965 research outputs found

    Quasiparticle relaxation dynamics in cuprates and lifetimes of low-energy states: Femtosecond data from underdoped to overdoped YBCO and mercury compounds

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    We show that low-energy spectral features in the cuprates can be separated into different components by the measurement of the recombination dynamics of different low-energy excitations in real-time using femtosecond laser spectroscopy. Quasiparticle (QP) recombination across the gap and intra-gap localized state relaxation processes exhibit qualitatively different time- and temperature-dependences. The relaxation measurements also show the existence of two distinct coexisting energy gaps near optimum doping and in the overdoped region, one more or less temperature independent (which exists above and below Tc) and one which closes at Tc in a mean-field like fashion. Thus systematic studies of QP recombination as a function of doping and temperature suggest that the ground state of the cuprates is a mixed Boson-Fermion system with localised states present over the entire region of the phase diagram.Comment: 4 pages, acepted for publication in Physica C, invited paper given at M2S, Feb. 20 - 25, 2000, Houston, US

    Photoinduced absorption from localized intra-gap states

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    A model is developed for photoinduced absorption from localized states observed in femtosecond pump-probe experiments in high-Tc superconductors and other materials. The dynamics of localized carriers are described in terms of phenomenological approach similar to that originaly proposed by Rothwarf and Taylor. Expanding the relaxation rate in powers of the order parameter we have shown that density of localized carriers is sensitive to Tc. From the analysis of the experimental data on YBa2Cu3O(7-x) and K0.3MoO3 we conclude that significant intra-gap density of localized states exists in these materials. Temperature dependence of the density of photoexcited localized carriers in underdoped YBa2Cu3O(7-x) and in K0.3MoO3 is consistent with the observation of the pseudogap above Tc.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, acepted for publication in Physica C, invited poster presented at M2S, Feb. 20 - 25, 2000, Houston, US

    Does replication groups scoring reduce false positive rate in SNP interaction discovery?

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    BACKGROUNG. Computational methods that infer single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) interactions from phenotype data may uncover new biological mechanisms in non-Mendelian diseases. However, practical aspects of such analysis face many problems. Present experimental studies typically use SNP arrays with hundreds of thousands of SNPs but record only hundreds of samples. Candidate SNP pairs inferred by interaction analysis may include a high proportion of false positives. Recently, Gayan et al. (2008) proposed to reduce the number of false positives by combining results of interaction analysis performed on subsets of data (replication groups), rather than analyzing the entire data set directly. If performing as hypothesized, replication groups scoring could improve interaction analysis and also any type of feature ranking and selection procedure in systems biology. Because Gayan et al. do not compare their approach to the standard interaction analysis techniques, we here investigate if replication groups indeed reduce the number of reported false positive interactions. RESULTS. A set of simulated and false interaction-imputed experimental SNP data sets were used to compare the inference of SNP-SNP interactions by means of replication groups to the standard approach where the entire data set was directly used to score all candidate SNP pairs. In all our experiments, the inference of interactions from the entire data set (e.g. without using the replication groups) reported fewer false positives. CONCLUSIONS. With respect to the direct scoring approach the utility of replication groups does not reduce false positive rates, and may, depending on the data set, often perform worse

    Presentism, Relativity, and Simultaneity

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    The A-theory of time insists that there is some real ontological fact about what is present. It is often alleged that this theory is inconsistent with the theory of special relativity. The conflict originates with the radar definition of simultaneity (RDS in my paper). I argue that the only argument for RDS is the argument for the dispensability of absolute rest; there is no good reason to accept the Newtonian concept of absolute rest and we can do perfectly well without it. I argue that there may be reasons to accept absolute rest. The notion seems to play an important part in our understanding of certain possible worlds. I go on to argue that it isn’t at all clear that the B-theory of time is consistent with special relativity. It accepts the empirically unverifiable entity called minkowsky spacetime. It is thus ostensibly committed to there being facts that go beyond merely what we can measure with RDS
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