500 research outputs found
Metallic ferromagnetism: Progress in our understanding of an old strong-coupling problem
Metallic ferromagnetism is in general an intermediate to strong coupling
phenomenon. Since there do not exist systematic analytic methods to investigate
such types of problems, the microscopic origin of metallic ferromagnetism is
still not sufficiently understood. However, during the last two or three years
remarkable progress was made in this field: It is now certain that even in the
one-band Hubbard model metallic ferromagnetism is stable in dimensions
2, and on regular lattices and at intermediate values of the
interaction and density . In this paper the basic questions and recent
insights regarding the microscopic conditions favoring metallic ferromagnetism
in this model are reviewed. These findings are contrasted with the results for
the orbitally degenerate case.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures, latex using vieweg.sty (enclosed); typos
corrected; to appear in "Advances in Solid State Physics", Vol. 3
Ferromagnetism in the Hubbard model with orbital degeneracy in infinite dimensions
We study the ferromagnetism due to orbital degeneracy in the Hubbard model in
infinite dimensions. The model contains the intraorbital repulsion , the
interorbital repulsion , the exchange (Hund coupling) and the
pair hopping , where all of them originate from the on-site Coulomb
interaction. The ground state of the effective one-site problem was obtained by
exact diagonalizations. At the 1/4-filling, we found two insulating phases; one
is a ferromagnetic phase with alternating orbital order and the other is
antiferromagnetic one with uniform orbital order. If electrons are doped into
the 1/4-filling, the ferromagnetic phase still survives and becomes metallic,
while the antiferromagnetic phase disappears. This result indicates that the
double-exchange mechanism is relevant to stabilize metallic ferromagnetism in
infinite dimensions.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex, 3 figures, corrected some typos and references, to
be published in Phys. Rev. B (Rapid Communication
Ferromagnetism in the one-dimensional Hubbard model with orbital degeneracy: From low to high electron density
We studied ferromagnetism in the one-dimensional Hubbard model with doubly
degenerate atomic orbitals by means of the density-matrix renormalization-group
method and obtained the ground-state phase diagrams. It was found that
ferromagnetism is stable from low to high (0< n < 1.75) electron density when
the interactions are sufficiently strong. Quasi-long-range order of triplet
superconductivity coexists with the ferromagnetic order for a strong Hund
coupling region, where the inter-orbital interaction U'-J is attractive. At
quarter-filling (n=1), the insulating ferromagnetic state appears accompanying
orbital quasi-long-range order. For low densities (n<1), ferromagnetism occurs
owing to the ferromagnetic exchange interaction caused by virtual hoppings of
electrons, the same as in the quarter-filled system. This comes from separation
of the charge and spin-orbital degrees of freedom in the strong coupling limit.
This ferromagnetism is fragile against variation of band structure. For high
densities (n>1), the phase diagram of the ferromagnetic phase is similar to
that obtained in infinite dimensions. In this case, the double exchange
mechanism is operative to stabilize the ferromagnetic order and this long-range
order is robust against variation of the band-dispersion. A partially polarized
state appears in the density region 1.68<n<1.75 and phase separation occurs for
n just below the half-filling (n=2).Comment: 16 pages, 16 figures, final version, references adde
Evaluation of alternative techniques to determine pork carcass value
Three techniques for estimating the value of pork carcasses were evaluated: an optical probe, a real-time ultrasound scanner, and an electromagnetic scanner (EMSCAN). The ability of these techniques to predict carcass value was compared to the predictive ability of actual measures of backfat depth and longissimus muscle area taken with a ruler and a dot grid. Results indicated the EMSCAN model was the best predictor of carcass value. However, the optical probe, ultrasound, and the ruler/dot grid all provided information not contained in the EMSCAN model. The choice among ultrasound, the optical probe, and the ruler/dot grid depends on how the carcass will be used. There is no significant difference between ultrasound and the ruler/dot grid or the optical probe and the ruler/dot grid if the carcass is to be marketed in wholesale primal form, but the ruler/dot grid is superior if the ham and loin are to be sold as lean, boneless products. A model combining the EMSCAN and optical probe readings provided more accurate value predictions than either technique alone. A carcass value matrix for use in pricing pork carcasses was developed using readings from the optical probe. Carcass use has a substantial impact on value differences between fat and lean pigs.Not peer reviewedAgricultural Economic
in the Standard Model with Flavor Symmetry
The observed branching ratios for decays are much larger than
factorization predictions in the Standard Model (SM). Many proposals have been
made to reconcile the data and theoretical predictions. In this paper we study
these decays within the SM using flavor U(3) symmetry. If small annihilation
amplitudes are neglected, one needs 11 hadronic parameters to describe decays where can be one of the , , and nonet
mesons. We find that existing data are consistent with SM with flavor U(3)
symmetry. We also predict several measurable branching ratios and CP
asymmetries for , decays.
Near future experiments can provide important tests for the Standard Model with
flavor U(3) symmetry.Comment: 13 pages, 4 table
Origin of Spin Incommensurability in Hole-doped S=1 Chains
Spin incommensurability has been recently experimentally discovered in the
hole-doped Ni-oxide chain compound (G. Xu {\it
al.}, Science {\bf 289}, 419 (2000)). Here a two orbital model for this
material is studied using computational techniques. Spin IC is observed in a
wide range of densities and couplings. The phenomenon originates in
antiferromagnetic correlations ``across holes'' dynamically generated to
improve hole movement, as it occurs in the one-dimensional Hubbard model and in
recent studies of the two-dimensional extended t-J model. The close proximity
of ferromagnetic and phase-separated states in parameter space are also
discussed.Comment: RevTex, 4 pages, 4 figures (eps
Differential baseline and response profile to IFN-γ gene transduction of IL-6/IL-6 receptor-α secretion discriminate primary tumors versus bone marrow metastases of nasopharyngeal carcinomas in culture
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Understanding of immunobiology of bone marrow metastases (designated BM-NPC) <it>versus </it>primary tumors (P-NPC) of the nasopharynx is far from complete. The aim of this study was to determine if there would be differences between cultured P-NPCs and BM-NPCs with respect to (i) constitutive IL-6 and the IL-6 receptor gp80 subunit (IL-6Rα) levels in the spent media of nontransduced cells, and (ii) IL-6 and IL-6Rα levels in the spent media of cells transduced with a retroviral vector containing the <it>IFN-γ </it>gene.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A panel of NPC cell lines were transduced with the <it>IFN-γ </it>gene through a retroviral vector. Four clonal sublines were isolated <it>via </it>limiting dilution methods. Cytofluorometric analysis was performed for the detection of cell surface antigens of HLA class I, HLA class II and ICAM-1. ELISA was used to assay for IFN-γ, IL-6 and IL-6Rα in the spent media of cultured cell lines.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Our results showed that in day 3 culture supernatants, low levels of soluble IL-6 were detected in 5/5 cultured tumors derived from P-NPCs, while much higher constitutive levels of IL-6 were detected in 3/3 metastasis-derived NPC cell lines including one originated from ascites; the difference was significant (<it>p </it>= 0.025). An inverse relationship was found between IL-6Rα and IL-6 in their release levels in cultured P-NPCs and metastasis-derived NPCs. In <it>IFN-γ</it>-transduced-P-NPCs, IL-6 production increased and yet IL-6Rα decreased substantially, as compared to nontransduced counterparts. At variance with P-NPC cells, the respective ongoing IL-6 and IL-6Rα release patterns of BM-NPC cells were not impeded as much following <it>IFN-γ </it>transduction. These observations were confirmed by extended kinetic studies with representative NPC cell lines and clonal sublines. The latter observation with the clonal sublines also indicates that selection for high IL-6 or low IL-6Rα producing subpopulations did not occur as a result of <it>IFN-γ</it>-transduction process. P-NPCs, which secreted constitutively only marginal levels of IFN-γ (8.4 ~ 10.5 pg/ml), could be enhanced to produce higher levels of IFN-γ (6.8- to 10.3-fold increase) after <it>IFN-γ </it>transduction. Unlike P-NPCs, BM-NPCs spontaneously released IFN-γ at moderate levels (83.8 ~ 100.7 pg/ml), which were enhanced by 1.3- to 2.2-fold in the spent media of their <it>IFN-γ</it>-transduced counterparts.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our results showed that cultured P-NPCs and BM-NPCs could be distinguished from one another on the basis of their differential baseline secretion pattern of IFN-γ, IL-6 and IL-6Rα, and their differential response profiles to <it>IFN-γ </it>gene transfer of the production of these three soluble molecules. These results suggest that the IL-6 and IFN-γ pathways in a background of genetic instability be involved in the acquisition of metastatic behaviour in BM-NPCs.</p
Analysis of an exhaustive search algorithm in random graphs and the n^{c\log n} -asymptotics
We analyze the cost used by a naive exhaustive search algorithm for finding a
maximum independent set in random graphs under the usual G_{n,p} -model where
each possible edge appears independently with the same probability p. The
expected cost turns out to be of the less common asymptotic order n^{c\log n},
which we explore from several different perspectives. Also we collect many
instances where such an order appears, from algorithmics to analysis, from
probability to algebra. The limiting distribution of the cost required by the
algorithm under a purely idealized random model is proved to be normal. The
approach we develop is of some generality and is amenable for other graph
algorithms.Comment: 35 page
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