858 research outputs found
Thermodynamics of Adiabatically Loaded Cold Bosons in the Mott Insulating Phase of One-Dimensional Optical Lattices
In this work we give a consistent picture of the thermodynamic properties of
bosons in the Mott insulating phase when loaded adiabatically into
one-dimensional optical lattices. We find a crucial dependence of the
temperature in the optical lattice on the doping level of the Mott insulator.
In the undoped case, the temperature is of the order of the large onsite
Hubbard interaction. In contrast, at a finite doping level the temperature
jumps almost immediately to the order of the small hopping parameter. These two
situations are investigated on the one hand by considering limiting cases like
the atomic limit and the case of free fermions. On the other hand, they are
examined using a quasi-particle conserving continuous unitary transformation
extended by an approximate thermodynamics for hardcore particles.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Fabric Cooling by Water Evaporation
Clothing can provide safety and comfort for persons exposed to both cold and hot thermal environments. To assess the potential impact of clothing moisture and wetness on fabric cooling, a series of wind-tunnel tests was conducted to quantify the evaporative cooling capacity of selected fabric samples. Single-layer cotton, polyester, nylon and silk were evaluated. The results showed that onset and magnitude of evaporative cooling was determined by the amount of water contained in a fabric sample. The results also showed that an exposed skin exhibited more cooling when covered with a fabric than when it was not. The information obtained helps better understand the evaporative cooling process for fabrics and assist in the selection of garment materials that optimize worker comfort and safety
Temperature in One-Dimensional Bosonic Mott insulators
The Mott insulating phase of a one-dimensional bosonic gas trapped in optical
lattices is described by a Bose-Hubbard model. A continuous unitary
transformation is used to map this model onto an effective model conserving the
number of elementary excitations. We obtain quantitative results for the
kinetics and for the spectral weights of the low-energy excitations for a broad
range of parameters in the insulating phase. By these results, recent Bragg
spectroscopy experiments are explained. Evidence for a significant temperature
of the order of the microscopic energy scales is found.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Mol. Cell. Proteomics
Chemical cross-linking in combination with mass spectrometric analysis offers the potential to obtain low-resolution structural information from proteins and protein complexes. Identification of peptides connected by a cross-link provides direct evidence for the physical interaction of amino acid side chains, information that can be used for computational modeling purposes. Despite impressive advances that were made in recent years, the number of experimentally observed cross-links still falls below the number of possible contacts of cross-linkable side chains within the span of the cross-linker. Here, we propose two complementary experimental strategies to expand cross-linking data sets. First, enrichment of cross-linked peptides by size exclusion chromatography selects cross-linked peptides based on their higher molecular mass, thereby depleting the majority of unmodified peptides present in proteolytic digests of cross-linked samples. Second, we demonstrate that the use of proteases in addition to trypsin, such as Asp-N, can additionally boost the number of observable cross-linking sites. The benefits of both SEC enrichment and multiprotease digests are demonstrated on a set of model proteins and the improved workflow is applied to the characterization of the 20S proteasome from rabbit and Schizosaccharomyces pombe
Systematic Mapping of the Hubbard Model to the Generalized t-J Model
The generalized t-J model conserving the number of double occupancies is
constructed from the Hubbard model at and in the vicinity of half-filling at
strong coupling. The construction is realized by a self-similar continuous
unitary transformation. The flow equation is closed by a truncation scheme
based on the spatial range of processes. We analyze the conditions under which
the t-J model can be set up and we find that it can only be defined for
sufficiently large interaction. There, the parameters of the effective model
are determined.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures included. v2: Order of sections changed.
Calculation and discussion of apparent gap in Section IV.A correcte
Microscopic model for Bose-Einstein condensation and quasiparticle decay
Sufficiently dimerized quantum antiferromagnets display elementary S=1
excitations, triplon quasiparticles, protected by a gap at low energies. At
higher energies, the triplons may decay into two or more triplons. A strong
enough magnetic field induces Bose-Einstein condensation of triplons. For both
phenomena the compound IPA-CuCl3 is an excellent model system. Nevertheless no
quantitative model was determined so far despite numerous studies. Recent
theoretical progress allows us to analyse data of inelastic neutron scattering
(INS) and of magnetic susceptibility to determine the four magnetic couplings
J1=-2.3meV, J2=1.2meV, J3=2.9meV and J4=-0.3meV. These couplings determine
IPA-CuCl3 as system of coupled asymmetric S=1/2 Heisenberg ladders
quantitatively. The magnetic field dependence of the lowest modes in the
condensed phase as well as the temperature dependence of the gap without
magnetic field corroborate this microscopic model.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Adapted continuous unitary transformation to treat systems with quasiparticles of finite lifetime
An improved generator for continuous unitary transformations is introduced to
describe systems with unstable quasiparticles. Its general properties are
derived and discussed. To illustrate this approach we investigate the
asymmetric antiferromagnetic spin-1/2 Heisenberg ladder which allows for
spontaneous triplon decay. We present results for the low energy spectrum and
the momentum resolved spectral density of this system. In particular, we show
the resonance behavior of the decaying triplon explicitly.Comment: 40 pages, 12 figure
First sequence-confirmed case of infection with the new influenza A(H1N1) strain in Germany
Here, we report on the first sequence-confirmed case of infection with the new influenza A(H1N1) virus in Germany. Two direct contacts of the patient were laboratory-confirmed as cases and demonstrate a chain of direct human-to-human transmission
Hole Dispersions for Antiferromagnetic Spin-1/2 Two-Leg Ladders by Self-Similar Continuous Unitary Transformations
The hole-doped antiferromagnetic spin-1/2 two-leg ladder is an important
model system for the high- superconductors based on cuprates. Using the
technique of self-similar continuous unitary transformations we derive
effective Hamiltonians for the charge motion in these ladders. The key
advantage of this technique is that it provides effective models explicitly in
the thermodynamic limit. A real space restriction of the generator of the
transformation allows us to explore the experimentally relevant parameter
space. From the effective Hamiltonians we calculate the dispersions for single
holes. Further calculations will enable the calculation of the interaction of
two holes so that a handle of Cooper pair formation is within reach.Comment: 16 pages, 26 figure
An SU(N) Mott insulator of an atomic Fermi gas realized by large-spin Pomeranchuk cooling
The Hubbard model, containing only the minimum ingredients of nearest
neighbor hopping and on-site interaction for correlated electrons, has
succeeded in accounting for diverse phenomena observed in solid-state
materials. One of the interesting extensions is to enlarge its spin symmetry to
SU(N>2), which is closely related to systems with orbital degeneracy. Here we
report a successful formation of the SU(6) symmetric Mott insulator state with
an atomic Fermi gas of ytterbium (173Yb) in a three-dimensional optical
lattice. Besides the suppression of compressibility and the existence of charge
excitation gap which characterize a Mott insulating phase, we reveal an
important difference between the cases of SU(6) and SU(2) in the achievable
temperature as the consequence of different entropy carried by an isolated
spin. This is analogous to Pomeranchuk cooling in solid 3He and will be helpful
for investigating exotic quantum phases of SU(N) Hubbard system at extremely
low temperatures.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures, to appear in Nature Physic
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