8,947 research outputs found
Organometalic carbosilane polymers containing vanadium and their preparation
The present invention concerns a new organometallic polymer material containing in part a vanadium-siloxane linkage (V-0-Si), which has excellent resistance to heat and oxidation and a high residue ratio after high temperature treatment in a non-oxidizing atmosphere, for example, nitrogen, argon, helium, ammonia, or hydrogen
Mirror effect induced by the dilaton field on the Hawking radiation
We discuss the string creation in the near-extremal NS1 black string
solution. The string creation is described by an effective field equation
derived from a fundamental string action coupled to the dilaton field in a
conformally invariant manner. In the non-critical string model the dilaton
field causes a timelike mirror surface outside the horizon when the size of the
black string is comparable to the Planck scale. Since the fundamental strings
are reflected by the mirror surface, the negative energy flux does not
propagate across the surface. This means that the evaporation stops just before
the naked singularity of the extremal black string appears even though the
surface gravity is non-zero in the extremal limit.Comment: 15 page
Number Density of Bright Lyman-Break Galaxies at z~6 in the Subaru Deep Field
We report on the bright Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs) selected in a 767
arcmin^2 area of the Subaru Deep Field. The selection is made in the i-zR vs
zB-zR plane, where zB and zR are new bandpasses with a central wavelength of
8842A and 9841A, respectively. This set of bandpasses enables us to separate
well z~6 LBGs from foreground galaxies and Galactic cool stars. We detect 12
LBG candidates down to zR=25.4, and calculate the normalization of the
rest-frame far-ultraviolet (FUV: 1400A) luminosity function at MFUV = -21.6 to
be \phi(-21.6) = (2.6+/-0.7) x 10^{-5} mag^{-1} Mpc^{-3}. This must be the most
reliable measurement ever obtained of the number density of bright z~6 LBGs,
because it is more robust against both contamination and cosmic variance than
previous values. The FUV luminosity density contributed from LBGs brighter than
MFUV = -21.3 is (2.8+/-0.8) x 10^{24} ergs/s/Hz/Mpc^3, which is equivalent to a
star formation rate density of (3.5+/-1.0) x 10^{-4} Msun/yr/Mpc^3. Combining
our measurement with those at z<6 in the literature, we find that the FUV
luminosity density of bright galaxies increases by an order of magnitude from
z~6 to z~3 and then drops by 10^3 from z~3 to the present epoch, while the
evolution of the total luminosity density is much milder. The evolutionary
behavior of bright LBGs resembles that of luminous dusty star-forming galaxies
and bright QSOs. The redshift of z~3 appears to be a remarkable era in the
cosmic history when massive galaxies were being intensively formed.Comment: 12 pages, accepted for PASJ, a high resolution version is available
at http://hikari.astron.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~shima/z6LBGs
High-Symmetry Polarization Domains in Low-Symmetry Ferroelectrics
We present experimental evidence for hexagonal domain faceting in the
ferroelectric polymer PVDF-TrFE films having the lower orthorhombic
crystallographic symmetry. This effect can arise from purely electrostatic
depolarizing forces. We show that in contrast to magnetic bubble shape domains
where such type of deformation instability has a predominantly elliptical
character, the emergence of more symmetrical circular harmonics is favored in
ferroelectrics with high dielectric constant
The Planetary Nebulae Luminosity Function and distances to Virgo, Hydra I and Coma clusters
The luminosity function of planetary nebulae populations in galaxies within
10-15 Mpc distance has a cut-off at bright magnitudes and a functional form
that is observed to be invariant in different galaxy morphological types. Thus
it is used as a secondary distance indicator in both early and late-type
galaxies. Recent deep surveys of planetary nebulae populations in brightest
cluster galaxies (BCGs) seem to indicate that their luminosity functions
deviate from those observed in the nearby galaxies. We discuss the evidence for
such deviations in Virgo, and indicate which physical mechanisms may alter the
evolution of a planetary nebula envelope and its central star in the halo of
BCGs. We then discuss preliminary results for distances for the Virgo, Hydra I
and Coma clusters based on the observed planetary nebulae luminosity functions.Comment: 5 pages, one figure. To appear on the Proceedings of the IAU Symp.
289 "Advancing the physics of cosmic distances
Pressure Tuning of an Ionic Insulator into a Heavy Electron Metal: An Infrared Study of YbS
Optical conductivity [] of YbS has been measured under
pressure up to 20 GPa. Below 8 GPa, is low since YbS is an
insulator with an energy gap between fully occupied 4 state and unoccupied
conduction () band. Above 8 GPa, however, increases
dramatically, developing a Drude component due to heavy carriers and
characteristic infrared peaks. It is shown that increasing pressure has caused
an energy overlap and hybridization between the band and 4 state, thus
driving the initially ionic and insulating YbS into a correlated metal with
heavy carriers
Interspecific differences in the larval performance of Pieris butterflies (Lepidoptera: Pieridae) are associated with differences in the glucosinolate profiles of host plants
The tremendous diversity of plants and herbivores has arisen from a coevolutionary relationship characterized by plant defense and herbivore counter adaptation. Pierid butterfly species feed on Brassicales plants that produce glucosinolates as a chemical deterrent against herbivory. In turn, the larvae of pierids have nitrile specifier proteins (NSPs) that are expressed in their gut and disarm glucosinolates. Pierid butterflies are known to have diversified in response to glucosinolate diversification in Brassicales. Therefore, each pierid species is expected to have a spectrum of host plants characterized by specific glucosinolate profiles. In this study, we tested whether the larval performance of different Pieris species, a genus in Pieridae (Lepidoptera: Pieridae), was associated with plant defense traits of putative host plants. We conducted feeding assays using larvae of three Pieris species and 10 species of the Brassicaceae family possessing different leaf physical traits and glucosinolate profile measurements. The larvae of Pieris rapae responded differently in the feeding assays compared with the other two Pieris species. This difference was associated with differences in glucosinolate profiles but not with variations in physical traits of the host plants. This result suggests that individual Pieris species are adapted to a subset of glucosinolate profiles within the Brassicaceae. Our results support the idea that the host ranges of Pieris species depend on larval responses to glucosinolate diversification in the host species, supporting the hypothesis of coevolution between butterflies and host plants mediated by the chemical arms race
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