3,694 research outputs found
The Effective Potential, the Renormalisation Group and Vacuum Stability
We review the calculation of the the effective potential with particular
emphasis on cases when the tree potential or the
renormalisation-group-improved, radiatively corrected potential exhibits
non-convex behaviour. We illustrate this in a simple Yukawa model which
exhibits a novel kind of dimensional transmutation. We also review briefly
earlier work on the Standard Model. We conclude that, despite some recent
claims to the contrary, it can be possible to infer reliably that the tree
vacuum does not represent the true ground state of the theory.Comment: 23 pages; 5 figures; v2 includes minor changes in text and additional
reference
Interstitials, Vacancies and Dislocations in Flux-Line Lattices: A Theory of Vortex Crystals, Supersolids and Liquids
We study a three dimensional Abrikosov vortex lattice in the presence of an
equilibrium concentration of vacancy, interstitial and dislocation loops.
Vacancies and interstitials renormalize the long-wavelength bulk and tilt
elastic moduli. Dislocation loops lead to the vanishing of the long-wavelength
shear modulus. The coupling to vacancies and interstitials - which are always
present in the liquid state - allows dislocations to relax stresses by climbing
out of their glide plane. Surprisingly, this mechanism does not yield any
further independent renormalization of the tilt and compressional moduli at
long wavelengths. The long wavelength properties of the resulting state are
formally identical to that of the ``flux-line hexatic'' that is a candidate
``normal'' hexatically ordered vortex liquid state.Comment: 21 RevTeX pgs, 7 eps figures uuencoded; corrected typos, published
versio
Topological Defects on Fluctuating Surfaces: General Properties and the Kosterlitz-Thouless Transition
We investigate the Kosterlitz-Thouless transition for hexatic order on a free
fluctuating membrane and derive both a Coulomb gas and a sine-Gordon
Hamiltonian to describe it. The Coulomb-gas Hamiltonian includes charge
densities arising from disclinations and from Gaussian curvature. There is an
interaction coupling the difference between these two densities, whose strength
is determined by the hexatic rigidity, and an interaction coupling Gaussian
curvature densities arising from the Liouville Hamiltonian resulting from the
imposition of a covariant cutoff. In the sine-Gordon Hamiltonian, there is a
linear coupling between a scalar field and the Gaussian curvature. We discuss
gauge-invariant correlation function for hexatic order and the dielectric
constant of the Coulomb gas. We also derive renormalization group recursion
relations that predict a transition with decreasing bending rigidity .Comment: REVTEX, 45 pages with 11 postscript figures compressed using uufiles.
Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Impact of droughts on the carbon cycle in European vegetation : a probabilistic risk analysis using six vegetation models
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Turbulent superfluid profiles in a counterflow channel
We have developed a two-dimensional model of quantised vortices in helium II
moving under the influence of applied normal fluid and superfluid in a
counterflow channel. We predict superfluid and vortex-line density profiles
which could be experimentally tested using recently developed visualization
techniques.Comment: 3 double figures, 9 page
Quality of Life in a Mixed Ethnic Population after Myocardial Infarction
Background: Although South Asian people are a significant ethnic group at increased risk of coronary heart disease and high mortality rates and experience greater delays with respect to diagnosis, referral and treatment, comparatively little is known about their quality of life during recovery from a myocardial infarction.Objectives: We sought to determine and compare the impact of ethnicity on quality of life after myocardial infarction (MI) in a mixed ethnic population (South Asian and white people) in the UK.Methods: A 2x2 mixed-group design with repeated measures on the second factor. The independent variables were ethnic group (white/South Asian) and time since MI (2 weeks/3 months). The dependent variables were the subscale scores on the Short-Form 36-item health survey (SF-36) and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS).Results: At 2 weeks, significant differences were observed between groups on 5 of the 8 SF-36 subscale domain scores, with the white group reporting higher quality of life. Significant improvement in reported quality of life occurred in both groups over time on all domains of the SF-36, except bodily pain. There was a significantly greater improvement in favour of the white group for the role-physical domain. There was no significant difference between groups in terms of anxiety or depression at 2 weeks. Both groups showed a significant reduction in anxiety and depression by 3 months, but the degree of reduction was not significantly different between them. At 3 months, there was no significant difference between groups in terms of anxiety scores, but the South Asian group scored significantly higher on the depression scale.Conclusions: South Asian people have significantly poorer quality of life than white people after MI. While both groups showed improvement over time, South Asian people reported significantly less improvement in physical role function and were more depressed at 3 months. Identifying the factors accounting for such differences is important to develop models of care for delivering the most effective and culturally-sensitive interventions to this group
Continuous Melting of a "Partially Pinned" Two-Dimensional Vortex Lattice in a Square Array of Pinning Centers
The structure and equilibrium properties of a two-dimensional system of
superconducting vortices in a periodic pinning potential with square symmetry
are studied numerically. For a range of the strength of the pinning potential,
the low-temperature crystalline state exhibits only one of the two basic
periodicities (in the - and -directions) of the pinning potential. This
``partially pinned'' solid undergoes a continuous melting transition to a
weakly modulated liquid as the temperature is increased. A spin model,
constructed using symmetry arguments, is shown to reproduce the critical
behavior at this transition.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Hydrodynamics of Spatially Ordered Superfluids
We derive the hydrodynamic equations for the supersolid and superhexatic
phases of a neutral two-dimensional Bose fluid. We find, assuming that the
normal part of the fluid is clamped to an underlying substrate, that both
phases can sustain third-sound modes and that in the supersolid phase there are
additional modes due to the superfluid motion of point defects (vacancies and
interstitials).Comment: 24 pages of ReVTeX and 7 uuencoded figures. Submitted for publication
in Phys. Rev.
Periodic harmonic functions on lattices and points count in positive characteristic
This survey addresses pluri-periodic harmonic functions on lattices with
values in a positive characteristic field. We mention, as a motivation, the
game "Lights Out" following the work of Sutner, Goldwasser-Klostermeyer-Ware,
Barua-Ramakrishnan-Sarkar, Hunzikel-Machiavello-Park e.a.; see also 2 previous
author's preprints for a more detailed account. Our approach explores harmonic
analysis and algebraic geometry over a positive characteristic field. The
Fourier transform allows us to interpret pluri-periods of harmonic functions on
lattices as torsion multi-orders of points on the corresponding affine
algebraic variety.Comment: These are notes on 13p. based on a talk presented during the meeting
"Analysis on Graphs and Fractals", the Cardiff University, 29 May-2 June 2007
(a sattelite meeting of the programme "Analysis on Graphs and its
Applications" at the Isaac Newton Institute from 8 January to 29 June 2007
Ab initio many-body calculations on infinite carbon and boron-nitrogen chains
In this paper we report first-principles calculations on the ground-state
electronic structure of two infinite one-dimensional systems: (a) a chain of
carbon atoms and (b) a chain of alternating boron and nitrogen atoms. Meanfield
results were obtained using the restricted Hartree-Fock approach, while the
many-body effects were taken into account by second-order M{\o}ller-Plesset
perturbation theory and the coupled-cluster approach. The calculations were
performed using 6-31 basis sets, including the d-type polarization
functions. Both at the Hartree-Fock (HF) and the correlated levels we find that
the infinite carbon chain exhibits bond alternation with alternating single and
triple bonds, while the boron-nitrogen chain exhibits equidistant bonds. In
addition, we also performed density-functional-theory-based local density
approximation (LDA) calculations on the infinite carbon chain using the same
basis set. Our LDA results, in contradiction to our HF and correlated results,
predict a very small bond alternation. Based upon our LDA results for the
carbon chain, which are in agreement with an earlier LDA calculation
calculation [ E.J. Bylaska, J.H. Weare, and R. Kawai, Phys. Rev. B 58, R7488
(1998).], we conclude that the LDA significantly underestimates Peierls
distortion. This emphasizes that the inclusion of many-particle effects is very
important for the correct description of Peierls distortion in one-dimensional
systems.Comment: 3 figures (included). To appear in Phys. Rev.
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