6,782 research outputs found
Two-photon annihilation in the pair formation cascades in pulsar polar caps
The importance of the photon-photon pair production process () to form pair production cascades in pulsar
polar caps is investigated within the framework of the Ruderman-Sutherland
vacuum gap model. It is found that this process is unimportant if the polar
caps are not hot enough, but will play a non-negligible role in the pair
formation cascades when the polar cap temperatures are in excess of the
critical temperatures, , which are around when
s and will slowly increase with increasing periods. Compared with the
process, it is found that the two-photon annihilation process may
ignite a central spark near the magnetic pole, where sparks can not
be formed due to the local weak curvatures. This central spark is large if the
gap is dominated by the ``resonant ICS mode''. The possible connection of these
central sparks with the observed pulsar ``core'' emission components is
discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 3 Postscript figures, LaTex, accepted for publication in
Astronomy and Astrophysic
Estiamte of the two-photon exchange effect on deuteron electromagnetic form factors
The corrections of two-photon exchange on deuteron electromagnetic form
factors are estimated based on an effective Lagrangian approach. Numerical
results for the form factors of the deuteron with the corrections
are compared to its empirical ones. Moreover, the two new form factors, due to
the two-photon exchange, are analyzed. Possible way to test the two-photon
exchange corrections to the deuteron form factors is discussed.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figure
Is Gamma-ray Absorption by Induced Electric Fields Important in the Pulsar Magnetospheres?
Although the unified formula for gamma-ray absorption process involving both
the magnetic field and a perpendicular electric field derived by Daugherty &
Lerche (1975) is correct, we argued in this paper that their conclusion that
the induced electric fields are important in the pair formation process in the
pulsar magnetospheres is wrong and misleading. The key point is that usually
the direction of a gamma photon at the emission point observed in the
laboratory frame should be (v/c, 0, [1-(v/c)^2]^{1/2}) rather than (0, 0, 1),
where v is the co-rotating velocity. This emission direction is just the one
which results in zero attenuation coefficient of the gamma photon. Calculation
shows that after the photon has moved a distance, its direction lead to the
result that the induced electric field is also of minor importance. Thus only
gamma-B process is the important mechanism for the pair production in the
pulsar magnetospheres. The implications of the modification by ejecting the
induced electric field are also discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 2 Postscript figures, LaTeX, some miscomments on the
references of Harding et al are modified, Accepted for publication in
Astronomy and Astrophysics Letter
What if pulsars are born as strange stars?
The possibility and the implications of the idea, that pulsars are born as
strange stars, are explored. Strange stars are very likely to have atmospheres
with typical mass of but bare polar caps almost
throughout their lifetimes, if they are produced during supernova explosions. A
direct consequence of the bare polar cap is that the binding energies of both
positively and negatively charged particles at the bare quark surface are
nearly infinity, so that the vacuum polar gap sparking scenario as proposed by
Ruderman & Sutherland should operate above the cap, regardless of the sense of
the magnetic pole with respect to the rotational pole. Heat can not accumulate
on the polar cap region due to the large thermal conductivity on the bare quark
surface. We test this ``bare polar cap strange star'' (BPCSS) idea with the
present broad band emission data of pulsars, and propose several possible
criteria to distinguish BPCSSs from neutron stars.Comment: 31 pages in Latex. Accepted by AstroParticle Physic
A virtual approach to evaluate therapies for management of multiple myeloma induced bone disease: Modelling Therapies for Multiple Myeloma Induced Bone Disease
Multiple myeloma bone disease is devastating for patients and a major cause of morbidity. The disease leads to bone destruction by inhibiting osteoblast activity while stimulating osteoclast activity. Recent advances in multiple myeloma research have improved our understanding of the pathogenesis of multiple myeloma-induced bone disease and suggest several potential therapeutic strategies. However, the effectiveness of some potential therapeutic strategies still requires further investigation and optimization. In this paper, a recently developed mathematical model is extended to mimic and then evaluate three therapies of the disease, namely: bisphosphonates, bortezomib and TGF-β inhibition. The model suggests that bisphosphonates and bortezomib treatments not only inhibit bone destruction, but also reduce the viability of myeloma cells. This contributes to the current debate as to whether bisphosphonate therapy has an anti-tumour effect. On the other hand, the analyses indicate that treatments designed to inhibit TGF-β do not reduce bone destruction, although it appears that they might reduce the viability of myeloma cells, which again contributes to the current controversy regarding the efficacy of TGF-β inhibition in multiple myeloma-induced bone disease
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