21,323 research outputs found
Holographic heat engine with momentum relaxation
We investigate the heat engine defined via black hole with momentum
relaxation, which is introduced by massless axion fields. We first study the
extended thermodynamical properties of the black hole and then apply it to
define a heat engine. Then, we analyze how the momentum relaxation affects the
efficiency of the heat engine in the limit of high temperature. We find that
depending on the schemes of specified parameters in the engine circle, the
influence of momentum relaxation on the efficiency of the heat engine behaves
novelly, and the qualitative behaviors do depend on the dimension of the
gravity theory.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Dark Energy and Fate of the Universe
We explore the ultimate fate of the Universe by using a divergence-free
parametrization for dark energy .
Unlike the CPL parametrization, this parametrization has well behaved, bounded
behavior for both high redshifts and negative redshifts, and thus can genuinely
cover many theoretical dark energy models. After constraining the parameter
space of this parametrization by using the current cosmological observations,
we find that, at the 95.4% confidence level, our Universe can still exist at
least 16.7 Gyr before it ends in a big rip. Moreover, for the phantom energy
dominated Universe, we find that a gravitationally bound system will be
destroyed at a time , where
is the period of a circular orbit around this system, before the big rip.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; typos corrected, publication version, Sci
China-Phys Mech Astron, doi: 10.1007/s11433-012-4748-
Fermionic phase transition induced by the effective impurity in holography
We investigate the holographic fermionic phase transition induced by the
effective impurity in holography, which is introduced by massless scalar fields
in Einstein-Maxwell-massless scalar gravity. We obtain a phase diagram in
plane separating the Fermi liquid phase and the non-Fermi liquid
phase.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figure
Determining layer number of two dimensional flakes of transition-metal dichalcogenides by the Raman intensity from substrate
Transition-metal dichalcogenide (TMD) semiconductors have been widely studied
due to their distinctive electronic and optical properties. The property of TMD
flakes is a function of its thickness, or layer number (N). How to determine N
of ultrathin TMDs materials is of primary importance for fundamental study and
practical applications. Raman mode intensity from substrates has been used to
identify N of intrinsic and defective multilayer graphenes up to N=100.
However, such analysis is not applicable for ultrathin TMD flakes due to the
lack of a unified complex refractive index () from monolayer to bulk
TMDs. Here, we discuss the N identification of TMD flakes on the SiO/Si
substrate by the intensity ratio between the Si peak from 100-nm (or 89-nm)
SiO/Si substrates underneath TMD flakes and that from bare SiO/Si
substrates. We assume the real part of of TMD flakes as that of
monolayer TMD and treat the imaginary part of as a fitting
parameter to fit the experimental intensity ratio. An empirical ,
namely, , of ultrathin MoS, WS and WSe
flakes from monolayer to multilayer is obtained for typical laser excitations
(2.54 eV, 2.34 eV, or 2.09 eV). The fitted of MoS has
been used to identify N of MoS flakes deposited on 302-nm SiO/Si
substrate, which agrees well with that determined from their shear and
layer-breathing modes. This technique by measuring Raman intensity from the
substrate can be extended to identify N of ultrathin 2D flakes with N-dependent
. For the application purpose, the intensity ratio excited by
specific laser excitations has been provided for MoS, WS and
WSe flakes and multilayer graphene flakes deposited on Si substrates
covered by 80-110 nm or 280-310 nm SiO layer.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures. Accepted by Nanotechnolog
Correlated Dirac semimetal by periodized cluster dynamical mean-field theory
The periodized cluster dynamical mean-field theory (PCDMFT) combined with
exact diagonalization as impurity solver has been applied to the half-filled
standard Hubbard model on the honeycomb lattice. A correlated Dirac semimetal
is found for weak interactions and it transforms into an antiferromagnetic
insulating phase for strong interactions via a first-order quantum phase
transition, not intervened by a spin liquid phase in between. In this
application, the PCDMFT introduces the partial translation symmetry, but cures
well the problem due to the translation symmetry breaking in the cluster
dynamical mean-field theory studies for the same model, which give rise to a
spurious insulating phase in the weakly interacting region.Comment: 5 pages and 5 figure
Quantification of the influence of drugs on zebrafish larvae swimming kinematics and energetics
The use of zebrafish larvae has aroused wide interest in the medical field for its potential role in the development of new therapies. The larvae grow extremely quickly and the embryos are nearly transparent which allows easy examination of its internal structures using fluorescent imaging techniques. Medical treatment of zebrafish larvae can directly influence its swimming behaviours. These behaviour changes are related to functional changes of central nervous system and transformations of the zebrafish body such as muscle mechanical power and force variation, which cannot be measured directly by pure experiment observation. To quantify the influence of drugs on zebrafish larvae swimming behaviours and energetics, we have developed a novel methodology to exploit intravital changes based on observed zebrafish locomotion. Specifically, by using an in-house MATLAB code to process the recorded live zebrafish swimming video, the kinematic locomotion equation of a 3D zebrafish larvae was obtained, and a customised Computational Fluid Dynamics tool was used to solve the fluid flow around the fish model which was geometrically the same as experimentally tested zebrafish. The developed methodology was firstly verified against experiment, and further applied to quantify the fish internal body force, torque and power consumption associated with a group of normal zebrafish larvae vs. those immersed in acetic acid and two neuroactive drugs. As indicated by our results, zebrafish larvae immersed in 0.01% acetic acid display approximately 30% higher hydrodynamic power and 10% higher cost of transport than control group. In addition, 500 μM diphenylhydantoin significantly decreases the locomotion activity for approximately 50% lower hydrodynamic power, whereas 100 mg/L yohimbine has not caused any significant influences on 5 dpf zebrafish larvae locomotion. The approach has potential to evaluate the influence of drugs on the aquatic animal’s behaviour changes and thus support the development of new analgesic and neuroactive drugs
- …
