- Kagome lattice
A kagome lattice is an arrangement of
lath s composed of interlaced triangles such that each point where two laths cross has four neighboring points. Although called a lattice, it is more closely related to thetrihexagonal tiling than to a mathematical lattice.Its name derives from two separate Japanese words, meaning the pattern of holes ("me", literally "eyes") in a basket ("kago"). There has been some debate about the proper way to write this term. Lately, it isunderstood that it is not strictly a Japanese word in itself and it is not the name of a person. Hence, it is proper for kagome to be written in roman font, not italic (foreign words), with a lower-case k, and without an unnecessary(pronunciation) acute accent on the last e.
Some minerals, namely jarosites and
herbertsmithite , contain layers with kagome lattice arrangement of atoms in theircrystal structure . These minerals display novel physical properties connected with geometrically frustrated magnetism. The term is much in use nowadays in the scientific literature, especially by theorists studying the magnetic properties of a theoretical kagome lattice in two or three dimensions.The term was first coined by Japanese physicist Kodi Husimi, who was working with Itiro Syôzi. The first paper [cite web | title=I. Syôzi, Prog. Theor. Phys. 6, 306 (1951).|url=http://ptp.ipap.jp/link?PTP/6/306] on the subject appeared in 1951. There is an article [cite web | title=Physics Today article on the word kagome|url=http://scitation.aip.org/journals/doc/PHTOAD-ft/vol_56/iss_2/12_1.shtml] in
Physics Today about all this.ee also
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Percolation threshold Footnotes
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