620 research outputs found
Carbon incorporation in ZnSe grown by metalorganic chemical vapor deposition
Carbon incorporation in ZnSe films grown by metalorganic chemical vapor deposition is reported. Secondary‐ion mass spectrometry measurements in ZnSe films grown from methylallylselenide and dimethylzinc show an enhanced carbon accumulation at the interface between ZnSe and GaAs. The carbon incorporation in the bulk ZnSe increases with the VI/II ratio and for a value of VI/II=3–4, the amount of incorporated carbon abruptly jumps to concentrations of 10^(21) cm^(−3), whereupon the films become polycrystalline. A new shallow peak I^C at 2.7920 eV dominates the near‐band‐edge low‐temperature photoluminescence spectra of all carbon‐contaminated ZnSe films. The intensity and linewidth of I^C increase with the VI/II ratio in a similar manner to the carbon concentration. This peak is proposed to be due to the radiative decay of excitons bound to a complex defect, which is associated with the presence of carbon in the films
Study of the Potts Model on the Honeycomb and Triangular Lattices: Low-Temperature Series and Partition Function Zeros
We present and analyze low-temperature series and complex-temperature
partition function zeros for the -state Potts model with on the
honeycomb lattice and on the triangular lattice. A discussion is given
as to how the locations of the singularities obtained from the series analysis
correlate with the complex-temperature phase boundary. Extending our earlier
work, we include a similar discussion for the Potts model with on the
honeycomb lattice and with on the kagom\'e lattice.Comment: 33 pages, Latex, 9 encapsulated postscript figures, J. Phys. A, in
pres
Critical Loop Gases and the Worm Algorithm
The loop gas approach to lattice field theory provides an alternative,
geometrical description in terms of fluctuating loops. Statistical ensembles of
random loops can be efficiently generated by Monte Carlo simulations using the
worm update algorithm. In this paper, concepts from percolation theory and the
theory of self-avoiding random walks are used to describe estimators of
physical observables that utilize the nature of the worm algorithm. The fractal
structure of the random loops as well as their scaling properties are studied.
To support this approach, the O(1) loop model, or high-temperature series
expansion of the Ising model, is simulated on a honeycomb lattice, with its
known exact results providing valuable benchmarks.Comment: 34 pages, 12 figures; v2: 2 figures and 1 table added; v3: typo's
correcte
Phase transition between synchronous and asynchronous updating algorithms
We update a one-dimensional chain of Ising spins of length with
algorithms which are parameterized by the probability for a certain site to
get updated in one time step. The result of the update event itself is
determined by the energy change due to the local change in the configuration.
In this way we interpolate between the Metropolis algorithm at zero temperature
for of the order of 1/L and for large , and a synchronous deterministic
updating procedure for . As function of we observe a phase transition
between the stationary states to which the algorithm drives the system. These
are non-absorbing stationary states with antiferromagnetic domains for ,
and absorbing states with ferromagnetic domains for . This means
that above this transition the stationary states have lost any remnants to the
ferromagnetic Ising interaction. A measurement of the critical exponents shows
that this transition belongs to the universality class of parity conservation.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Towards integration of environmental and health impact assessments for wild capture fishing and farmed fish with particular reference to public health and occupational health dimensions
The paper offers a review and commentary, with particular reference to the production of fish from wild capture fisheries and aquaculture, on neglected aspects of health impact assessments which are viewed by a range of international and national health bodies and development agencies as valuable and necessary project tools. Assessments sometimes include environmental health impact assessments but rarely include specific occupational health and safety impact assessments especially integrated into a wider public health assessment. This is in contrast to the extensive application of environmental impact assessments to fishing and the comparatively large body of research now generated on the public health effects of eating fish. The value of expanding and applying the broader assessments would be considerable because in 2004 the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization reports there were 41,408,000 people in the total ‘fishing’ sector including 11,289,000 in aquaculture. The paper explores some of the complex interactions that occur with regard to fishing activities and proposes the wider adoption of health impact assessment tools in these neglected sectors through an integrated public health impact assessment tool
The Phase Diagram of an Anisotropic Potts Model
A study is made of an anisotropic Potts model in three dimensions where the
coupling depends on both the Potts state on each site but also the direction of
the bond between them using both analytical and numerical methods. The phase
diagram is mapped out for all values of the exchange interactions. Six distinct
phases are identified. Monte Carlo simulations have been used to obtain the
order parameter and the values for the energy and entropy in the ground state
and also the transition temperatures. Excellent agreement is found between the
simulated and analytic results. We find one region where there are two phase
transitions with the lines meeting in a triple point. The orbital ordering that
occurs in occurs as one of the ordered phases.Comment: 30 pages, 19 figures, one tabl
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Tracking website data-collection and privacy practices with the iWatch Web Crawler
In this paper we introduce the iWatch web crawler, a tool designed to catalogue and analyze online data practices and the use of privacy related indicators and technologies. Our goal in developing iWatch was to make possible a new type of analysis of trends, the impact of legislation on practices, and geographic and social differences online. In this paper we present preliminary findings from two sets of data collected 15 months apart and analyzed with this tool. Our combined samples included more than 240,000 pages from over 24,000 domains and 47 different countries. In addition to providing useful and needed data on the state of online data practices, we show that iWatch is a promising approach to the study of the web ecosystem.Keywords: P3P, Web-crawling, End-user's privacy, Privacy, Privacy technologies in terms of geography, Webbugs, Cookies, Data-collection practice
Transfer Matrices and Partition-Function Zeros for Antiferromagnetic Potts Models. V. Further Results for the Square-Lattice Chromatic Polynomial
We derive some new structural results for the transfer matrix of
square-lattice Potts models with free and cylindrical boundary conditions. In
particular, we obtain explicit closed-form expressions for the dominant (at
large |q|) diagonal entry in the transfer matrix, for arbitrary widths m, as
the solution of a special one-dimensional polymer model. We also obtain the
large-q expansion of the bulk and surface (resp. corner) free energies for the
zero-temperature antiferromagnet (= chromatic polynomial) through order q^{-47}
(resp. q^{-46}). Finally, we compute chromatic roots for strips of widths 9 <=
m <= 12 with free boundary conditions and locate roughly the limiting curves.Comment: 111 pages (LaTeX2e). Includes tex file, three sty files, and 19
Postscript figures. Also included are Mathematica files data_CYL.m and
data_FREE.m. Many changes from version 1: new material on series expansions
and their analysis, and several proofs of previously conjectured results.
Final version to be published in J. Stat. Phy
High sample throughput genotyping for estimating C-lineage introgression in the dark honeybee: an accurate and cost-effective SNP-based tool
The natural distribution of the honeybee (Apis mellifera L.) has been changed by humans in recent
decades to such an extent that the formerly widest-spread European subspecies, Apis mellifera
mellifera, is threatened by extinction through introgression from highly divergent commercial strains
in large tracts of its range. Conservation efforts for A. m. mellifera are underway in multiple European
countries requiring reliable and cost-efficient molecular tools to identify purebred colonies. Here, we
developed four ancestry-informative SNP assays for high sample throughput genotyping using the
iPLEX Mass Array system. Our customized assays were tested on DNA from individual and pooled,
haploid and diploid honeybee samples extracted from different tissues using a diverse range of
protocols. The assays had a high genotyping success rate and yielded accurate genotypes. Performance
assessed against whole-genome data showed that individual assays behaved well, although the
most accurate introgression estimates were obtained for the four assays combined (117 SNPs).
The best compromise between accuracy and genotyping costs was achieved when combining two
assays (62 SNPs). We provide a ready-to-use cost-effective tool for accurate molecular identification
and estimation oinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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