859 research outputs found
Thermodynamics of the 3D Hubbard model on approach to the Neel transition
We study the thermodynamic properties of the 3D Hubbard model for
temperatures down to the Neel temperature using cluster dynamical mean-field
theory. In particular we calculate the energy, entropy, density, double
occupancy and nearest-neighbor spin correlations as a function of chemical
potential, temperature and repulsion strength. To make contact with cold-gas
experiments, we also compute properties of the system subject to an external
trap in the local density approximation. We find that an entropy per particle
at is sufficient to achieve a Neel state in the
center of the trap, substantially higher than the entropy required in a
homogeneous system. Precursors to antiferromagnetism can clearly be observed in
nearest-neighbor spin correlators.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Original Macromolecular Architectures Based on poly(Δ-caprolactone) and poly(Δ-thiocaprolactone) Grafted onto Chitosan Backbone
Polyester and/or polythioester grafted chitosan copolymers were synthesized. For that, poly(Δ-caprolactone) (PCL), poly(Δ-thiocaprolactone) (PTCL), and their copolymers were first synthesized by ring opening polymerization. Copolymers with caprolactone:thiocaprolactone (CL:TCL) molar ratios of 2:1, 1:1, 1:2 were synthesized. All of the synthesized macromolecular architectures were characterized using different spectral (Fourier transform infrared (FTIR), proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H-NMR), X-Ray diffraction (XRD)) and thermal (Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA)) methods. Grafting was then performed according two distinct routes: (i) using a blend of both homopolymers (PCL and PTCL) or (ii) using pre-synthesized copolymers with controlled CL:TCL ratios. Hexamethylene diisocyanate was used as a grafting/coupling agent through urethane bonds with high yield. Grafting preferentially occurred at sulfur sites. The results indicated that PTCL is more reactive and favorable than PCL for grafting onto chitosan. With the homopolymers blend grafting route, the corresponding materials mostly had a higher PTCL portion than expected. To obtain polyester grafted chitosan with a determined CL:TCL ratio, the copolymer grafting route would yield better result
Competition between pairing and ferromagnetic instabilities in ultracold Fermi gases near Feshbach resonances
We study the quench dynamics of a two-component ultracold Fermi gas from the
weak into the strong interaction regime, where the short time dynamics are
governed by the exponential growth rate of unstable collective modes. We obtain
an effective interaction that takes into account both Pauli blocking and the
energy dependence of the scattering amplitude near a Feshbach resonance. Using
this interaction we analyze the competing instabilities towards Stoner
ferromagnetism and pairing.Comment: 4+epsilon pages, 4 figure
Xenbase: a Xenopus biology and genomics resource
Xenbase (www.xenbase.org) is a model organism database integrating a diverse array of biological and genomic data on the frogs, Xenopus laevis and Xenopus (Silurana) tropicalis. Data is collected from other databases, high-throughput screens and the scientific literature and integrated into a number of database modules covering subjects such as community, literature, gene and genomic analysis. Gene pages are automatically assembled from data piped from the Entrez Gene, Gurdon Institute, JGI, Metazome, MGI, OMIM, PubMed, Unigene, Zfin, commercial suppliers and others. These data are then supplemented with in-house annotation. Xenbase has implemented the Gbrowse genome browser and also provides a BLAST service that allows users to specifically search either laevis or tropicalis DNA or protein targets. A table of Xenopus gene synonyms has been implemented and allows the genome, genes, publications and high-throughput gene expression data to be seamlessly integrated with other Xenopus data and to external database resources, making the wealth of developmental and functional data from the frog available to the broader research community
Quantitative Determination of Temperature in the Approach to Magnetic Order of Ultracold Fermions in an Optical Lattice
We perform a quantitative simulation of the repulsive Fermi-Hubbard model using an ultracold gas trapped in an optical lattice. The entropy of the system is determined by comparing accurate measurements of the equilibrium double occupancy with theoretical calculations over a wide range of parameters. We demonstrate the applicability of both high-temperature series and dynamical mean-field theory to obtain quantitative agreement with the experimental data. The reliability of the entropy determination is confirmed by a comprehensive analysis of all systematic errors. In the center of the Mott insulating cloud we obtain an entropy per atom as low as 0.77k(B) which is about twice as large as the entropy at the Neel transition. The corresponding temperature depends on the atom number and for small fillings reaches values on the order of the tunneling energy
Diagrammatic Monte Carlo for Correlated Fermions
We show that Monte Carlo sampling of the Feynman diagrammatic series (DiagMC)
can be used for tackling hard fermionic quantum many-body problems in the
thermodynamic limit by presenting accurate results for the repulsive Hubbard
model in the correlated Fermi liquid regime. Sampling Feynman's diagrammatic
series for the single-particle self-energy we can study moderate values of the
on-site repulsion () and temperatures down to . We
compare our results with high temperature series expansion and with single-site
and cluster dynamical mean-field theory.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, stylistic change
Optimal Monte Carlo Updating
Based on Peskun's theorem it is shown that optimal transition matrices in
Markov chain Monte Carlo should have zero diagonal elements except for the
diagonal element corresponding to the largest weight. We will compare the
statistical efficiency of this sampler to existing algorithms, such as
heat-bath updating and the Metropolis algorithm. We provide numerical results
for the Potts model as an application in classical physics. As an application
in quantum physics we consider the spin 3/2 XY model and the Bose-Hubbard model
which have been simulated by the directed loop algorithm in the stochastic
series expansion framework.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, replaced with published versio
Glide and Superclimb of Dislocations in Solid He
Glide and climb of quantum dislocations under finite external stress,
variation of chemical potential and bias (geometrical slanting) in Peierls
potential are studied by Monte Carlo simulations of the effective string model.
We treat on unified ground quantum effects at finite temperatures . Climb at
low is assisted by superflow along dislocation core -- {\it superclimb}.
Above some critical stress avalanche-type creation of kinks is found. It is
characterized by hysteretic behavior at low . At finite biases gliding
dislocation remains rough even at lowest -- the behavior opposite to
non-slanted dislocations. In contrast to glide, superclimb is characterized by
quantum smooth state at low temperatures even for finite bias. In some
intermediate -range giant values of the compressibility as well as
non-Luttinger type behavior of the core superfluid are observed.Comment: Updated version submitted to JLTP as QFS2010 proceedings; 11 pages, 6
figure
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