3,558 research outputs found
Climate-Vegetation-Feedbacks as a Mechanism for Accelerated Climate Change: The onset of the African Humid Period
Paleo-environmental records and models indicate that the African Humid Period (AHPabruptly ended about 5000-4000 years before present (BP). Some proxies indicate alsan abrupt onset of the AHP between 14,000 and 11,000 BP. How important are local orbitaforcing, ice-sheet forcing, greenhouse gas forcing, and the reorganization of the AtlantiMeridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) for changes in the African Monsoon/vegetatiosystem? Here we use transient simulations with climate-vegetation models of differencomplexity to identify the factors that control the onset of the African Monsoon/VegetationWe test the following hypothesis:(1) There is no indication for insolation-thresholds for the onset/break of the AHP.(2) Forcing from CO2/ice-sheets significantly controls the climate of North Africa.(3) CO2 fertilization contributes to the vegetation changes over North Africa.(4) A shutdown of the AMOC is as important as orbital insolation for the African Monsoon
Liquid antiferromagnets in two dimensions
It is shown that, for proper symmetry of the parent lattice,
antiferromagnetic order can survive in two-dimensional liquid crystals and even
isotropic liquids of point-like particles, in contradiction to what common
sense might suggest. We discuss the requirements for antiferromagnetic order in
the absence of translational and/or orientational lattice order. One example is
the honeycomb lattice, which upon melting can form a liquid crystal with
quasi-long-range orientational and antiferromagnetic order but short-range
translational order. The critical properties of such systems are discussed.
Finally, we draw conjectures for the three-dimensional case.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX, 4 figures include
Doping dependence of the Neel temperature in Mott-Hubbard antiferromagnets: Effect of vortices
The rapid destruction of long-range antiferromagnetic order upon doping of
Mott-Hubbard antiferromagnetic insulators is studied within a generalized
Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless renormalization group theory in accordance with
recent calculations suggesting that holes dress with vortices. We calculate the
doping-dependent Neel temperature in good agreement with experiments for
high-Tc cuprates. Interestingly, the critical doping where long-range order
vanishes at zero temperature is predicted to be xc ~ 0.02, independently of any
energy scales of the system.Comment: 4 pages with 3 figures included, minor revisions, to be published in
PR
Cotunneling through a magnetic single-molecule transistor based on N\atC60
We present an experimental and theoretical study of a magnetic
single-molecule transistor based on N@C60 connected to gold electrodes.
Particular attention is paid to the regime of intermediate molecule-lead
coupling, where cotunneling effects manifest themselves in the Coulomb-blockade
regime. The experimental results for the differential conductance as a function
of bias, gate voltage, and external magnetic field are in agreement with our
analysis of the tunneling rates and provide evidence of magnetic signatures in
single-N@C60 devices arising from an antiferromagnetic exchange interaction
between the C60 spin and the nitrogen spin.Comment: Accepted for publication in PRB Rapid Com, 4 pages, 4 figures, with
supplementary information (6 pages, 3 figures
Quantum Tunneling of Magnetization in Single Molecular Magnets Coupled to Ferromagnetic Reservoirs
The role of spin polarized reservoirs in quantum tunneling of magnetization
and relaxation processes in a single molecular magnet (SMM) is investigated
theoretically. The SMM is exchange-coupled to the reservoirs and also subjected
to a magnetic field varying in time, which enables the quantum tunneling of
magnetization (QTM). The spin relaxation times are calculated from the Fermi
golden rule. The exchange interaction with tunneling electrons is shown to
affect the spin reversal due to QTM. Furthermore, it is shown that the
switching is associated with transfer of a certain charge between the leads.Comment: 5 pages, 3 EPS figures, final version as publishe
Resonant and Kondo tunneling through molecular magnets
Transport through molecular magnets is studied in the regime of strong
coupling to the leads. We consider a resonant-tunneling model where the
electron spin in a quantum dot or molecule is coupled to an additional local,
anisotropic spin via exchange interaction. The two opposite regimes dominated
by resonant tunneling and by Kondo transport, respectively, are considered. In
the resonant-tunneling regime, the stationary state of the impurity spin is
calculated for arbitrarily strong molecule-lead coupling using a
master-equation approach, which treats the exchange interaction perturbatively.
We find that the characteristic fine structure in the differential conductance
persists even if the hybridization energy exceeds thermal energies. Transport
in the Kondo regime is studied within a diagrammatic approach. We show that
magnetic anisotropy gives rise to a splitting of the Kondo peak at low bias
voltages.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, version as publishe
Random transition-rate matrices for the master equation
Random-matrix theory is applied to transition-rate matrices in the Pauli
master equation. We study the distribution and correlations of eigenvalues,
which govern the dynamics of complex stochastic systems. Both the cases of
identical and of independent rates of forward and backward transitions are
considered. The first case leads to symmetric transition-rate matrices, whereas
the second corresponds to general, asymmetric matrices. The resulting matrix
ensembles are different from the standard ensembles and show different
eigenvalue distributions. For example, the fraction of real eigenvalues scales
anomalously with matrix dimension in the asymmetric case.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figure
Magnetic susceptibilities of diluted magnetic semiconductors and anomalous Hall-voltage noise
The carrier spin and impurity spin densities in diluted magnetic
semiconductors are considered using a semiclassical approach. Equations of
motions for the spin densities and the carrier spin current density in the
paramagnetic phase are derived, exhibiting their coupled diffusive dynamics.
The dynamical spin susceptibilities are obtained from these equations. The
theory holds for p-type and n-type semiconductors doped with magnetic ions of
arbitrary spin quantum number. Spin-orbit coupling in the valence band is shown
to lead to anisotropic spin diffusion and to a suppression of the Curie
temperature in p-type materials. As an application we derive the Hall-voltage
noise in the paramagnetic phase. This quantity is critically enhanced close to
the Curie temperature due to the contribution from the anomalous Hall effect.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figure include
Stochastic Assembly of Bacteria in Microwell Arrays Reveals the Importance of Confinement in Community Development
Citation: Hansen, R. H., Timm, A. C., Timm, C. M., Bible, A. N., Morrell-Falvey, J. L., Pelletier, D. A., . . . Retterer, S. T. (2016). Stochastic Assembly of Bacteria in Microwell Arrays Reveals the Importance of Confinement in Community Development. Plos One, 11(5), 18. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0155080The structure and function of microbial communities is deeply influenced by the physical and chemical architecture of the local microenvironment and the abundance of its community members. The complexity of this natural parameter space has made characterization of the key drivers of community development difficult. In order to facilitate these characterizations, we have developed a microwell platform designed to screen microbial growth and interactions across a wide variety of physical and initial conditions. Assembly of microbial communities into microwells was achieved using a novel biofabrication method that exploits well feature sizes for control of innoculum levels. Wells with incrementally smaller size features created populations with increasingly larger variations in inoculum levels. This allowed for reproducible growth measurement in large (20 mu m diameter) wells, and screening for favorable growth conditions in small (5, 10 mu m diameter) wells. We demonstrate the utility of this approach for screening and discovery using 5 mu m wells to assemble P. aeruginosa colonies across a broad distribution of innoculum levels, and identify those conditions that promote the highest probability of survivial and growth under spatial confinement. Multi-member community assembly was also characterized to demonstrate the broad potential of this platform for studying the role of member abundance on microbial competition, mutualism and community succession
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