1,700 research outputs found
Structural and magnetic study of a dilute magnetic semiconductor: Fe doped CeO2 nanoparticles
This paper reports the effect of Fe doping on the structure and room
temperature ferromagnetism of CeO2 nanoparticles. X-ray diffraction and
selective area electron diffraction measurement reflects that Ce1-xFexO2 (x =
0.0 - 0.07) nanoparticles exhibit single phase nature with cubic structure and
none of the sample showed the presence of any secondary phase. The mean
particle size calculated by using a transmission electron microscopy
measurement was found to increase with increase in Fe content. DC magnetization
measurements performed at room temperature indicates that all the samples
exhibit ferromagnetism. The saturation magnetic moment has been found to
increase with an increase in the Fe content.Comment: 16 Pages, 5 figure, 1 Table, Accepted in JN
Information and entropy in quantum Brownian motion: Thermodynamic entropy versus von Neumann entropy
We compare the thermodynamic entropy of a quantum Brownian oscillator derived
from the partition function of the subsystem with the von Neumann entropy of
its reduced density matrix. At low temperatures we find deviations between
these two entropies which are due to the fact that the Brownian particle and
its environment are entangled. We give an explanation for these findings and
point out that these deviations become important in cases where statements
about the information capacity of the subsystem are associated with
thermodynamic properties, as it is the case for the Landauer principle.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Electric Charge in Interaction with Magnetically Charged Black Holes
We examine the angular momentum of an electric charge e placed at rest
outside a dilaton black hole with magnetic charge Q. The electromagnetic
angular momentum which is stored in the electromagnetic field outside the black
hole shows several common features regardless of the dilaton coupling strength,
though the dilaton black holes are drastically different in their spacetime
structure depending on it. First, the electromagnetic angular momentum depends
on the separation distance between the two objects and changes monotonically
from eQ to 0 as the charge goes down from infinity to the horizon, if
rotational effects of the black hole are discarded. Next, as the black hole
approaches extremality, however, the electromagnetic angular momentum tends to
be independent of the distance between the two objects. It is then precisely
as in the electric charge and monopole system in flat spacetime. We
discuss why these effects are exhibited and argue that the above features are
to hold in widely generic settings including black hole solutions in theories
with more complicated field contents, by addressing the no hair theorem for
black holes and the phenomenon of field expulsion exhibited by extremal black
holes.Comment: 26 pages, 4 figures ; Typos are corrected and a reference is adde
Scalar Hair of Global Defect and Black Brane World
We consider a complex scalar field in (p+3)-dimensional bulk with a negative
cosmological constant and study global vortices in two extra-dimensions. We
reexamine carefully the coupled scalar and Einstein equations, and show that
the boundary value of scalar amplitude at infinity of the extra-dimensions
should be smaller than vacuum expectation value. The brane world has a
cigar-like geometry with an exponentially decaying warp factor and a flat thick
p-brane is embedded. Since a coordinate transformation identifies the obtained
brane world as a black p-brane world bounded by a horizon, this strange
boundary condition of the scalar amplitude is understood as existence of a
short scalar hair.Comment: 26 pages, 2 figure
Tachyon Tube and Supertube
We search for tubular solutions in unstable D3-brane. With critical electric
field E=1, solutions representing supertubes, which are supersymmetric bound
states of fundamental strings, D0-branes, and a cylindrical D2-brane, are found
and shown to exhibit BPS-like property. We also point out that boosting such a
{\it tachyon tube} solution generates string flux winding around the tube,
resulting in helical electric fluxes on the D2-brane. We also discuss issues
related to fundamental string, absence of magnetic monopole, and finally more
tachyon tubes with noncritical electric field.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figure
Aspects of Magnetic Field Configurations in Planar Nonlinear Electrodynamics
In the framework of three-dimensional Born-Infeld Electrodynamics, we pursue
an investigation of the consequences of the space-time dimensionality on the
existence of magnetostatic fields generated by electric charges at rest in an
inertial frame, which are present in its four-dimensional version. Our analysis
reveals interesting features of the model. In fact, a magnetostatic field
associated with an electric charge at rest does not appear in this case.
Interestingly, the addition of the topological term (Chern-Simons) to
Born-Infeld Electrodynamics yields the appearance of the magnetostatic field.
We also contemplate the fields associated to the would-be-magnetic monopole in
three dimensions.Comment: 8 page
Non-extremal D-instantons
We construct the most general non-extremal deformation of the D-instanton
solution with maximal rotational symmetry. The general non-supersymmetric
solution carries electric charges of the SL(2,R) symmetry, which correspond to
each of the three conjugacy classes of SL(2,R). Our calculations naturally
generalise to arbitrary dimensions and arbitrary dilaton couplings.
We show that for specific values of the dilaton coupling parameter, the
non-extremal instanton solutions can be viewed as wormholes of non-extremal
Reissner-Nordstr\"om black holes in one higher dimension. We extend this result
by showing that for other values of the dilaton coupling parameter, the
non-extremal instanton solutions can be uplifted to non-extremal non-dilatonic
p-branes in p+1 dimensions higher.
Finally, we attempt to consider the solutions as instantons of (compactified)
type IIB superstring theory. In particular, we derive an elegant formula for
the instanton action. We conjecture that the non-extremal D-instantons can
contribute to the R^8-terms in the type IIB string effective action.Comment: 31 pages, 4 figures. v3: minor correction and reference adde
Rolling of Modulated Tachyon with Gauge Flux and Emergent Fundamental String
We investigate real-time tachyon dynamics of unstable D-brane carrying
fundamental string charge. We construct the boundary state relevant for rolling
of modulated tachyon with gauge fields excited on the world-volume, and study
spatial distribution of the fundamental string charge and current as the
D-brane decays. We find that, in contrast to homogeneous tachyon rolling,
spatial modulation of the tachyon field triggers density wave of strings when
electric field is turned on, and of string anti-string pairs when magnetic
field is turned on. We show that the energy density and the fundamental string
charge density are locked together, and evolve into a localized delta-function
array (instead of evolving into a string fluid) until a critical time set by
initial condition of rolling tachyon. When the gauge fields approach the
critical limit, the fundamental strings produced become BPS-like. We also study
the dynamics via effective field theory, and find agreement.Comment: 28 pages, Latex, 7 .eps figures v2: stability discussion update
Rats and the city: Implications of urbanization on zoonotic disease risk in Southeast Asia
Urbanization is rapidly transforming much of Southeast Asia, altering the structure and function of the landscape, as well as the frequency and intensity of the interactions between people, animals, and the environment. In this study, we explored the impact of urbanization on zoonotic disease risk by simultaneously characterizing changes in the ecology of animal reservoirs (rodents), ectoparasite vectors (ticks), and pathogens across a gradient of urbanization in Kuching, a city in Malaysian Borneo. We sampled 863 rodents across rural, developing, and urban locations and found that rodent species diversity decreased with increasing urbanization—from 10 species in the rural location to 4 in the rural location. Notably, two species appeared to thrive in urban areas, as follows: the invasive urban exploiter Rattus rattus (n = 375) and the native urban adapter Sundamys muelleri (n = 331). R. rattus was strongly associated with built infrastructure across the gradient and carried a high diversity of pathogens, including multihost zoonoses capable of environmental transmission (e.g., Leptospira spp.). In contrast, S. muelleri was restricted to green patches where it was found at high densities and was strongly associated with the presence of ticks, including the medically important genera Amblyomma, Haemaphysalis, and Ixodes. Our analyses reveal that zoonotic disease risk is elevated and heterogeneously distributed in urban environments and highlight the potential for targeted risk reduction through pest management and public health messaging
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