72,766 research outputs found
Reconciling the CAST and PVLAS Results
The PVLAS experiment has recently claimed evidence for an axion-like particle
in the milli-electron-Volt mass range with a coupling to two photons that
appears to be in contradiction with the negative results of the CAST experiment
searching for solar axions. The simple axion interpretation of these two
experimental results is therefore untenable and it has posed a challenge for
theory. We propose a possible way to reconcile these two results by postulating
the existence of an ultralight pseudo-scalar particle interacting with two
photons and a scalar boson and the existence of a low scale phase transition in
the theory.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; references update
Dispersion of biased swimming microorganisms in a fluid flowing through a tube
Classical Taylor-Aris dispersion theory is extended to describe the transport
of suspensions of self-propelled dipolar cells in a tubular flow. General
expressions for the mean drift and effective diffusivity are determined exactly
in terms of axial moments, and compared with an approximation a la Taylor. As
in the Taylor-Aris case, the skewness of a finite distribution of biased
swimming cells vanishes at long times. The general expressions can be applied
to particular models of swimming microorganisms, and thus be used to predict
swimming drift and diffusion in tubular bioreactors, and to elucidate competing
unbounded swimming drift and diffusion descriptions. Here, specific examples
are presented for gyrotactic swimming algae.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures. Published version available at
http://rspa.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/early/2010/02/09/rspa.2009.0606.short?rss=
Medical microbiological analysis of Apollo-Soyuz test project crewmembers
The procedures and results of the Microbial Exchange Experiment (AR-002) of the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project are described. Included in the discussion of procedural aspects are methods and materials, in-flight microbial specimen collection, and preliminary analysis of microbial specimens. Medically important microorganisms recovered from both Apollo and Soyuz crewmen are evaluated
Methods for microbiological and immunological studies of space flight crews
Systematic laboratory procedures compiled as an outgrowth of a joint U.S./U.S.S.R. microbiological-immunological experiment performed during the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project space flight are presented. Included are mutually compatible methods for the identification of aerobic and microaerophilic bacteria, yeast and yeastlike microorganisms, and filamentous fungi; methods for the bacteriophage typing of Staphylococcus aureus; and methods for determining the sensitivity of S. aureus to antibiotics. Immunological methods using blood and immunological and biochemical methods using salivary parotid fluid are also described. Formulas for media and laboratory reagents used are listed
Monitoring the Bi-Directional Relativistic Jets of the Radio Galaxy 1946+708
We report on a multi-frequency, multi-epoch campaign of Very Long Baseline
Interferometry observations of the radio galaxy 1946+708 using the VLBA and a
Global VLBI array. From these high-resolution observations we deduce the
kinematic age of the radio source to be 4000 years, comparable with the
ages of other Compact Symmetric Objects (CSOs). Ejections of pairs of jet
components appears to take place on time scales of 10 years and these
components in the jet travel outward at intrinsic velocities between 0.6 and
0.9 c. From the constraint that jet components cannot have intrinsic velocities
faster than light, we derive H_0 > 57 km s^-1 Mpc^-1 from the fastest pair of
components launched from the core. We provide strong evidence for the ejection
of a new pair of components in ~1997. From the trajectories of the jet
components we deduce that the jet is most likely to be helically confined,
rather than purely ballistic in nature.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, accepted to Ap
Finite Size Effects in the Anisotropic \lambda/4!(\phi^4_1 + \phi^4_2)_d Model
We consider the model on a
d-dimensional Euclidean space, where all but one of the coordinates are
unbounded. Translation invariance along the bounded coordinate, z, which lies
in the interval [0,L], is broken because of the boundary conditions (BC's)
chosen for the hyperplanes z=0 and z=L. Two different possibilities for these
BC's boundary conditions are considered: DD and NN, where D denotes Dirichlet
and N Newmann, respectively. The renormalization procedure up to one-loop order
is applied, obtaining two main results. The first is the fact that the
renormalization program requires the introduction of counterterms which are
surface interactions. The second one is that the tadpole graphs for DD and NN
have the same z dependent part in modulus but with opposite signs. We
investigate the relevance of this fact to the elimination of surface
divergences.Comment: 33 pages, 2 eps figure
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