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Journal articles on the topic "Halle berry"

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Richards, Deborah. "The Halle Berry One Two:." Callaloo 27, no. 4 (2004): 1009–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/cal.2004.0171.

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Sanders, Laura. "Neuroscience: Single brain cells selectively fire in response to specific thoughts: Thinking about her face activates ‘Halle Berry’ neuron." Science News 176, no. 11 (2009): 9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/scin.5591761107.

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HALL, KIM F. "On Yearning: Reading Itinerant Shakespeare." Journal of American Studies 54, no. 1 (2019): 97–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021875819001129.

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For years the best black Shakespeare performers in America were itinerant “readers” or elocutionists. Denied access to white-dominated theatrical venues and refusing the minstrel stage, they traveled the country, usually alone, reciting key speeches and scenes from Shakespeare's works in school auditoriums, church halls and the occasional rented venue. Little is known about their audience's experiences of Shakespeare (which was often performed with other authors like Paul Laurence Dunbar). This essay experiments with using the author's personal history to interpret an anecdote from actor Richard Berry Harrison's unpublished memoir in which he recounts Frederick Douglass performing scenes from Shakespeare's Othello.
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Zhidekhina, T. V., V. A. Lavrinova, and T. S. Polunina. "Mycological profiling of raspberry cultivars in storage." Horticulture and viticulture, no. 6 (December 29, 2020): 40–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.31676/0235-2591-2020-6-40-45.

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Economic losses incurred during raspberry storage are primarily a result of fungal spoilage. This study aimed to characterise the micromycete phytopathogenic complex in stored raspberries. The fungal microbiome was assessed in six Russian raspberry cultivars (Cleopatra, Novost’ Kuzmina, Sulamiph, Fregat, Shakhrazada, Yarkaya) as well as three foreign varieties (Glen Lyon, Cascade Delight, Limonnaya). The economic and biological traits of the cultivars were studied within the “Programme and Protocol for Fruit, Berry and Nut Crops Varietal Testing”. Internal and surfacelevel contamination in infected fruit tissues was detected via the stimulation of microbial growth in a wet chamber. The micromycete species composition was assessed via commonly used methods. The following raspberry spoilage organisms were identified as being predominant. Rots: black (Alternaria alternata (Fr) Keissler), dry (Fusarium Link.), leather (Phytophthora cactorum (Leb. et Cohn) Schroet), grey (Botrytis cinerea Pers.); moulds: black (Cladosporium Link.), green-blue (Penicillium Link.), green-yellow (Aspergillus P. Micheliex Haller), grey capitate (Rhizopus nigricans Ehrenb.), capitate (Mucor spp.); drupe rot (Phragmidium rubi Wint.); bacterioses. Microbiotic profiles varied between cultivars in storage. The fungal genera Fusarium and Alternaria prevailed, with the former dominating in almost all samples. The phytopathogenic complex primarily consisted of the fungal genera Fusarium, Alternaria and Penicillium. Raspberry cultivars which had a weak (Sulamiph, Shakhrazada, Novost’ Kuzmina) or strong (Cleopatra) resistance to micromycetes in storage were identified.
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Boo, Jae Yoon, and Ju Sung Kim. "A Study on the Native Environment and Cutting Propagation for the Black-berry Magnolia Vine [Schisandra repanda (Siebold & Zucc.) Radlk] in Halla Mountain." Korean Journal of Medicinal Crop Science 28, no. 5 (2020): 354–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.7783/kjmcs.2020.28.5.354.

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Klassen, Pamela E. "The Robes of Womanhood: Dress and Authenticity among African American Methodist Women in the Nineteenth Century." Religion and American Culture: A Journal of Interpretation 14, no. 1 (2004): 39–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/rac.2004.14.1.39.

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AbstractScholars of American religion are increasingly attentive to material culture as a rich source for the analysis of religious identity and practice that is especially revealing of the relationships among doctrine, bodily comportment, social structures, and innovation. In line with this focus, this article analyses the ways nineteenth-century African American Methodist women turned to dress as a tool to communicate religious and political messages. Though other nineteenth-century Protestants also made use of the communicative powers of dress, African American women did so with a keen awareness of the ways race trumped clothing in the semiotic system of nineteenth-century America. Especially for women entering into public fora as preachers and public speakers, dress could act as a passport to legitimacy in an often hostile setting, but it was not always enough to establish oneself as a Christian lady. Considering the related traditions of plain dress and respectability within the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) church, this essay finds that AME women cultivated respectability and plainness within discourses of authenticity that tried—with some ambivalence—to use dress as a marker of the true soul beneath the fabric. Based primarily on the autobiographical and journalistic writings of women such as Jarena Lee, Amanda Berry Smith, Hallie Q. Brown, and Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, as well as accounts from AME publications such as the Christian Recorder and the Church Review, and other church documents, the essay also draws on the work of historians of African American women and historians of dress and material culture. For nineteenth-century AME women, discourses of authenticity could be both a burden and a resource, but either way they were discourses that were often remarkably critical, both of selfmotivation and of cultural markers of class, race, and gender in a world that made a fetish of whiteness.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Halle berry"

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Taillefumier, Mathieu. "Quelques mécanismes non conventionnels de l'effet Hall anormal." Phd thesis, Université Joseph Fourier (Grenoble), 2006. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00012052.

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Ce manuscrit est divisé en trois parties distinctes. les deux<br />premières parties sont axées sur l'étude de quelques mécanismes<br />intrinsèques de l'effet Hall anormal. Nous montrons notamment que la<br />diffusion des porteurs de charge par des impuretés ou des défauts<br />donne une contribution intrinsèque non négligeable à l'effet Hall<br />anormal. Nous proposons ensuite une expérience, basée sur un réseau de<br />nanocylindres magnétiques, placé au dessus d'un gaz d'électrons<br />bidimensionnel, dans laquelle les contributions intrinsèques de<br />l'effet Hall anormal sont clairement identifiables et contrôlables.<br />Enfin, nous abordons le problème du mécanisme de chiralité de spin<br />proposé pour expliquer l'effet Hall dans le composé pyrochlore<br />Nd$_2$Mo$_2$O$_7$. En utilisant un modèle de gaz sur réseau ainsi<br />qu'une configuration magnétique non colinéaire (chirale), nous<br />montrons que la conductivité transverse a une dépendance complexe par<br />rapport à la chiralité de spin.<br /><br />La dernière partie de ce manuscrit est dédiée à l'étude de quelques<br />propriétés des gaz d'électrons soumis à un champ magnétique<br />inhomogène. Après un bref rappel sur la dynamique d'électron en<br />présence d'un gradient de champ magnétique constant, nous abordons le<br />problème d'un champ magnétique périodique spatialement. En calculant<br />quelques états de Bloch aux points de haute symétrie, nous montrons qu'il<br />existe des états pour lesquels les électrons sont localisés au<br />voisinage des lignes de champ nul. Le calcul des courants de<br />probabilité montre que ces états sont porteurs de courants permanents<br />dont l'origine est liée aux inhomogénéités du champ magnétique au<br />voisinages des lignes de champ nul.
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Bamler, Robert Verfasser], Achim [Gutachter] Rosch, and Alexander [Gutachter] [Altland. "Phase-Space Berry Phases in Chiral Magnets: Skyrmion Charge, Hall Effect, and Dynamics of Magnetic Skyrmions / Robert Bamler. Gutachter: Achim Rosch ; Alexander Altland." Köln : Universitäts- und Stadtbibliothek Köln, 2016. http://d-nb.info/1113178728/34.

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Bleu, Olivier. "Physics of quantum fluids in two-dimensional topological systems." Thesis, Université Clermont Auvergne‎ (2017-2020), 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018CLFAC044/document.

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Cette thèse est consacrée à la description de la physique à une particule ainsi qu'à celle de fluides quantiques bosoniques dans des systèmes topologiques. Les deux premiers chapitres sont introductifs. Dans le premier, nous introduisons des éléments de théorie des bandes et les quantités géométriques et topologiques associées : tenseur métrique quantique, courbure de Berry, nombre de Chern. Nous discutons différents modèles et réalisations expérimentales donnant lieu à des effets topologiques. Dans le second chapitre, nous introduisons les condensats de Bose-Einstein ainsi que les excitons-polaritons de cavité.La première partie des résultats originaux discute des phénomènes topologiques à une particule dans des réseaux en nid d'abeilles. Cela permet de comparer deux modèles théoriques qui mènent à l'effet Hall quantique anormal pour les électrons et les photons dû à la présence d'un couplage spin-orbite et d'un champ Zeeman. Nous étudions aussi l'effet Hall quantique de vallée photonique à l'interface entre deux réseaux de cavités avec potentiels alternés opposés.Dans une seconde partie, nous discutons de nouveaux effets qui émergent due à la présence d'un fluide quantique interagissant décrit par l’équation de Gross-Pitaevskii dans ces systèmes. Premièrement, il est montré que les interactions spin anisotropes donnent lieu à des transitions topologiques gouvernées par la densité de particules pour les excitations élémentaires d’un condensat spineur d’exciton-polaritons.Ensuite, nous montrons que les tourbillons quantifiés d'un condensat scalaire dans un système avec effet Hall quantique de vallée, manifestent une propagation chirale le long de l'interface contrairement aux paquets d'ondes linéaires. La direction de propagation de ces derniers est donnée par leur sens de rotation donnant lieu à un transport de pseudospin de vallée protégé topologiquement, analogue à l’effet Hall quantique de spin.Enfin, revenant aux effets géométriques linéaires, nous nous sommes concentrés sur l’effet Hall anormal. Dans ce contexte, nous présentons une correction non-adiabatique aux équations semi-classiques décrivant le mouvement d’un paquet d’ondes qui s’exprime en termes du tenseur géométrique quantique. Nous proposons un protocole expérimental pour mesurer cette quantité dans des systèmes photonique radiatifs<br>This thesis is dedicated to the description of both single-particle and bosonic quantum fluid Physics in topological systems. After introductory chapters on these subjects, I first discuss single-particle topological phenomena in honeycomb lattices. This allows to compare two theoretical models leading to quantum anomalous Hall effect for electrons and photons and to discuss the photonic quantum valley Hall effect at the interface between opposite staggered cavity lattices.In a second part, I present some phenomena which emerge due to the interplay of the linear topological effects with the presence of interacting bosonic quantum fluid described by mean-field Gross-Pitaevskii equation. First, I show that the spin-anisotropic interactions lead to density-driven topological transitions for elementary excitations of a condensate loaded in the polariton quantum anomalous Hall model (thermal equilibrium and out-of-equilibrium quasi-resonant excitation configurations). Then, I show that the vortex excitations of a scalar condensate in a quantum valley Hall system, contrary to linear wavepackets, can exhibit a robust chiral propagation along the interface, with direction given by their winding in real space, leading to an analog of quantum spin Hall effect for these non-linear excitations. Finally, coming back to linear geometrical effects, I will focus on the anomalous Hall effect exhibited by an accelerated wavepacket in a two-band system. In this context, I present a non-adiabatic correction to the known semiclassical equations of motion which can be expressed in terms of the quantum geometric tensor elements. We also propose a protocol to directly measure the tensor components in radiative photonic systems
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Barnett, Katrina. "Nine Lives: A History of Cat Women, Subversive Femininity, and Transgressive Archetypes in Film." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2020. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1707290/.

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The intention of this thesis is to identify and analyze the cat woman archetype as a contemporary extension of the transgressive witch archetype, which rampantly appears over the course of cinema history, working as a signifier of a patriarchal society's fear of autonomous and subversive women. The character of Catwoman is the ultimate representation for this archetype on grounds of her visibility, longevity, and ability to return again and again. More importantly, Catwoman and her sisterhood of cat women work against male creators as a means of female empowerment through trickery. Within this thesis, key films of varying genres are drawn from throughout cinema history and analyzed in order to demonstrate the intertextual network of characters that make up the cat woman archetype, and the importance of the Catwoman character in her many forms.
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Dauphin, Alexandre. "Cold atom quantum simulation of topological phases of matter." Doctoral thesis, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/209076.

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L'étude des phases de la matière est d'un intérêt fondamental en physique. La théorie de Landau, qui est le "modèle standard" des transitions de phases, caractérise les phases de la matière en termes des brisures de symétrie, décrites par un paramètre d'ordre local. Cette théorie a permis la description de phénomènes remarquables tels que la condensation de Bose-Einstein, la supraconductivité et la superfluidité.<p><p>Il existe cependant des phases qui échappent à la description de Landau. Il s'agit des phases quantiques topologiques. Celles-ci constituent un nouveau paradigme et sont caractérisées par un ordre global défini par un invariant topologique. Ce dernier classe les objets ou systèmes de la manière suivante: deux objets appartiennent à la même classe topologique s'il est possible de déformer continument le premier objet en le second. Cette propriété globale rend le système robuste contre des perturbations locales telles que le désordre. <p><p>Les atomes froids constituent une plateforme idéale pour simuler les phases quantiques topologiques. Depuis l'invention du laser, les progrès en physique atomique et moléculaire ont permis un contrôle de la dynamique et des états internes des atomes. La réalisation de gaz quantiques,tels que les condensats de Bose-Einstein et les gaz dégénérés de Fermi, ainsi que la réalisation de réseaux optiques à l'aide de faisceaux lasers, permettent d'étudier ces nouvelles phases de la matière et de simuler aussi la physique du solide cristallin.<p><p>Dans cette thèse, nous nous concentrons sur l'etude d'isolants topologiques avec des atomes froids. Ces derniers sont isolants de volume mais possèdent des états de surface qui sont conducteurs, protégés par un invariant topologique. Nous traitons trois sujets principaux. Le premier sujet concerne la génération dynamique d'un isolant topologique de Mott. Ici, les interactions engendrent l'isolant topologique et ce, sans champ de jauge de fond. Le second sujet concerne la détection des isolants topologiques dans les expériences d'atomes froids. Nous proposons deux méthodes complémentaires pour caractériser celles-ci. Finalement, le troisième sujet aborde des thèmes au-delà de la définition standard d'isolant topologique. Nous avons d'une part proposé un algorithme efficace pour calculer la conductivité de Berry, la contribution topologique à la conductivité transverse lorsque l'énergie de Fermi se trouve dans une bande d'énergie. D'autre part, nous avons utilisé des méthodes pour caractériser les propriétés quantiques topologiques de systèmes non-périodiques.<p><p>L'étude des isolants topologiques dans les expériences d'atomes froids est un sujet de recherche récent et en pleine expansion. Dans ce contexte, cette thèse apporte plusieurs contributions théoriques pour la simulation de systèmes quantiques sur réseau avec des atomes froids.<br>Doctorat en Sciences<br>info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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Delplace, Pierre. "ÉTATS DE BORD ET CÔNES DE DIRAC DANS DES CRISTAUX BIDIMENSIONNELS." Phd thesis, Université Paris Sud - Paris XI, 2010. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00607781.

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Cette thèse en physique constitue une étude théorique des états de bord dans des cristaux bidimensionnels qui exhibent deux cônes de Dirac (dégénérés en spin) dans leur relation de dispersion. Les deux systèmes considérés sont le graphène d'une part, et le réseau carré traversé d'un demi quantum de flux magnétique d'autre part. L'accent est mis sur la description analytique des niveaux d'énergie dispersifs sous fort champ magnétique (régime de l'effet Hall quantique), à l'approche du bord. Selon la géométrie du réseau cristallin et la forme du bord considéré, différents types de couplage sont induits sur les composantes de la fonction d'onde, donnant lieu à des structures d'états de bord différentes mais qui peuvent néanmoins être décrites de façon communes. En l'absence de champ magnétique, des états de bord peuvent également exister dans ces systèmes, mais ceux-ci ont une origine différente et leur existence même dépend de la nature des bords. Dans le cas du graphène, on montre comment comprendre l'existence de tels états en terme d'une phase de Berry particulière, appelée phase de Zak. Cette approche permet entre autre de comprendre comment manipuler ces états de bord en induisant une transition topologique de la phase de Zak à partir des paramètres de volume. Un autre type de transition topologique est également étudié. Il s'agit de la fusion des cônes de Dirac dans le réseau carré à demi flux. On montre que le mécanisme donnant lieu à ce phénomène est totalement différent de celui connu dans le graphène, et que le voisinage de la transition peut toutefois être décrit avec le même Hamiltonien effectif. Une partie plus courte traite de la localisation faible sur un cylindre désordonné en présence d'interactions électroniques. Le but de cette étude est d'illustrer le rôle de la géométrie sur les mécanismes de décohérence dus aux interactions électron-électron dans les systèmes diffusifs. Les harmoniques de la correction de localisation faible alors calculées mettent en évidence différents régimes qui permettent de sonder les différentes échelles de longueur caractérisant la décohérence. Ces longueurs révèlent la sensibilité des processus cohérents à la géométrie, et sont caractérisées par des lois de puissance en température spécifiques.
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Yang, Shengyuan. "Berry phase related effects in ferromagnetic metal materials." Thesis, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-3213.

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The concept of Berry phase, since its proposition in 1984, has found numerous applications and appears in almost every branch of physics today. In this work, we study several physical effects in ferromagnetic metal materials which are manifestations of the Berry phase. We first show that when a domain wall in a ferromagnetic nanowire is undergoing precessional motion, it pumps an electromotive force which follows a universal Josephson-type relation. We discover that the integral of the electromotive force over one pumping cycle is a quantized topological invariant equal to integer multiples of h/e, which does not depend on the domain wall geometry nor its detailed dynamic evolution. In particular, when a domain wall in a nanowire is driven by a constant magnetic field, we predict that the generated electromotive force is proportional to the applied field with a simple coefficient consisting of only fundamental constants. Our theoretical prediction has been successfully confirmed by experiments. Similar effect known as spin pumping occurs in magnetic multilayer heterostructures, where a precessing free magnetic layer pumps a spin current into its adjacent normal metal layers. Based on this effect, we propose two magnetic nanodevices that can be useful in future spintronics applications: the magnetic Josephson junction and the magneto-dynamic battery. The magnetic Josephson junction has a drastic increase in resistance when the applied current exceeds a critical value determined by the magnetic anisotropy. The magneto-dynamic battery acts as a conventional charge battery in a circuit with well-defined electromotive force and internal resistance. We investigate the condition under which the power output and efficiency of the battery can be optimized. Finally we study the side jump contribution in the anomalous Hall effect of a uniformly magnetized ferromagnetic metal. The side jump contribution, although arises from disorder scattering, was believed to be independent of both the scattering strength and the disorder density. Nevertheless, we find that it has a sensitive dependence on the spin structure of the disorder potential. We therefore propose a classification scheme of disorder scattering according to their spin structures. When two or more classes of disorders are present, the value of side jump is no longer fixed but depends on the relative disorder strength between classes. Due to this competition, the side jump contribution could flow from one class dominated limit to another class dominated limit when certain system control parameter changes. Our result indicates that the magnon scattering plays a role distinct from the normal impurity scattering and the phonon scattering in the anomalous Hall effect, because they belong to different scattering classes.<br>text
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Wang, Xinjie. "First-principles calculation of dynamical properties of insulators in finite electric fields and anomalous Hall conductivity of ferromagnets based on Berry phase approach." 2007. http://hdl.rutgers.edu/1782.2/rucore10001600001.ETD.16791.

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Noky, Jonathan. "Anomalous electric, thermal, and thermoelectric transport in magnetic topological metals and semimetals." 2020. https://tud.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A75712.

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In den letzten Jahren führte die Verbindung zwischen Topologie und kondensierter Materie zur Entdeckung vieler interessanter und exotischer elektronischer Effekte. Während sich die Forschung anfangs auf elektronische Systeme mit einer Bandlücke wie den topologischen Isolator konzentrierte, erhalten in letzter Zeit topologische Halbmetalle viel Aufmerksamkeit. Das bekannteste Beispiel sind Weyl-Halbmetalle, die an beliebigen Punkten in der Brillouin-Zone lineare Kreuzungen von nicht entarteten Bändern aufweist. An diese Punkte ist eine spezielle Quantenzahl namens Chiralität gebunden, die die Existenz von Weyl-Punktpaaren erzwingt. Diese Paare sind topologisch geschützt und wirken als Quellen und Senken der Berry-Krümmung, einem topologischen Feld im reziproken Raum. Diese Berry-Krümmung steht in direktem Zusammenhang mit dem anomalen Hall-Effekt, der die Entstehung einer Querspannung aus einem Längsstrom in einem magnetischen Material beschreibt. Analog existiert auch der anomale Nernst-Effekt, bei dem der longitudinale Strom durch einen thermischen Gradienten ersetzt wird. Dieser Effekt ermöglicht die Umwandlung von Wärme in elektrische Energie und ist zudem stark an die Berry-Krümmung gebunden. In dieser Arbeit werden die anomalen Transporteffekte zunächst in fundamentalen Modellsystemen untersucht. Hier wird eine Kombination aus analytischen und numerischen Methoden verwendet, um Quantisierungen sowohl des Hall- und Nernst- als auch des thermischen Hall-Effekts in zweidimensionalen Systemen mit und ohne externen Magnetfeldern zu zeigen. Eine Erweiterung in drei Dimensionen zeigt eine Quasi-Quantisierung, bei der die Leitfähigkeiten Werte der jeweiligen zweidimensionalen Quanten skaliert durch charakteristische Wellenvektoren annehmen. Im nächsten Schritt werden verschiedene Mechanismen zur Erzeugung starker Berry-Krümmung und damit großer anomaler Hall- und Nernst-Effekte sowohl in Modellsystemen als auch in realen Materialien untersucht. Dies ermöglicht die Identifizierung und Isolierung vielversprechender Effekte in den einfachen Modellen, in denen wichtige Merkmale untersucht werden können. Die Ergebnisse können dann auf die realen Materialien übertragen werden, wo die jeweiligen Effekte erkennbar sind. Hier werden sowohl Weyl-Punkte als auch Knotenlinien in Kombination mit Magnetismus als vielversprechende Eigenschaften identifiziert und Materialrealisierungen in der Klasse der Heusler-Verbindungen vorgeschlagen. Diese Verbindungen sind eine sehr vielseitige Materialklasse, in der unter anderem auch magnetische topologische Metalle zu finden sind. Um ein tieferes Verständnis der anomalen Transporteffekte zu erhalten sowie Faustregeln für Hochleistungsverbindungen abzuleiten, wurde eine High-Throughput-Rechnung von magnetisch-kubischen Voll-Heusler-Verbindungen durchgeführt. Diese Berechnung zeigt die Bedeutung von Spiegelebenen in magnetischen Materialien für große anomale Hall- und Nernst-Effekte und zeigt, dass einige der Heusler-Verbindungen die höchsten bisher berichteten Literaturwerte bei diesen Effekten übertreffen. Auch andere interessante Effekte im Zusammenhang mit Weyl-Punkten werden untersucht. Beim bekannten Weyl-Halbmetall NbP weisen die Weyl-Punkte aufgrund der hohen Symmetrie des Kristalls eine hohe Entartung auf. Die Anwendung von einachsigem Zug reduziert jedoch die Symmetrien und hebt damit die Entartungen auf. Eine theoretische Untersuchung zeigt, dass die Weyl-Punkte bei einachsigem Zug energetisch verschoben werden und, was noch wichtiger ist, dass sie bei realistischen Werten das Fermi-Niveau durchschreiten. Dies macht NbP zu einer vielversprechenden Plattform, um die Weyl-Physik weiter zu untersuchen. Die theoretischen Ergebnisse werden mit experimentellen Messungen von Shubnikov-de-Haas-Oszillationen unter einachsigem Zug kombiniert und es wird eine gute Übereinstimmung mit den theoretischen Ergebnissen gefunden. Als erster Schritt in Richtung neuer Berechnungsmethoden wird die Idee eines Weyl-Halbmetall-basierten Chiralitätsfilters für Elektronen untersucht. An der Grenzfläche zweier Weyl-Halbmetalle kann in Abhängigkeit von den genauen Weyl-Punktparametern nur eine Chiralität übertragen werden. Hier wird ein effektives geometrisches Modell erstellt und zur Untersuchung realer Materialgrenzflächen eingesetzt. Während im Allgemeinen eine Filterwirkung möglich erscheint, zeigten die untersuchten Materialien keine geeignete Kombination. Hier können weitere Studien mit Fokus auf magnetische Weyl-Halbmetalle oder Multifold-Fermion-Materialien durchgeführt werden.:List of publications Preface 1. Theoretical background 1.1. Berry curvature and Weyl semimetals 1.1.1. From the adiabatic evolution to the Berry phase 1.1.2. From the Berry phase to the Berry curvature 1.1.3. Topological phases of condensed matter 1.1.4. Weyl semimetals 1.1.5. Dirac semimetals 1.1.6. Nodal line semimetals 1.2. Density-functional theory 1.2.1. Born-Oppenheimer approximation 1.2.2. Hohenberg-Kohn theorems 1.2.3. Kohn-Sham formalism 1.2.4. Exchange-correlation functional 1.2.5. Pseudopotentials 1.2.6. Basis functions 1.2.7. VASP 1.3. Tight-binding Hamiltonian from Wannier functions 1.3.1. Wannier functions 1.3.2. Constructing Wannier functions from DFT 1.3.3. Generating a Wannier tight-binding Hamiltonian 1.3.4. Necessity of the tight-binding Hamiltonian 1.4. Linear response theory 1.4.1. General introduction to linear response 1.4.2. Anomalous Hall effect 1.4.3. Anomalous Nernst effect 1.4.4. Anomalous thermal Hall effect 1.4.5. Common features of anomalous transport effects 1.4.6. Symmetry considerations for Berry curvature related transport effects 1.4.7. Magneto-optic Kerr effect 1.4.8. About the efficiency of the calculations 2. (Quasi-)Quantization in the Hall, thermal Hall, and Nernst effects 2.1. Quantization with an external magnetic field 2.1.1. Two-dimensional case 2.1.2. Three-dimensional case 2.2. Quantization without an external field 2.2.1. Two-dimensional case 2.2.2. Three-dimensional case . 2.3. A remark on the spin Hall effect 2.4. A remark on the quasi-quantization of the three-dimensional conductivities 2.5. Conclusions 3. Understanding anomalous transport 3.1. Anomalous transport without a net magnetic moment 3.1.1. Toy model 3.1.2. Ti2MnAl and related compounds 3.2. Large Berry curvature enhancement from nodal line gapping 3.2.1. Toy model 3.2.2. Fe2MnP and related compounds 3.2.3. Co2MnGa 3.3. Topological features away from the Fermi level and the anomalous Nernst effect 3.3.1. Toy model . 3.3.2. Co2FeGe and Co2FeSn 3.4. Conclusions 4. Heusler database calculation 4.1. Workflow 4.2. Importance of mirror planes 4.3. The right valence electron count 4.4. Correlation between anomalous Hall and Nernst effects 4.5. Selected special compounds 4.6. Conclusions 5. NbP under uniaxial strain 5.1. NbP and its symmetries 5.2. The influence of strain on the electronic structure 5.2.1. Shifting of the Weyl points 5.2.2. Splitting of the Fermi surfaces 5.3. Comparison with experimental results 5.4. Conclusions 6. A tunable chirality filter 6.1. Concept 6.2. Geometrical simplification and expansion for more Weyl points 6.3. Material selection 6.3.1. Workflow 6.3.2. Results for NbP and TaAs 6.3.3. Results for Ag2Se and Ag2S 6.4. Conclusions and perspective . Summary and outlook A. Numerical tricks A.1. Hamiltonian setup at several k points at once A.2. Precalculating prefactors B. Derivation of the conductivity (quasi-)quanta B.1. Two dimensions B.1.1. General formula and necessary approximations B.1.2. Useful integrals B.1.4. Quantized thermal Hall effect B.1.5. Quantized Nernst effect B.1.6. Flat bands and the Nernst effect B.2. Three dimensions B.2.1. General formula B.2.2. Three-dimensional electron gas B.2.3. Three-dimensional Weyl semimetal C. Heusler database tables D. Details on the NbP strain calculations E. Details on the geometrical matching procedure References List of abbreviations List of Figures List of Tables Acknowledgements Eigenständigkeitserklärung<br>In recent years, the connection between topology and condensed matter resulted in the discovery of many interesting and exotic electronic effects. While in the beginning, the research was focused on gapped electronic systems like the topological insulator, more recently, topological semimetals are getting a lot of attention. The most well-known example is the Weyl semimetal, which hosts linear crossings of non-degenerate bands at arbitrary points in the Brillouin zone. Tied to these points there is a special quantum number called chirality, which enforces the existence of Weyl point pairs. These pairs are topologically protected and act as sources and sinks of the Berry curvature, a topological field in reciprocal space. This Berry curvature is directly connected to the anomalous Hall effect, which describes the emergence of a transverse voltage from a longitudinal current in a magnetic material. Analogously, there also exists the anomalous Nernst effect, where the longitudinal current is replaced by a thermal gradient. This effect allows for the conversion of heat into electrical energy and is also strongly tied to the Berry curvature. In this work, the anomalous transport effects are at first studied in fundamental model systems. Here, a combination of analytical and numerical methods is used to reveal quantizations in both the Hall, the Nernst, and the thermal Hall effects in two-dimensional systems with and without external magnetic fields. An expansion into three dimensions shows a quasi-quantization, where the conductivities take values of the respective two-dimensional quanta scaled by characteristic wavevectors. In the next step, several mechanisms for the generation of strong Berry curvature and thus large anomalous Hall and Nernst effects are studied in both model systems and real materials. This allows for the identification and isolation of promising effects in the simple models, where important features can be studied. The results can then be applied to the real materials, where the respective effects can be recognized. Here, both Weyl points and nodal lines in combination with magnetism are identified as promising features and material realizations are proposed in the class of Heusler compounds. These compounds are a very versatile class of materials, where among others also magnetic topological metals can be found. To get a deeper understanding of the anomalous transport effects as well as to derive guidelines for high-performance compounds, a high-throughput calculation of magnetic cubic full Heusler compounds was carried out. This calculation reveals the importance of mirror planes in magnetic materials for large anomalous Hall and Nernst effects and shows that some of the Heusler compounds outperform the highest so-far reported literature values in these effects. Also other interesting effects related to Weyl points are investigated. In the well-known Weyl semimetal NbP, the Weyl points have a high degeneracy due to the high symmetry of the crystal. However, the application of uniaxial strain reduces the symmetries and therefore lifts the degeneracies. A theoretical investigation shows, that the Weyl points are moved in energy under uniaxial strain and, more importantly, that at reasonable strain values they cross the Fermi level. This renders NbP a promising platform to further study Weyl physics. The theoretical results are combined with experimental measurements of Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations under uniaxial strain and a good agreement with the theoretical results is found. As a first step in the direction of new ways of computation, an idea of a Weyl semimetal based chirality filter for electrons is investigated. At the interface of two Weyl semimetals, depending on the exact Weyl point parameters, it is possible to transmit only one chirality. Here, an effective geometrical model is established and employed for the investigation of real material interfaces. While in general, a filtering effect seems possible, the investigated materials did not show any suitable combination. Here, further studies can be made with the focus on either magnetic Weyl semimetals of multifold-fermion materials.:List of publications Preface 1. Theoretical background 1.1. Berry curvature and Weyl semimetals 1.1.1. From the adiabatic evolution to the Berry phase 1.1.2. From the Berry phase to the Berry curvature 1.1.3. Topological phases of condensed matter 1.1.4. Weyl semimetals 1.1.5. Dirac semimetals 1.1.6. Nodal line semimetals 1.2. Density-functional theory 1.2.1. Born-Oppenheimer approximation 1.2.2. Hohenberg-Kohn theorems 1.2.3. Kohn-Sham formalism 1.2.4. Exchange-correlation functional 1.2.5. Pseudopotentials 1.2.6. Basis functions 1.2.7. VASP 1.3. Tight-binding Hamiltonian from Wannier functions 1.3.1. Wannier functions 1.3.2. Constructing Wannier functions from DFT 1.3.3. Generating a Wannier tight-binding Hamiltonian 1.3.4. Necessity of the tight-binding Hamiltonian 1.4. Linear response theory 1.4.1. General introduction to linear response 1.4.2. Anomalous Hall effect 1.4.3. Anomalous Nernst effect 1.4.4. Anomalous thermal Hall effect 1.4.5. Common features of anomalous transport effects 1.4.6. Symmetry considerations for Berry curvature related transport effects 1.4.7. Magneto-optic Kerr effect 1.4.8. About the efficiency of the calculations 2. (Quasi-)Quantization in the Hall, thermal Hall, and Nernst effects 2.1. Quantization with an external magnetic field 2.1.1. Two-dimensional case 2.1.2. Three-dimensional case 2.2. Quantization without an external field 2.2.1. Two-dimensional case 2.2.2. Three-dimensional case . 2.3. A remark on the spin Hall effect 2.4. A remark on the quasi-quantization of the three-dimensional conductivities 2.5. Conclusions 3. Understanding anomalous transport 3.1. Anomalous transport without a net magnetic moment 3.1.1. Toy model 3.1.2. Ti2MnAl and related compounds 3.2. Large Berry curvature enhancement from nodal line gapping 3.2.1. Toy model 3.2.2. Fe2MnP and related compounds 3.2.3. Co2MnGa 3.3. Topological features away from the Fermi level and the anomalous Nernst effect 3.3.1. Toy model . 3.3.2. Co2FeGe and Co2FeSn 3.4. Conclusions 4. Heusler database calculation 4.1. Workflow 4.2. Importance of mirror planes 4.3. The right valence electron count 4.4. Correlation between anomalous Hall and Nernst effects 4.5. Selected special compounds 4.6. Conclusions 5. NbP under uniaxial strain 5.1. NbP and its symmetries 5.2. The influence of strain on the electronic structure 5.2.1. Shifting of the Weyl points 5.2.2. Splitting of the Fermi surfaces 5.3. Comparison with experimental results 5.4. Conclusions 6. A tunable chirality filter 6.1. Concept 6.2. Geometrical simplification and expansion for more Weyl points 6.3. Material selection 6.3.1. Workflow 6.3.2. Results for NbP and TaAs 6.3.3. Results for Ag2Se and Ag2S 6.4. Conclusions and perspective . Summary and outlook A. Numerical tricks A.1. Hamiltonian setup at several k points at once A.2. Precalculating prefactors B. Derivation of the conductivity (quasi-)quanta B.1. Two dimensions B.1.1. General formula and necessary approximations B.1.2. Useful integrals B.1.4. Quantized thermal Hall effect B.1.5. Quantized Nernst effect B.1.6. Flat bands and the Nernst effect B.2. Three dimensions B.2.1. General formula B.2.2. Three-dimensional electron gas B.2.3. Three-dimensional Weyl semimetal C. Heusler database tables D. Details on the NbP strain calculations E. Details on the geometrical matching procedure References List of abbreviations List of Figures List of Tables Acknowledgements Eigenständigkeitserklärung
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Liu, Xiongjun. "Theory of the Anomalous Hall Effect in the Insulating Regime." Thesis, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2011-08-10102.

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The Hall resistivity in ferromagnetic materials has an anomalous contribution proportional to the magnetization, which is defined as the anomalous Hall effect (AHE). Being a central topic in the study of ferromagnetic materials for many decades, the AHE was revived in recent years by generating many new understandings and phenomena, e.g. spin-Hall effect, topological insulators. The phase diagram of the AHE was shown recently to exhibit three distinct regions: a skew scattering region in the high conductivity regime, a scattering-independent normal metal regime, and an insulating regime. While the origin of the metallic regime scaling has been understood for many decades through the expected dependence of each contribution, the origin of the surprising scaling in the insulating regime was completely unexplained, leaving the primary challenge to the last step to understand fully the AHE. In this dissertation work we developed a theory to study the AHE in the disordered insulating regime, whose scaling relation is observed to be omega_xy^AH is proportional to omega_xx^(1.40∼1.75) in a large range of materials. This scaling is qualitatively different from the ones observed in metals. In the metallic regime where kFl > > 1, the linear response theory predicts that omega_xx is proportional to the quasi-particle lifetime tau, while omega_xy^AH scales as alpha*tau beta*tau^0, indicating that the upper limit of the scaling exponent is 1.0. Basing our theory on the phonon-assisted hopping mechanism and percolation theory, we derived a general formula for the anomalous Hall conductivity (AHC), and showed that the AHC scales with the longitudinal conductivity as omega_xy^AH ~ omega_xx^gamma with gamma predicted to be 1.33 <= gamma <= 1.76, quantitatively in agreement with the experimental observations. This scaling remains similar regardless of whether the hopping process is long range type (varible range hopping) or short range type (activation E3 hopping), or is influenced by interactions, i.e. Efros-Shklovskii (E-S) regime. Our theory completes the understanding of the AHE phase diagram in the insulating regime.
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Books on the topic "Halle berry"

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Uschan, Michael V. Halle Berry. Lucent Books, 2012.

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Hinds, Maurene J. Halle Berry. Mason Crest Publishers, 2008.

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Uschan, Michael V. Halle Berry. Lucent Books, 2012.

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Halle Berry. Raintree, 2005.

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Halle Berry. Weigl Publishers, 2005.

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Rose, Blue, ed. Halle Berry. Chelsea House Publishers, 2002.

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Sapet, Kerrily. Halle Berry. Mason Crest Publishers, Inc., 2009.

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Parish, James Robert. Halle Berry: Actor. Ferguson, 2005.

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Halle Berry: A biography. Greenwood, 2010.

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Johnson, Melissa Ewey. Halle Berry: A biography. Greenwood, 2010.

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Book chapters on the topic "Halle berry"

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Woldu, Gail Hilson. "“Don’t I look like a Halle Berry poster?”." In The Routledge Companion to Popular Music and Humor. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351266642-47.

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Litvinov, Vladimir. "Hall Effects and Berry Phase." In Magnetism in Topological Insulators. Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-12053-5_2.

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"8 Angela Bassett and Halle Berry: African American Leading Ladies." In Pretty People. Rutgers University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.36019/9780813553252-010.

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Mitchell, Jasmine. "Reinventing the Mulatta in the United States for the 2000s." In Imagining the Mulatta. University of Illinois Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043284.003.0005.

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This chapter illustrates how mixed black women are moralized, pathologized, or eroticized in the public imaginary through an analysis of the film Monster’s Ball (2001) starring Halle Berry and the television series The L Word (2004-9) featuring Jennifer Beals. These two cultural productions serve as examples of the management and disciplining of blackness through sexuality and consumer citizenship. Illuminating how the historical specter of the mulatta figure both haunts and rearticulates discourses of multiculturalism and postrace in the 2000s, Monster’s Ball and The L Word both represent the anxieties and desires of an acceptable blackness that can be brought into civil society or contained.
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Mitchell, Jasmine. "Framing Blackness and Mixedness." In Imagining the Mulatta. University of Illinois Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043284.003.0003.

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Chapter 2 focuses on mass-market newspaper and magazine depictions of actresses Jennifer Beals and Halle Berry in the United States and Camila Pitanga in Brazil. The chapter begins by laying out the national policy debates such as census racial categories and affirmative action in the 1990s and 2000s in order to relate how the media framing of these celebrities engages with changing ideas of race while at the same time furthering feminized racial commodification. Examining how these actresses negotiate and position themselves in relation to racial categories and racial discourses, the chapter explores how mixed black female celebrities serve as lightning rods for discussions of race, gender, and sexuality.
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Whaley, Deborah Elizabeth. "Neo-Passing and Dissociative Identities as Affective Strategies in Frankie and Alice." In Neo-Passing. University of Illinois Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252041587.003.0013.

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This chapter interprets dissociative identity as a neo-passing narrative through an examination of capacity and incapacity in the film Frankie and Alice. The film, starring actor Halle Berry, oscillates from the late 1950s to the early 1970s, showing neo-passing and dissociative identity in the 1970s as a response to the social, racial, and sexual landscape of the 1950s. Purportedly based on a true story, Frankie and Alice challenges spectators to consider the implications of racial and sexual trauma in passing between and through alternative identities. This chapter argues that neo-passing and dissociative identity constitute performances of identity that generate from historical and social relations and produce psychological and material manifestations of recoded difference.
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Hofstadter, Douglas. "The Berry phase and the quantum Hall effect." In Butterfly in the Quantum World The story of the most fascinating quantum fractal. IOP Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/978-1-6817-4117-8ch9.

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"Gurney Norman." In Writing Appalachia, edited by Katherine Ledford and Theresa Lloyd. University Press of Kentucky, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813178790.003.0053.

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Gurney Norman was born in the coalfields of Virginia in 1937 and spent his childhood under the care of his grandparents in that state and Kentucky. As an undergraduate student at the University of Kentucky, Norman met future writers Wendell Berry, James Baker Hall, and Bobbie Ann Mason. Norman continued his study of writing at Stanford University. From 1963 to 1965 Norman worked as a reporter at the ...
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Gorman, Sara E., and Jack M. Gorman. "Confirmation Bias." In Denying to the Grave. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199396603.003.0007.

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One of America’s greatest scientists summarized confirmation bias well when he quipped, “I wouldn’t have seen it if I didn’t believe it.”That scientist was the great Hall of Famer and New York Yankee baseball player Yogi Berra. How do we know Yogi Berra said that? One of us once heard someone say that he did, and it sounds like the kind of thing that has been attributed to him. Of course, there are those who say that Yogi didn’t say many of the things attributed to him and that there are actually perfectly logical explanations for some of the seemingly nonsensical statements he allegedly did utter. But we don’t care about any of that. We love the line, it makes our point well, and we are going to stick to the Yogi attribu¬tion no matter what kind of disconfirming evidence crops up. As Yogi might have said, “When you come to a piece of evidence that doesn’t agree with what you already believe, tear it to shreds and then ignore it.” Confirmation bias refers to our tendency to attend only to information that agrees with what we already think is true. Notice that we did not simply say that this bias involves ignoring evidence that is incompatible with our beliefs but rather that it is an active process in which we selectively pay attention to those things that confirm our hypotheses. Confirmation bias is responsible for not only a great deal of denial of scientific evidence but also the actual generation and maintenance of incorrect scientific information. That is, scientists, doctors, and public health experts are as prone as anyone else is to “seeing what we believe,” making it especially difficult to help people sort out what is true science from the mistakes and outright fabrications. As we will see, confirmation bias is strongly rooted in primitive needs and emotion and therefore not amenable to correction merely by reciting facts. Although confirmation bias is irrational in the sense that it does not take into consideration evidence, it is still frequently adaptive and even necessary.
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Allison, Penelope M. "House I 10,2–3." In The Insula of the Menander at Pompeii. Oxford University Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199263127.003.0029.

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According to Elia, this area had been a ‘cubiculum’, that was later adapted as a ‘bottega’ or ‘taberna’ and decorated in the Fourth Style. Remains of painted plaster on the walls suggest that the decoration had been cursory. An L-shaped masonry counter ran west from the east door jamb of the entrance, and then south. It was plastered and painted red, decorated with plants, and had two dolia inset into the centre of the southern branch. At the southern end of this bench was a masonry fornello, of which only the base and east wall was extant at the time of excavation. Disturbed volcanic deposit was encountered 2.5 m above the pavement. The only loose finds were made on the counter. They consisted of three bronze coins, one Republican and one dating to ad 37–8. The fixtures in this area, and the graffiti at the entrance to the house, have been used as evidence that this was a shop for the heating and dispensing of food. The apparent state of the fornello suggests that it was not in use at the time of the eruption. Loose finds may have been removed after the eruption, as suggested by the breaches in the walls, or possibly during clearing of the façade. However, the complete lack of recorded finds supports an inference that it was not operating as a going concern prior to the eruption. Similar conditions were observed by Berry for the so-called ‘caupona’ in House I 9,11, from which she concluded that it was not functioning in ad 79. This entranceway led to hall 4, off which most of the rooms in this house opened. Ling notes evidence of wall plaster but no decoration was recorded by Elia. In the east wall, 1.15 m above the floor and 0.82 m from the south end, was a semi-circular lararium niche with traces of a protecting door and an associated inscription: ‘Lares Augusti’. Disturbed volcanic deposit was encountered 2.5 m above the pavement of this entranceway. The finds from the actual entrance consisted of iron fragments, which would have been part of the closing system for the street door, and a marble base.
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Conference papers on the topic "Halle berry"

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Kim, Edward, Darryl Hannan, and Garrett Kenyon. "Deep Sparse Coding for Invariant Multimodal Halle Berry Neurons." In 2018 IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cvpr.2018.00122.

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Milione, Giovanni, Martin P. J. Laverly, Miles J. Padgett, and Robert R. Alfano. "Pancharatnam-Berry phase and Hall effect of Vector Light Beams." In Frontiers in Optics. OSA, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/fio.2012.ftu1f.5.

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TOKURA, Y., and Y. TAGUCHI. "CONTROL OF SPIN CHIRALITY, BERRY PHASE, AND ANOMALOUS HALL EFFECT." In Proceedings of the 8th International Symposium. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812773210_0029.

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Kormányos, Andor, Viktor Zólyomi, Vladimir I. Fal'ko, and Guido Burkard. "Tunable Berry curvature, valley and spin Hall effect in Bilayer MoS2." In Spintronics XII, edited by Henri-Jean M. Drouhin, Jean-Eric Wegrowe, and Manijeh Razeghi. SPIE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2527691.

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Ling, Xiaohui, Xunong Yi, Zhaoming Luo, Yachao Liu, Hailu Luo, and Shuangchun Wen. "Manipulation of photonic spin Hall effect with space-variant Pancharatnam-Berry phase." In SPIE/COS Photonics Asia, edited by Zhiping Zhou and Kazumi Wada. SPIE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2064262.

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McCann, Edward, та Vladimir I. Fal’ko. "Berry phase 2π quasiparticles, Landau level degeneracy and quantum Hall effect in a bilayer of graphene". У PHYSICS OF SEMICONDUCTORS: 28th International Conference on the Physics of Semiconductors - ICPS 2006. AIP, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2730042.

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