36,280 research outputs found
Isovector spin-singlet (T=1, S=0) and isoscalar spin-triplet (T=0, S=1) pairing interactions and spin-isospin response
We review several experimental and theoretical advances that emphasise common
aspects of the study of T=1 and T=0 pairing correlations in nuclei. We first
discuss several empirical evidences of the special role played by the T=1
pairing interaction. In particular, we show the peculiar features of the
nuclear pairing interaction in the low density regime, and possible outcomes
such as the BCS-BEC crossover in nuclear matter and, in an analogous way, in
loosely bound nuclei. We then move to the competition between T=1 and T=0
pairing correlations. The effect of such competition on the low-lying spectra
is studied in N=Z odd-odd nuclei by using a three-body model; it is shown that
the inversion of the 0+ and 1+ states near the ground state, and the strong
magnetic dipole transitions between them, can be considered as a clear
manifestation of strong T=0 pairing correlations in these nuclei. The effect of
T=0 pairing correlations is also quite evident if one studies charge-changing
transitions. The Gamow-Teller (GT) states in N=Z+2 nuclei are studied here by
using self-consistent HFB+QRPA calculations in which the T=0 pairing
interaction is taken into account. Strong GT states are found, near the ground
state of daughter nuclei; these are compared with available experimental data
from charge-exchange reactions, and such comparison can pinpoint the value of
the strength of the T=0 interaction. Pair transfer reactions are eventually
discussed: while two-neutron transfer has been long proposed as a tool to
measure the T=1 superfluidity in the nuclear ground states, the study of
deuteron transfer is still in its infancy, despite its potential interest in
revealing effects coming from both T=1 and T=0 interactions.Comment: Paper submitted to Physica Scripta for inclusion in the Focus Issue
entitled "Focus Issue on Nuclear Structure: Celebrating the 75 Nobel Prize"
(by A. Bohr and B.R. Mottelson). arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:nucl-th/0512021 by other author
A Model that Predicts the Material Recognition Performance of Thermal Tactile Sensing
Tactile sensing can enable a robot to infer properties of its surroundings,
such as the material of an object. Heat transfer based sensing can be used for
material recognition due to differences in the thermal properties of materials.
While data-driven methods have shown promise for this recognition problem, many
factors can influence performance, including sensor noise, the initial
temperatures of the sensor and the object, the thermal effusivities of the
materials, and the duration of contact. We present a physics-based mathematical
model that predicts material recognition performance given these factors. Our
model uses semi-infinite solids and a statistical method to calculate an F1
score for the binary material recognition. We evaluated our method using
simulated contact with 69 materials and data collected by a real robot with 12
materials. Our model predicted the material recognition performance of support
vector machine (SVM) with 96% accuracy for the simulated data, with 92%
accuracy for real-world data with constant initial sensor temperatures, and
with 91% accuracy for real-world data with varied initial sensor temperatures.
Using our model, we also provide insight into the roles of various factors on
recognition performance, such as the temperature difference between the sensor
and the object. Overall, our results suggest that our model could be used to
help design better thermal sensors for robots and enable robots to use them
more effectively.Comment: This article is currently under review for possible publicatio
Adiabatic heating in impulsive solar flares
The dynamic X-ray spectra of two simple, impulsive solar flares are examined together with H alpha, microwave and meter wave radio observations. X-ray spectra of both events were characteristic of thermal bremsstrahlung from single temperature plasmas. The symmetry between rise and fall was found to hold for the temperature and emission measure. The relationship between temperature and emission measure was that of an adiabatic compression followed by adiabatic expansion; the adiabatic index of 5/3 indicated that the electron distribution remained isotropic. Observations in H alpha provided further evidence for compressive energy transfer
The Jackprot Simulation Couples Mutation Rate with Natural Selection to Illustrate How Protein Evolution Is Not Random
Protein evolution is not a random process. Views which attribute randomness to molecular change, deleterious nature to single-gene mutations, insufficient geological time, or population size for molecular improvements to occur, or invoke “design creationism” to account for complexity in molecular structures and biological processes, are unfounded. Scientific evidence suggests that natural selection tinkers with molecular improvements by retaining adaptive peptide sequence. We used slot-machine probabilities and ion channels to show biological directionality on molecular change. Because ion channels reside in the lipid bilayer of cell membranes, their residue location must be in balance with the membrane’s hydrophobic/philic nature; a selective “pore” for ion passage is located within the hydrophobic region. We contrasted the random generation of DNA sequence for KcsA, a bacterial two-transmembrane-domain (2TM) potassium channel, from Streptomyces lividans, with an under-selection scenario, the “jackprot,” which predicted much faster evolution than by chance. We wrote a computer program in JAVA APPLET version 1.0 and designed an online interface, The Jackprot Simulation http://faculty.rwu.edu/cbai/JackprotSimulation.htm, to model a numerical interaction between mutation rate and natural selection during a scenario of polypeptide evolution. Winning the “jackprot,” or highest-fitness complete-peptide sequence, required cumulative smaller “wins” (rewarded by selection) at the first, second, and third positions in each of the 161 KcsA codons (“jackdons” that led to “jackacids” that led to the “jackprot”). The “jackprot” is a didactic tool to demonstrate how mutation rate coupled with natural selection suffices to explain the evolution of specialized proteins, such as the complex six-transmembrane (6TM) domain potassium, sodium, or calcium channels. Ancestral DNA sequences coding for 2TM-like proteins underwent nucleotide “edition” and gene duplications to generate the 6TMs. Ion channels are essential to the physiology of neurons, ganglia, and brains, and were crucial to the evolutionary advent of consciousness. The Jackprot Simulation illustrates in a computer model that evolution is not and cannot be a random process as conceived by design creationists
Impurity scattering and Friedel oscillations in mono-layer black phosphorus
We study the effect of impurity scattering effect in black phosphorurene (BP)
in this work. For single impurity, we calculate impurity induced local density
of states (LDOS) in momentum space numerically based on tight-binding
Hamiltonian. In real space, we calculate LDOS and Friedel oscillation
analytically. LDOS shows strong anisotropy in BP. Many impurities in BP are
investigated using -matrix approximation when the density is low. Midgap
states appear in band gap with peaks in DOS. The peaks of midgap states are
dependent on impurity potential. For finite positive potential, the impurity
tends to bind negative charge carriers and vise versa. The infinite impurity
potential problem is related to chiral symmetry in BP
Nonuniqueness in spin-density-functional theory on lattices
In electronic many-particle systems, the mapping between densities and spin
magnetizations, {n(r), m(r)}, and potentials and magnetic fields, {v(r), B(r)},
is known to be nonunique, which has fundamental and practical implications for
spin-density-functional theory (SDFT). This paper studies the nonuniqueness
(NU) in SDFT on arbitrary lattices. Two new, non-trivial cases are discovered,
here called local saturation and global noncollinear NU, and their properties
are discussed and illustrated. In the continuum limit, only some well-known
special cases of NU survive.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
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