2,220 research outputs found
Classical Spin Liquid: Exact Solution for the Infinite-Component Antiferromagnetic Model on the Kagom\'e Lattice
Thermodynamic quantities and correlation functions (CFs) of the classical
antiferromagnet on the kagom\'e lattice are studied for the exactly solvable
infinite-component spin-vector model, D \to \infty. In this limit, the critical
coupling of fluctuations dies out and the critical behavior simplifies, but the
effect of would be Goldstone modes preventing ordering at any nonzero
temperature is properly accounted for. In contrast to conventional
two-dimensional magnets with continuous symmetry showing extended short-range
order at distances smaller than the correlation length, r < \xi_c \propto
\exp(T^*/T), correlations in the kagom\'e-lattice model decay already at the
scale of the lattice spacing due to the strong degeneracy of the ground state
characterized by a macroscopic number of strongly fluctuating local degrees of
freedom. At low temperatures, spin CFs decay as \propto
1/r^2 in the range a_0 << r << \xi_c \propto T^{-1/2}, where a_0 is the lattice
spacing. Analytical results for the principal thermodynamic quantities in our
model are in fairly good quantitative agreement with the MC simulations for the
classical Heisenberg model, D=3. The neutron scattering cross section has its
maxima beyond the first Brillouin zone; at T\to 0 it becomes nonanalytic but
does not diverge at any q.Comment: 14 PR pages, 10 figures; Phys. Rev. B; Version 3: final published
versio
Ground-State Candidate for the Dipolar Kagome Ising Antiferromagnet
We have investigated the low-temperature thermodynamic properties of the
dipolar kagome Ising antiferromagnet using at-equilibrium Monte Carlo
simulations, in the quest for the ground-state manifold. In spite of the
limitations of a single spin-flip approach, we managed to identify certain
ordering patterns in the low-temperature regime and we propose a candidate for
this unknown state. This novel configuration presents some intriguing features
and passes several test-criteria, making it a very likely choice for the
dipolar long-range order of this kagome Ising antiferromagnet.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Voltage induced control and magnetoresistance of noncollinear frustrated magnets
Noncollinear frustrated magnets are proposed as a new class of spintronic
materials with high magnetoresistance which can be controlled with relatively
small applied voltages. It is demonstrated that their magnetic configuration
strongly depends on position of the Fermi energy and applied voltage. The
voltage induced control of noncollinear frustrated materials (VCFM) can be seen
as a way to intrinsic control of colossal magnetoresistance (CMR) and is the
bulk material counterpart of spin transfer torque concept used to control giant
magnetoresistance in layered spin-valve structures.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Una habitación propia para las ciencias sociales en Cuba. La perspectiva de género y sus pruebas
La investigación se propuso responder al problema de cómo contribuyó un grupo de mujeres al pensamiento social cubano y explicar la manera en que se desarrolla el proceso de transversalización de los estudios de género en la academia cubana en la actualidad, los avances y las dificultades recientes para el desarrollo de unas relaciones de género más equitativas y el análisis de un feminismo académico que se vincule al complejo proceso que vive la nación cubana. Se constató el aporte sustancial del feminismo al pensamiento social alternativo de Cuba y Latinoamericana.Índice
Caer en eso: a manera de introducción
Capítulo 1/ estar-de-otra-manera
El mundo al revés
Feminismo y género. Algunas acotaciones
Donde no hay instrucción no hay libertad: Cuba y la educación femenina
- La educación femenina (siglos XIX y XX)
- La mujer en las universidades cubanas
Capítulo 2/ Mujeres y pensamiento social. Un anhelo en busca de argumentos
Futuro de ensueño: Dulce María Borrero
-Boceto de familia
-El despertar de la conciencia nacional
-El compromiso intelectual
Mundele quiere bundanga: el alma cimarrona de Lydia Cabrera
-Esbozo biográfico
-Resonancias infinitas de la Cabra
-La Casa Cubana
-Favor de no olvidarme
Sí, estoy aquí (ensayo sobre la cubana secreta)
-Crónica habanera de una voz sibilina
-Ser de aquí
-El exilio: Nunca me he ido Soy de España
-La Quinta San José en la mirada zambraniana
-Un pensar que barra la casa
-La esperanza
-La llamita de la resurrección
Zaida Capote contra el silencio
Capítulo3/ La querella de las cubanas y la esperanza creadora
La resaca feminista:
a) Cuba y la VI Conferencia Internacional Americana (1928)
b) El Lyceum-Lawn Tennis Club
¿Un feminismo verdeolivo?
El no sé qué del balbuceo cubano: el feminismo académico
¿Puede hablar la subalterna?
Conclusiones: la imprudencia como método
Bibliografía
Anexo metodológic
Genesis of self-organized zebra textures in burial dolomites : displacive veins, induced stress, and dolomitization
The dolomite veins making up rhythmites common in burial dolomites are not cement infillings of supposed cavities, as in the prevailing view, but are instead displacive veins, veins that pushed aside the host dolostone as they grew. Evidence that the veins are displacive includes a) small transform-fault-like displacements that could not have taken place if the veins were passive cements, and b) stylolites in host rock that formed as the veins grew in order to compensate for the volume added by the veins. Each zebra vein consists of crystals that grow inward from both sides, and displaces its walls via the local induced stress generated by the crystal growth itself. The petrographic criterion used in recent literature to interpret zebra veins in dolomites as cements - namely, that euhedral crystals can grow only in a prior void - disregards evidence to the contrary. The idea that flat voids did form in dolostones is incompatible with the observed optical continuity between the saddle dolomite euhedra of a vein and the replacive dolomite crystals of the host. The induced stress is also the key to the self-organization of zebra veins: In a set of many incipient, randomly-spaced, parallel veins just starting to grow in a host dolostone, each vein's induced stress prevents too-close neighbor veins from nucleating, or redissolves them by pressure-solution. The veins that survive this triage are those just outside their neighbors's induced stress haloes, now forming a set of equidistant veins, as observed
Magnetic frustration in an iron based Cairo pentagonal lattice
The Fe3+ lattice in the Bi2Fe4O9 compound is found to materialize the first
analogue of a magnetic pentagonal lattice. Due to its odd number of bonds per
elemental brick, this lattice, subject to first neighbor antiferromagnetic
interactions, is prone to geometric frustration. The Bi2Fe4O9 magnetic
properties have been investigated by macroscopic magnetic measurements and
neutron diffraction. The observed non-collinear magnetic arrangement is related
to the one stabilized on a perfect tiling as obtained from a mean field
analysis with direct space magnetic configurations calculations. The
peculiarity of this structure arises from the complex connectivity of the
pentagonal lattice, a novel feature compared to the well-known case of
triangle-based lattices
Sandstones from the Eureka Mine (Cu-U-V) (Central Pyrennees): observed textures versus proposed reactions
Global land use implications of biofuels: State of the art conference and workshop on modelling global land use implications in the environmental assessment of biofuels
Background, Aims and Scope On 4¿5 June 2007, an international conference was held in Copenhagen. It provided an interdisciplinary forum where economists and geographers met with LCA experts to discuss the challenges of modelling the ultimate land use changes caused by an increased demand for biofuels. Main Features The main feature of the conference was the cross-breeding of experience from the different approaches to land use modelling: The field of LCA could especially benefit from economic modelling in the identification of marginal crop production and the resulting expansion of the global agricultural area. Furthermore, the field of geography offers insights in the complexity behind new land cultivation and practical examples of where this is seen to occur on a regional scale. Results Results presented at the conference showed that the magnitude and location of land use changes caused by biofuels demand depend on where the demand arises. For instance, mandatory blending in the EU will increase land use both within and outside of Europe, especially in South America. A key learning for the LCA society was that the response to a change in demand for a given crop is not presented by a single crop supplier or a single country, but rather by responses from a variety of suppliers of several different crops in several countries. Discussion The intensification potential of current and future crop and biomass production was widely discussed. It was generally agreed that some parts of the third world hold large potentials for intensification, which are not realised due to a number of barriers resulting in so-called yield gaps. Conclusions Modelling the global land use implications of biofuels requires an interdisciplinary approach optimally integrating economic, geographical, biophysical, social and possibly other aspects in the modelling. This interdisciplinary approach is necessary but also difficult due to different perspectives and mindsets in the different disciplines. Recommendations and Perspectives The concept of a location dependent marginal land use composite should be introduced in LCA of biofuels and it should be acknowledged that the typical LCA assumption of linear substitution is not necessarily valid. Moreover, fertiliser restrictions/accessibility should be included in land use modelling and the relation between crop demand and intensification should be further explored. In addition, environmental impacts of land use intensification should be included in LCA, the powerful concept of land use curves should be further improved, and so should the modelling of diminishing returns in crop production
Classical generalized constant coupling model for geometrically frustrated antiferromagnets
A generalized constant coupling approximation for classical geometrically
frustrated antiferromagnets is presented. Starting from a frustrated unit we
introduce the interactions with the surrounding units in terms of an internal
effective field which is fixed by a self consistency condition. Results for the
magnetic susceptibility and specific heat are compared with Monte Carlo data
for the classical Heisenberg model for the pyrochlore and kagome lattices. The
predictions for the susceptibility are found to be essentially exact, and the
corresponding predictions for the specific heat are found to be in very good
agreement with the Monte Carlo results.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 2 columns. Discussion about the zero T value of
the pyrochlore specific heat correcte
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