1,224 research outputs found
Observation of Magnetic Supercooling of the Transition to the Vortex State
We demonstrate that the transition from the high-field state to the vortex
state in a nanomagnetic disk shows the magnetic equivalent of supercooling.
This is evidence that this magnetic transition can be described in terms of a
modified Landau first-order phase transition. To accomplish this we have
measured the bulk magnetization of single magnetic disks using nanomechanical
torsional resonator torque magnetometry. This allows observation of single
vortex creation events without averaging over an array of disks or over
multiple runs.Comment: 11 pages preprint, 4 figures, accepted to New Journal of Physic
Phase transitions and configuration space topology
Equilibrium phase transitions may be defined as nonanalytic points of
thermodynamic functions, e.g., of the canonical free energy. Given a certain
physical system, it is of interest to understand which properties of the system
account for the presence of a phase transition, and an understanding of these
properties may lead to a deeper understanding of the physical phenomenon. One
possible approach of this issue, reviewed and discussed in the present paper,
is the study of topology changes in configuration space which, remarkably, are
found to be related to equilibrium phase transitions in classical statistical
mechanical systems. For the study of configuration space topology, one
considers the subsets M_v, consisting of all points from configuration space
with a potential energy per particle equal to or less than a given v. For
finite systems, topology changes of M_v are intimately related to nonanalytic
points of the microcanonical entropy (which, as a surprise to many, do exist).
In the thermodynamic limit, a more complex relation between nonanalytic points
of thermodynamic functions (i.e., phase transitions) and topology changes is
observed. For some class of short-range systems, a topology change of the M_v
at v=v_t was proved to be necessary for a phase transition to take place at a
potential energy v_t. In contrast, phase transitions in systems with long-range
interactions or in systems with non-confining potentials need not be
accompanied by such a topology change. Instead, for such systems the
nonanalytic point in a thermodynamic function is found to have some
maximization procedure at its origin. These results may foster insight into the
mechanisms which lead to the occurrence of a phase transition, and thus may
help to explore the origin of this physical phenomenon.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figure
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A phase II study of temozolomide vs. procarbazine in patients with glioblastoma multiforme at first relapse.
A randomized, multicentre, open-label, phase II study compared temozolomide (TMZ), an oral second-generation alkylating agent, and procarbazine (PCB) in 225 patients with glioblastoma multiforme at first relapse. Primary objectives were to determine progression-free survival (PFS) at 6 months and safety for TMZ and PCB in adult patients who failed conventional treatment. Secondary objectives were to assess overall survival and health-related quality of life (HRQL). TMZ was given orally at 200 mg/m(2)/day or 150 mg/m(2)/day (prior chemotherapy) for 5 days, repeated every 28 days. PCB was given orally at 150 mg/m(2)/day or 125 mg/m(2)/day (prior chemotherapy) for 28 days, repeated every 56 days. HRQL was assessed using the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire (EORTC QLQ-C30 [+3]) and the Brain Cancer Module 20 (BCM20). The 6-month PFS rate for patients who received TMZ was 21%, which met the protocol objective. The 6-month PFS rate for those who received PCB was 8% (P = 0.008, for the comparison). Overall PFS significantly improved with TMZ, with a median PFS of 12.4 weeks in the TMZ group and 8.32 weeks in the PCB group (P = 0.0063). The 6-month overall survival rate for TMZ patients was 60% vs. 44% for PCB patients (P = 0.019). Freedom from disease progression was associated with maintenance of HRQL, regardless of treatment received. TMZ had an acceptable safety profile; most adverse events were mild or moderate in severity
Harmonics generation in electron-ion collisions in a short laser pulse
Anomalously high generation efficiency of coherent higher field-harmonics in
collisions between {\em oppositely charged particles} in the field of
femtosecond lasers is predicted. This is based on rigorous numerical solutions
of a quantum kinetic equation for dense laser plasmas which overcomes
limitations of previous investigations.Comment: 4 pages, 4 eps-figures include
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The effects of locus of control, attitudes toward women and gender on attribution of responsibility for rape
CP and related phenomena in the context of Stellar Evolution
We review the interaction in intermediate and high mass stars between their
evolution and magnetic and chemical properties. We describe the theory of
Ap-star `fossil' fields, before touching on the expected secular diffusive
processes which give rise to evolution of the field. We then present recent
results from a spectropolarimetric survey of Herbig Ae/Be stars, showing that
magnetic fields of the kind seen on the main-sequence already exist during the
pre-main sequence phase, in agreement with fossil field theory, and that the
origin of the slow rotation of Ap/Bp stars also lies early in the pre-main
sequence evolution; we also present results confirming a lack of stars with
fields below a few hundred gauss. We then seek which macroscopic motions
compete with atomic diffusion in determining the surface abundances of AmFm
stars. While turbulent transport and mass loss, in competition with atomic
diffusion, are both able to explain observed surface abundances, the interior
abundance distribution is different enough to potentially lead to a test using
asterosismology. Finally we review progress on the turbulence-driving and
mixing processes in stellar radiative zones.Comment: Proceedings of IAU GA in Rio, JD4 on Ap stars; 10 pages, 7 figure
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