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Institution

University of Jyväskylä

EducationJyvaskyla, Finland
About: University of Jyväskylä is a education organization based out in Jyvaskyla, Finland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 8066 authors who have published 25168 publications receiving 725033 citations. The organization is also known as: Jyväskylän yliopisto & Kasvatusopillinen korkeakoulu.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a time-dependent many-body approach is proposed to study the short-time dynamics of correlated electrons in quantum transport through nanoscale systems contacted to metallic leads.
Abstract: We propose a time-dependent many-body approach to study the short-time dynamics of correlated electrons in quantum transport through nanoscale systems contacted to metallic leads. This approach is based on the time propagation of the Kadanoff-Baym equations for the nonequilibrium many-body Green's function of open and interacting systems out of equilibrium. An important feature of the method is that it takes full account of electronic correlations and embedding effects in the presence of time-dependent external fields, while at the same time satisfying the charge conservation law. The method further extends the Meir-Wingreen formula to the time domain for initially correlated states. We study the electron dynamics of a correlated quantum wire attached to two-dimensional leads exposed to a sudden switch on of a bias voltage using conserving many-body approximations at Hartree-Fock, second Born and GW level. We obtain detailed results for the transient currents, dipole moments, spectral functions, charging times, and the many-body screening of the quantum wire as well as for the time-dependent density pattern in the leads, and we show how the time dependence of these observables provides a wealth of information on the energy level structure of the quantum wire out of equilibrium. For moderate interaction strengths the second Born and GW results are in excellent agreement at all times. We find that many-body effects beyond the Hartree-Fock approximation have a large effect on the qualitative behavior of the system and lead to a bias-dependent gap closing and quasiparticle broadening, shortening of the transient times and washing out of the step features in the current-voltage curves.

195 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the use of π-stacking interactions to control the aggregation of photo-active metal centres is explored through the design of bis(2,2′;6′, 2′′-terpyridyl) metal complexes functionalised with biphenyl tails.
Abstract: The use of π-stacking interactions to control the aggregation of photo-active metal centres is explored through the design of bis(2,2′;6′,2′′-terpyridyl) metal complexes functionalised with biphenyl ‘tails’. Aryl–aryl interactions control the aggregation of the metal complexes into polymetallic arrays in the solid state. Cobalt(II), ruthenium(II), nickel(II), copper(II), zinc(II) and cadmium(II) bis-ligand complexes and a mixed ligand ruthenium(II) complex have been structurally characterised. The solid-state structures are dependent on which units dominate the π-stacking. For cobalt, ruthenium, nickel and copper, biphenylene–biphenylene interactions lead to linear rod-like arrays, while for the group 12 d10 ions zinc and cadmium, biphenylene–pyridyl interactions lead to two-dimensional sheets. The addition of the biphenylene tail has favourable effects on the photophysical-properties of the complexes which exhibit room temperature red (ruthenium) or blue (zinc and cadmium) luminescence, both in solution and the solid state.

195 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results show that pheromones are condition-dependent signals, the quantity of which females use in their mate choice, and the production of the phersomones is affected by the condition of the male.
Abstract: Summary 1. Pheromones are chemical signals that function not only as mate attractors, but may also relay important information to prospective mates. In order for the information to be reliable, the signal must be costly to produce and this is likely to result in condition dependent expression of the signal. 2. We present results from two experiments on the grain beetle Tenebrio molitor examining phenotypic condition dependence of pheromones and patterns of female preference for pheromones. We also analysed condition dependence of two measures of immunocompetence: encapsulation response and phenoloxidase activity. 3. By manipulating the nutritional condition of the males we found that the attractiveness of the male pheromones to virgin females was condition-dependent, indicating that the production of the pheromones is affected by the condition of the male. We also found that the phenoloxidase activity of the males was affected by the nutritional condition of the male but that encapsulation rate was not. 4. Our results show that pheromones are condition-dependent signals, the quantity of which females use in their mate choice.

195 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the direct and moderator roles of recovery experiences (psychological detachment from work, relaxation, mastery, and control) in the relationship between psychosocial work characteristics (i.e., time demands, job control, and justice of the supervisor) and occupational well-being.
Abstract: This study examined the direct and moderator roles of recovery experiences (psychological detachment from work, relaxation, mastery, and control) in the relationship between psychosocial work characteristics (i.e. time demands, job control, and justice of the supervisor) and occupational well-being (need for recovery, job exhaustion, and work engagement). The study was conducted among 527 Finnish employees from several occupational sectors who were employed in a variety of different jobs. Of the employees, 53% were women and the average age was 42.4 years. The moderated hierarchical regression analyses showed that psychological detachment and mastery were protective mechanisms against increased need for recovery in a situation of lack of job control. Also, relaxation protected against increased job exhaustion under high time demands. In addition, recovery experiences – psychological detachment and mastery in particular – had direct links to occupational well-being. Altogether, the study findings ...

194 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
A. Adare1, S. Afanasiev2, Christine Angela Aidala3, N. N. Ajitanand4  +381 moreInstitutions (56)
TL;DR: In the p(T) < 4 GeV/c region dominated by thermal photons, a substantial direct-photon v(2) comparable to that of hadrons is found, whereas model calculations for thermal photons in this kinematic region underpredict the observed v( 2).
Abstract: The second Fourier component v(2) of the azimuthal anisotropy with respect to the reaction plane is measured for direct photons at midrapidity and transverse momentum (p(T)) of 1-12 GeV/c in Au + Au collisions at root s(NN) = 200 GeV. Previous measurements of this quantity for hadrons with p(T) 6 GeV/c a reduced anisotropy is interpreted in terms of a path-length dependence for parton energy loss. In this measurement with the PHENIX detector at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider we find that for p(T) > 4 GeV/c the anisotropy for direct photons is consistent with zero, which is as expected if the dominant source of direct photons is initial hard scattering. However, in the p(T) < 4 GeV/c region dominated by thermal photons, we find a substantial direct-photon v(2) comparable to that of hadrons, whereas model calculations for thermal photons in this kinematic region underpredict the observed v(2).

194 citations


Authors

Showing all 8239 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Brenda W.J.H. Penninx1701139119082
Mika Kivimäki1661515141468
Jaakko Kaprio1631532126320
Marvin Johnson1491827119520
Stanislas Dehaene14945686539
Roger Jones138998114061
Zubayer Ahammed12991259811
James Alexander12988675096
Matti J Kortelainen128118680603
Madan M. Aggarwal12488356065
Joakim Nystrand11765850146
Robert U. Newton10975342527
Dieter Røhrich10263735942
Keijo Häkkinen9942131355
Dong Jo Kim9849736272
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20241
202390
2022286
20211,666
20201,684
20191,506