130 research outputs found
Study of the factors affecting the karst volume assessment in the Dead Sea sinkhole problem using microgravity field analysis and 3-D modeling
Thousands of sinkholes have appeared in the Dead Sea (DS) coastal area in Israel and Jordan during two last decades. The sinkhole development is recently associated with the buried evaporation karst at the depth of 25–50 m from earth's surface caused by the drop of the DS level at the rate of 0.8–1.0 m/yr. Drop in the Dead Sea level has changed hydrogeological conditions in the subsurface and caused surface to collapse. The pre-existing cavern was detected using microgravity mapping in the Nahal Hever South site where seven sinkholes of 1–2 m diameter had been opened. About 5000 gravity stations were observed in the area of 200&times;200 m<sup>2</sup> by the use of Scintrex CG-3M AutoGrav gravimeter. Besides the conventional set of corrections applied in microgravity investigations, a correction for a strong gravity horizontal gradient (DS Transform Zone negative gravity anomaly influence) was inserted. As a result, residual gravity anomaly of –(0.08÷0.14) mGal was revealed. The gravity field analysis was supported by resistivity measurements. We applied the Emigma 7.8 gravity software to create the 3-D physical-geological models of the sinkholes development area. The modeling was confirmed by application of the <i>GSFC</i> program developed especially for 3-D combined gravity-magnetic modeling in complicated environments. Computed numerous gravity models verified an effective applicability of the microgravity technology for detection of karst cavities and estimation of their physical-geological parameters. A volume of the karst was approximately estimated as 35 000 m<sup>3</sup>. The visual analysis of large sinkhole clusters have been forming at the microgravity anomaly site, confirmed the results of microgravity mapping and 3-D modeling
Quasi-long range order in the random anisotropy Heisenberg model
The large distance behaviors of the random field and random anisotropy
Heisenberg models are studied with the functional renormalization group in
dimensions. The random anisotropy model is found to have a phase
with the infinite correlation radius at low temperatures and weak disorder. The
correlation function of the magnetization obeys a power law . The
magnetic susceptibility diverges at low fields as . In the random field model the correlation radius is found
to be finite at the arbitrarily weak disorder.Comment: 4 pages, REVTe
INTEGRAL discovery of non-thermal hard X-ray emission from the Ophiuchus cluster
We present the results of deep observations of the Ophiuchus cluster of
galaxies with INTEGRAL in the 3-80 keV band. We analyse 3 Ms of INTEGRAL data
on the Ophiuchus cluster with the IBIS/ISGRI hard X-ray imager and the JEM-X
X-ray monitor. In the X-ray band using JEM-X, we show that the source is
extended, and that the morphology is compatible with the results found by
previous missions. Above 20 keV, we show that the size of the source is
slightly larger than the PSF of the instrument, and is consistent with the soft
X-ray morphology found with JEM-X and ASCA. Thanks to the constraints on the
temperature provided by JEM-X, we show that the spectrum of the cluster is not
well fitted by a single-temperature thermal Bremsstrahlung model, and that
another spectral component is needed to explain the high energy data. We detect
the high energy tail with a higher detection significance (6.4 sigma) than the
BeppoSAX claim (2 sigma). Because of the imaging capabilities of JEM-X and
ISGRI, we are able to exclude the possibility that the excess emission comes
from very hot regions or absorbed AGN, which proves that the excess emission is
indeed of non-thermal origin. Using the available radio data together with the
non-thermal hard X-ray flux, we estimate a magnetic field B ~ 0.1-0.2 mu G.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, accepted by A&
Haldane Gapped Spin Chains: Exact Low Temperature Expansions of Correlation Functions
We study both the static and dynamic properties of gapped, one-dimensional,
Heisenberg, anti-ferromagnetic, spin chains at finite temperature through an
analysis of the O(3) non-linear sigma model. Exploiting the integrability of
this theory, we are able to compute an exact low temperature expansion of the
finite temperature correlators. We do so using a truncated `form-factor'
expansion and so provide evidence that this technique can be successfully
extended to finite temperature. As a direct test, we compute the static
zero-field susceptibility and obtain an exact match to the susceptibility
derived from the low temperature expansion of the exact free energy. We also
study transport properties, computing both the spin conductance and the
NMR-relaxation rate, 1/T_1. We find these quantities to show ballistic
behaviour. In particular, the computed spin conductance exhibits a non-zero
Drude weight at finite temperature and zero applied field. The physics thus
described differs from the spin diffusion reported by Takigawa et al. from
experiments on the Haldane gap material, AgVP_2S_6.Comment: 51 pages, 5 figure
Magnetic power spectra from Faraday rotation maps - REALMAF and its use on Hydra A
We develop a novel maximum-a-posteriori method to measure magnetic power
spectra from Faraday rotation data and implement it in the REALMAF code. A
sophisticated model for the magnetic autocorrelation in real space permits us
to alleviate previously required simplifying assumptions in the processing. We
also introduce a way to treat the divergence relation of the magnetic field
with a multiplicative factor in Fourier space, with which we can model the
magnetic autocorrelation as a spherically symmetric function. Applied to the
dataset of Hydra A north, we find a power law power spectrum on spatial scales
between 0.3 kpc and 8 kpc, with no visible turnover at large scales within this
range and a spectral index consistent with a Kolmogorov-like power law regime.
The magnetic field strength profile seems to follow the electron density
profile with an index alpha=1. A variation of alpha from 0.5 to 1.5 would lead
to a spectral index between 1.55 and 2.05. The extrapolated magnetic field
strength in the cluster centre highly depends on the assumed projection angle
of the jet. For an angle of 45 degree we derive extrapolated 36 muG in the
centre and directly probed 16 muG at 50 kpc radius.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures, version accepted by A&A with restructured
introduction and language improvement
Regulatory modules controlling maize inflorescence architecture
Genetic control of branching is a primary determinant of yield, regulating seed number and harvesting ability, yet little is known about the molecular networks that shape grain-bearing inflorescences of cereal crops. Here, we used the maize (Zea mays) inflorescence to investigate gene networks that modulate determinacy, specifically the decision to allow branch growth. We characterized developmental transitions by associating spatiotemporal expression profiles with morphological changes resulting from genetic perturbations that disrupt steps in a pathway controlling branching. Developmental dynamics of genes targeted in vivo by the transcription factor RAMOSA1, a key regulator of determinacy, revealed potential mechanisms for repressing branches in distinct stem cell populations, including interactions with KNOTTED1, a master regulator of stem cell maintenance. Our results uncover discrete developmental modules that function in determining grass-specific morphology and provide a basis for targeted crop improvement and translation to other cereal crops with comparable inflorescence architectures
Metal-rich multi-phase gas in M87: AGN-driven metal transport, magnetic-field supported multi-temperature gas, and constraints on non-thermal emission observed with XMM-Newton
We use deep (~120 ks) XMM-Newton data of the M87 halo to analyze its
spatially resolved temperature structure and chemical composition. We focus
particularly on the regions of enhanced X-ray brightness associated with the
inner radio lobes, which are known not to be described very well by
single-temperature spectral models. Compared to a simple two-temperature fit,
we obtain a better and more physical description of the spectra using a model
that involves a continuous range of temperatures in each spatial bin. The range
of temperatures of the multiphase gas spans ~0.6-3.2 keV. Such a multiphase
structure is only possible if thermal conduction is suppressed by magnetic
fields. In the multi-temperature regions, we find a correlation between the
amount of gas cooler than the surrounding X-ray plasma and the metallicity, and
conclude that the cool gas is more metal-rich than the ambient halo. We
estimate the average Fe abundance of the cool gas to ~2.2 solar. Our results
thus point toward the key role of the active galactic nucleus (AGN) in
transporting heavy elements into the intracluster medium. The abundance ratios
of O/Si/S/Fe in and outside the X-ray arms are similar, indicating that the
dominant fraction of metals in the gas halo was uplifted by AGN outbursts
relatively recently compared to the age of M87. Our estimate for the mass of
the cool gas is 5e8 M_sun, which probably stems from a mixture of ICM, stellar
mass loss, and Type Ia supernova products. ~30-110 Myr are required to produce
the observed metals in the cool gas. Finally, we put upper limits on possible
non-thermal X-ray emission from M87 and, combining it with the 90 cm radio
maps, we put lower limits of around ~0.5-1.0 muG on the magnetic field
strength.Comment: 18 pages, accepted for publication in A&A. Some significant changes
following the referee repor
FIRST-based survey of Compact Steep Spectrum sources, II. MERLIN and VLA observations of Medium-sized Symmetric Objects
A new sample of candidate Compact Steep Spectrum (CSS) sources that are much
weaker than the CSS source prototypes has been selected from the VLA FIRST
catalogue. MERLIN `snapshot' observations of the sources at 5 GHz indicate that
six of them have an FR II-like morphology, but are not edge-brightened as is
normal for Medium-sized Symmetric Objects (MSOs) and FR IIs. Further
observations of these six sources with the VLA at 4.9 GHz and MERLIN at 1.7
GHz, as well as subsequent full-track observations with MERLIN at 5 GHz of what
appeared to be the two sources of greatest interest are presented. The results
are discussed with reference to the established evolutionary model of CSS
sources being young but in which not all of them evolve to become old objects
with extended radio structures. A lack of stable fuelling in some of them may
result in an early transition to a so-called coasting phase so that they fade
away instead of growing to become large-scale objects. It is possible that one
of the six sources (1542+323) could be labelled as a prematurely `dying' MSO or
a `fader'.Comment: 13 pages, matches the version printed in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Quasi-long-range order in the random anisotropy Heisenberg model: functional renormalization group in 4-\epsilon dimensions
The large distance behaviors of the random field and random anisotropy O(N)
models are studied with the functional renormalization group in 4-\epsilon
dimensions. The random anisotropy Heisenberg (N=3) model is found to have a
phase with the infinite correlation radius at low temperatures and weak
disorder. The correlation function of the magnetization obeys a power law <
m(x) m(y) >\sim |x-y|^{-0.62\epsilon}. The magnetic susceptibility diverges at
low fields as \chi \sim H^{-1+0.15\epsilon}. In the random field O(N) model the
correlation radius is found to be finite at the arbitrarily weak disorder for
any N>3. The random field case is studied with a new simple method, based on a
rigorous inequality. This approach allows one to avoid the integration of the
functional renormalization group equations.Comment: 12 pages, RevTeX; a minor change in the list of reference
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