8,835 research outputs found

    Magnetic-Moment Fragmentation and Monopole Crystallization

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    The Coulomb phase, with its dipolar correlations and pinch-point-scattering patterns, is central to discussions of geometrically frustrated systems, from water ice to binary and mixed-valence alloys, as well as numerous examples of frustrated magnets. The emergent Coulomb phase of lattice-based systems has been associated with divergence-free fields and the absence of long-range order. Here, we go beyond this paradigm, demonstrating that a Coulomb phase can emerge naturally as a persistent fluctuating background in an otherwise ordered system. To explain this behavior, we introduce the concept of the fragmentation of the field of magnetic moments into two parts, one giving rise to a magnetic monopole crystal, the other a magnetic fluid with all the characteristics of an emergent Coulomb phase. Our theory is backed up by numerical simulations, and we discuss its importance with regard to the interpretation of a number of experimental results

    The Survival of Mafic Magmatic Enclaves and the Timing of Magma Recharge

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    Many intermediate to felsic intrusive and extrusive rocks contain mafic magmatic enclaves that are evidence for magma recharge and mixing. Whether enclaves represent records of prolonged mixing  or syn‐eruptive recharge depends on their preservation potential in their intermediate to felsic host magmas. We present a model for enclave consumption where an initial stage of diffusive equilibration loosens the crystal framework in the enclave followed by advective erosion and disaggregation of the loose crystal layer. Using experimental data to constrain the propagation rate of the loosening front leads to enclave “erosion” rates of 10−5–10−8 cm/s for subvolcanic magma systems. These rates suggest that under some circumstances, enclave records are restricted to syn‐eruptive processes, while in most cases, enclave populations represent the recharge history over centuries to millennia. On these timescales, mafic magmatic enclaves may be unique recorders that can be compared to societal and written records of volcano activity.Plain Language SummaryTwo major questions in volcano research are how magma chambers are built through time and how they are disrupted to cause volcanic eruptions. One piece of evidence that chambers are assembled by episodic magma addition from below (called “recharge”) comes from mingled magmas, where mingling is expressed by the presence of two or more chemically distinct magmas. In particular, the more primitive magma in such mingled magmas is commonly present as discrete blobs, called mafic magmatic enclaves. These enclaves are often interpreted as evidence for recharge‐triggered volcanic eruptions. However, they may also form during recharge episodes that are not associated with volcanic eruptions and instead only feed and sustain the magma chamber. Here, we develop a model that estimates how long mafic magmatic enclaves survive in a chemically distinct magma chamber to better understand how information drawn from enclaves informs the two major questions above. We find that under most common conditions, they survive for centuries to millennia. Therefore, the presence of enclaves is not explicitly evidence for a recharge‐triggered eruption without studying them in greater detail. That detail can then potentially provide information regarding both the run up to eruption as well as magma assembly over centuries and millennia.Key PointsCommon survival times for mafic enclaves in felsic volcanic systems are centuries to millennia extending timescale records from mineralsMafic enclaves record only syn‐eruptive processes in hot magmatic systemsMafic enclaves in plutonic systems may represent recharge histories of 10,000–100,000 yearsPeer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156204/3/grl60839-sup-0002-2020GL087274-ds01.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156204/2/grl60868_am.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156204/1/grl60868.pd

    Three-dimensional topological lattice models with surface anyons

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    We study a class of three dimensional exactly solvable models of topological matter first put forward by Walker and Wang [arXiv:1104.2632v2]. While these are not models of interacting fermions, they may well capture the topological behavior of some strongly correlated systems. In this work we give a full pedagogical treatment of a special simple case of these models, which we call the 3D semion model: We calculate its ground state degeneracies for a variety of boundary conditions, and classify its low-lying excitations. While point defects in the bulk are confined in pairs connected by energetic strings, the surface excitations are more interesting: the model has deconfined point defects pinned to the boundary of the lattice, and these exhibit semionic braiding statistics. The surface physics is reminiscent of a ν=1/2\nu=1/2 bosonic fractional quantum Hall effect in its topological limit, and these considerations help motivate an effective field theoretic description for the lattice models as variants of bFbF theories. Our special example of the 3D semion model captures much of the behavior of more general `confined Walker-Wang models'. We contrast the 3D semion model with the closely related 3D version of the toric code (a lattice gauge theory) which has deconfined point excitations in the bulk and we discuss how more general models may have some confined and some deconfined excitations. Having seen that there exist lattice models whose surfaces have the same topological order as a bosonic fractional quantum Hall effect on a confining bulk, we construct a lattice model whose surface has similar topological order to a fermionic quantum hall effect. We find that in these models a fermion is always deconfined in the three dimensional bulk

    Bathymetry Based Modeling of Subaxial Magma Flows Under the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, 0 to 30° N

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    Fracture patterns of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) provide evidence of tectonic forces related to divergence and magma upwelling at the ridge axis. In this study, we focus on the MAR from 0 to 30° N, where the N-S ridge exhibits slow spreading rates (2-4 cm/yr) and pronounced axial topography. Ridge segments and transform faults identified in bathymetry data were analyzed for strike orientation and axial depth profiles. Azimuths of transform faults and ridge segments exhibit increasing clockwise rotation with latitude, and all have left lateral displacement. Bathymetric sampling along ridge segments occurred at 9 km intervals with 20 km sampling radii, producing axial lithostatic pressure gradients. One-dimensional magma flows parallel to the ridge axis at 10 and 50 km depths were modeled using Darcy’s law based on published parameters and calculated gradients. Subaxial magma velocities of up to 4 cm/yr were predicted for horizontal flow at depth and are comparable in magnitude to upwelling rates in published literature. Average flow magnitudes (n = 422) within the melt generation region are predicted at 0.8 and 0.2 cm/yr for 10 and 50 km depths respectively. Flow velocities up to five times higher are expected with this model in the high-porosity boundary layer below the solidus. The Coriolis parameter would affect the movement of the flows predicted by our model and may be linked to rotational patterns observed at the MAR. Future research of magma migration below divergent margins would benefit from incorporating axial lithostatic load variations as a driver of flow

    Identification of single-site gold catalysis in acetylene hydrochlorination

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    There remains considerable debate over the active form of gold under operating conditions of a recently validated gold catalyst for acetylene hydrochlorination. We have performed an in situ x-ray absorption fine structure study of gold/carbon (Au/C) catalysts under acetylene hydrochlorination reaction conditions and show that highly active catalysts comprise single-site cationic Au entities whose activity correlates with the ratio of Au(I):Au(III) present. We demonstrate that these Au/C catalysts are supported analogs of single-site homogeneous Au catalysts and propose a mechanism, supported by computational modeling, based on a redox couple of Au(I)-Au(III) species. View Full Tex

    Formation of the Chah-Gaz iron oxide-apatite ore (IOA) deposit, Bafq District, Iran: constraints from halogens, trace element concentrations, and Sr-Nd isotopes of fluorapatite

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    The textures, chemistry and Sr-Nd isotopic compositions of apatite from the Chah-Gaz iron-oxide apatite (IOA) deposit in the Bafq metallogenic belt, central Iran, were studied to investigate the formation of this ore deposit. Two generations of apatite were recognized based on Cl/F and Cl/OH ratios. Primary fluorapatite, which is coeval with magnetite in the massive ore bodies, is chemically homogeneous and characterized by Cl/F < 0.05 and Cl/OH in the range of 0.01–0.07. By contrast, F-depleted apatite rims are present in apatite hosted in veinlets that crosscut the massive ore bodies and are disseminated in the igneous host rocks, and have Cl/F and Cl/OH-apatite ratios of 0.08–0.12 and 0.15–0.79, respectively. The F-depleted rims are also depleted in LREEs, Th and U, consistent with the presence of secondary monazite, xenotime and thorite that formed by coupled dissolution-reprecipitation. The whole-rock Nd–Sr isotopic data ((87Sr/86Sr)(I) = 0.7052 to 0.7064 and ɛNd(t) = +1.3 to + 2.7) of gabbro-diorite indicate an mantle source, while the high -K, calc-alkaline-shoshonitic volcanic host rocks have εNd(t) = − 5.5 to − 7.6, clearly reflecting mixing between mantle-derived mafic magmas and assimilated Proterozoic basement. The initial 87Sr/86Sr ratios and ɛNd values of both F-rich and -depleted apatites (0.7038 to 0.7050 and −0.3 to + 6.5, respectively) are similar to gabbroic rocks and support a magmatic source for primary fluorapatite, with minimal or no crustal contribution, and indicate that the magmatic event with negative ɛNd values did not affect the whole-rock Sm-Nd signature of the ore. Petrography plus geochemical and Nd-Sr isotopic data of both studied fluorapatite, which come from iron oxide stage, are consistent with a combined igneous/magmatic-hydrothermal genesis for the Chah-Gaz IOA deposit, with low degrees of hydrothermal overprint, as evidenced by the formation of F-depleted (Cl-rich) apatite rims. The relatively constant Sr-Nd data in apatite are consistent with superimposed, episodic hydrothermal fluids from the same, evolving, magmatic-hydrothermal system
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