution of the low-emittance proton-beam of the Cooler
Synchrotron COSY we determine the excitation function for the pp --> pp eta'
reaction close-to-threshold. Combining these data with previous results we
extract the scattering length for the eta'-proton potential in free space to be
Re(a_{p eta'}) = 0+-0.43 fm and Im(a_{p eta'}) = 0.37(+0.40)(-0.16) fm.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
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