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Homicide in Finland, the Netherlands and Sweden: a first study on the European Homicide Monitor Data
Superconductivity in hole-doped C60 from electronic correlations
We derive a model for the highest occupied molecular orbital band of a C60
crystal which includes on-site electron-electron interactions. The form of the
interactions are based on the icosahedral symmetry of the C60 molecule together
with a perturbative treatment of an isolated C60 molecule. Using this model we
do a mean-field calculation in two dimensions on the [100] surface of the
crystal. Due to the multi-band nature we find that electron-electron
interactions can have a profound effect on the density of states as a function
of doping. The doping dependence of the transition temperature can then be
qualitatively different from that expected from simple BCS theory based on the
density of states from band structure calculations
Kondo effect in crossed Luttinger liquids
We study the Kondo effect in two crossed Luttinger liquids, using Boundary
Conformal Field Theory. We predict two types of critical behaviors: either a
two-channel Kondo fixed point with a nonuniversal Wilson ratio, or a new theory
with an anomalous response identical to that found by Furusaki and Nagaosa (for
the Kondo effect in a single Luttinger liquid). Moreover, we discuss the
relevance of perturbations like channel anisotropy, and we make links with the
Kondo effect in a two-band Hubbard system modeled by a channel-dependent
Luttinger Hamiltonian. The suppression of backscattering off the impurity
produces a model similar to the four-channel Kondo theory.Comment: 7 pages, RevteX, to be published in Physical Review
One-Dimensional Electron Liquid in an Antiferromagnetic Environment: Spin Gap from Magnetic Correlations
We study a one-dimensional electron liquid coupled by a weak spin-exchange
interaction to an antiferromagnetic spin-S ladder with n legs. A perturbative
renormalization group analysis in the semiclassical limit reveals the opening
of a spin gap, driven by the local magnetic correlations on the ladder. The
effect, which we argue is present for any gapful ladder or gapless ladder with
, is enhanced by the repulsive interaction among the conduction
electrons but is insensitive to the sign of the spin exchange interaction with
the ladder. Possible implications for the striped phases of the cuprates are
discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Antiferromagnetic spin ladders effectively coupled by one-dimensional electron liquids
We study a model of the stripe state in strongly correlated systems
consisting of an array of antiferromagnetic spin ladders, each with
legs, coupled to each other through the spin-exchange interaction to charged
stripes in between each pair of ladders. The charged stripes are assumed to be
Luttinger liquids in a spin-gap regime (Luther-Emery). An effective interaction
for a pair of neighboring ladders is calculated by integrating out the gapped
spin degree of freedom in the charged stripe. The low energy effective theory
of each ladder is the usual nonlinear -model with additional cross
couplings of neighboring ladders. These interactions are found to favor either
in-phase or anti-phase short range spin orderings depending on whether the
charge stripe is site-centered or bond-centered as well as on its filling
factor and other physical parameters of the charged stripe.Comment: 4 pages with 1 figure, revised introduction and discussion section
Magnetic impurities in the one-dimensional spin-orbital model
Using one-dimensional spin-orbital model as a typical example of quantum spin
systems with richer symmetries, we study the effect of an isolated impurity on
its low energy dynamics in the gapless phase through bosonization and
renormalization group methods. In the case of internal impurities, depending on
the symmetry, the boundary fixed points can be either an open chain with a
residual spin or (and) orbital triplet left behind, or a periodic chain.
However, these two fixed points are indistinguishable in the sense that in both
cases, the lead-correction-to-scaling boundary operators (LCBO) only show
Fermi-liquid like corrections to thermodynamical quantities. (Except the
possible Curie-like contributions from the residual moments in the latter
cases.) In the case of external (Kondo) impurities, the boundary fixed points,
depending on the sign of orbital couplings, can be either an open chain with an
isolated orbital doublet due to Kondo screening or it will flow to an
intermediate fixed point with the same LCBO as that of the two-channel Kondo
problem. Comparison with the Kondo effect in one-dimensional (1D) Heisenberg
spin chain and multi-band Hubbard models is also made.Comment: 7 pages, No figur
Distribution of spectral weight in a system with disordered stripes
The ``band-structure'' of a disordered stripe array is computed and compared,
at a qualitative level, to angle resolved photoemission experiments on the
cuprate high temperature superconductors. The low-energy states are found to be
strongly localized transverse to the stripe direction, so the electron dynamics
is strictly one-dimensional (along the stripe). Despite this, aspects of the
two dimensional band-structure Fermi surface are still vividly apparent.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figure
Nordic homicide in deep time : lethal violence in the early modern era and present times
Nordic Homicide in Deep Time draws a unique, detailed picture of developments in human violence and presents new findings on homicide in Northern Europe in two eras – the 17th century and early 21st century. The book provides answers to questions, such as where and when did homicide typically occur, who were the victims and the offenders, and what were the circumstances of their conflicts? Additionally, it offers an empirically grounded view on how state consolidation and changing routines of everyday life transformed the patterns of criminal homicide in the Nordics.
This publication is also a methodological experiment. When developing a new approach for extending homicide research into the deep past, the authors created a new instrument, the Historical Homicide Monitor. This tool combines wide explanatory scope, measurement standardization, and articulated theory expression. By retroactively expanding research data to the pre-statistical era, the method enables long-duration comparison of different periods
and areas.
Written by an interdisciplinary team of criminologists and historians for professionals, students and anyone interested in the history of human behaviour, Nordic Homicide in Deep Time helps the reader to understand modern homicide by revealing the historical continuities and changes in lethal violence.VertaisarvioitupeerReviewe
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