557 research outputs found
On Two Complementary Types of Total Time Derivative in Classical Field Theories and Maxwell's Equations
Close insight into mathematical and conceptual structure of classical field
theories shows serious inconsistencies in their common basis. In other words,
we claim in this work to have come across two severe mathematical blunders in
the very foundations of theoretical hydrodynamics. One of the defects concerns
the traditional treatment of time derivatives in Eulerian hydrodynamic
description. The other one resides in the conventional demonstration of the
so-called Convection Theorem. Both approaches are thought to be necessary for
cross-verification of the standard differential form of continuity equation.
Any revision of these fundamental results might have important implications for
all classical field theories. Rigorous reconsideration of time derivatives in
Eulerian description shows that it evokes Minkowski metric for any flow field
domain without any previous postulation. Mathematical approach is developed
within the framework of congruences for general 4-dimensional differentiable
manifold and the final result is formulated in form of a theorem. A modified
version of the Convection Theorem provides a necessary cross-verification for a
reconsidered differential form of continuity equation. Although the approach is
developed for one-component (scalar) flow field, it can be easily generalized
to any tensor field. Some possible implications for classical electrodynamics
are also explored.Comment: no figure
Diffusion Enhances Spontaneous Electroweak Baryogenesis
We include the effects of diffusion in the electroweak spontaneous
baryogenesis scenario and show that it can greatly enhance the resultant baryon
density, by as much as a factor of over previous
estimates. Furthermore, the baryon density produced is rather insensitive to
parameters characterizing the first order weak phase transition, such as the
width and propagation velocity of the phase boundary.Comment: 15 pages, uses harvmac and epsf macro
Far-infrared electrodynamics of superconducting Nb: comparison of theory and experiment
Complex conductivity spectra of superconducting Nb are calculated from the
first principles in the frequency region around the energy gap and compared to
the experimental results. The row experimental data obtained on thin films can
be precisely described by these calculations.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figures incl. Accepted to Solid State Commu
Debye Screening and Baryogenesis during the Electroweak Phase Transition
We examine a recent claim that Debye screening will affect the charge
transport mechanism of anomalous electroweak baryogenesis. We show that the
effects of gauge charge screening do not affect the baryon number produced
during a first order electroweak phase transition. (Requires harvmac.tex)Comment: 12 pages, UCSD-PTH-92-19, BU-HEP-92-2
Supersymmtric Baryogenesis
Requiring that the baryon number of the universe be generated by anomalous
electroweak interactions places strong constraints on the minimal
supersymmetric standard model. In particular, the electric dipole moment of the
neutron must be greater than e-cm. Improvement of the current
experimental bound on the neutron's electric dipole moment by one order of
magnitude would constrain the lightest chargino to be lighter than 88 GeV, and
the the lightest neutralino to be lighter than 44 GeV. In extensions of this
model with gauge singlet superfields all of these bounds are eliminated.Comment: 14 pages 3 fig.,BUHEP-92-2
Microthyriaceae sp., an endophytic fungus
In screening for natural products with antiparasitic activity, an endophytic fungus, strain F2611, isolated from above-ground tissue of the tropical grass Paspalum conjugatum (Poaceae) in Panama, was chosen for bioactive principle elucidation. Cultivation on malt extract agar (MEA) followed by bioassayguided chromatographic fractionation of the extract led to the isolation of the new polyketide integrasone B (1) and two known mycotoxins, sterigmatocystin (2) and secosterigmatocystin (3). Sterigmatocystin (2) was found to be the main antiparasitic compound in the fermentation extract of this fungus, possessing potent and selective antiparasitic activity against Trypanosoma cruzi, the cause of Chagas disease, with an IC50 value of 0 13 lmol l 1. Compounds 2 and 3 showed high cytotoxicity against Vero cells (IC50 of 0 06 and 0 97 lmol l 1, respectively). The new natural product integrasone B (1), which was co-purified from the active fractions, constitutes the second report of a natural product possessing an epoxyquinone with a lactone ring and exhibited no significant biological activity. Strain F2611 represents a previously undescribed taxon within the Microthyriaceae (Dothideomycetes, AscomycotaIn screening for natural products with antiparasitic activity, an endophytic fungus, strain F2611, isolated from above-ground tissue of the tropical grass Paspalum conjugatum (Poaceae) in Panama, was chosen for bioactive principle elucidation. Cultivation on malt extract agar (MEA) followed by bioassayguided chromatographic fractionation of the extract led to the isolation of the new polyketide integrasone B (1) and two known mycotoxins, sterigmatocystin (2) and secosterigmatocystin (3). Sterigmatocystin (2) was found to be the main antiparasitic compound in the fermentation extract of this fungus, possessing potent and selective antiparasitic activity against Trypanosoma cruzi, the cause of Chagas disease, with an IC50 value of 0 13 lmol l 1. Compounds 2 and 3 showed high cytotoxicity against Vero cells (IC50 of 0 06 and 0 97 lmol l 1, respectively). The new natural product integrasone B (1), which was co-purified from the active fractions, constitutes the second report of a natural product possessing an epoxyquinone with a lactone ring and exhibited no significant biological activity. Strain F2611 represents a previously undescribed taxon within the Microthyriaceae (Dothideomycetes, AscomycotaLaboratory of Tropical Bioorganic Chemistry, Faculty of Natural Exact Sciences and Technology, University of Panama, Panama City, Republic of Panama
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Panama City, Republic of Panama
Centro de Biodiversidade, Gen omica Integrativa e Funcional (BioFIG), Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Ci^encias, Edif ıcio ICAT/TecLabs, Campus da FCUL, Campo Grande, Lisboa, Portugal
Institute for Advanced Scientific Investigation and High Technology Services, National Secretariat of Science, Technology, and Innovation, City of Knowledge, Panama City, Republic of Panama
School of Plant Sciences, The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA
Department of Biology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
Center for Marine Biotechnology and Biomedicine, Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, US
Entanglement of photons
It is argued that the title of this paper represents a misconception.
Contrary to widespread beliefs it is electromagnetic field modes that are
``systems'' and can be entangled, not photons. The amount of entanglement in a
given state is shown to depend on redefinitions of the modes; we calculate the
minimum and maximum over all such redefinitions for several examples.Comment: 5 pages ReVTe
Single-grain and multi-grain OSL dating of river terrace sediments in the Tabernas Basin, SE Spain
River terraces represent important records of landscape response to e.g. base-level change and tectonic movement. Both these driving forces are important in the southern Iberian Peninsula. In this study, Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) dating was used to date two principal river terraces in the Tabernas Basin, SE Spain. A total of 23 samples was collected from the fluvial terraces for dating using quartz OSL. Sixteen of the samples could not be dated because of low saturation levels (e.g. typical 2xD0 < 50 Gy). The remaining seven samples (5 fossil and 2 modern analogues) were investigated using both multi-grain and single-grain analysis. Single grain results show that: (i) measurements from multi-grain aliquots overestimate ages by up to ∼ 4 ka for modern analogues and young samples (<5 ka), presumably because (ii) the presence of many saturated grains has biased the multi-grain results to older ages. Despite the unfavourable luminescence characteristics we are able to present the first numerical ages for two terrace aggradation stages in the Tabernas Basin, one at ∼16 ka and the other within the last 2 ka
Electroweak Phase Transition in Two Higgs Doublet Models
We reexamine the strength of the first order phase transition in the
electroweak theory supplemented by an extra Higgs doublet. The
finite-temperature effective potential, , is computed to one-loop
order, including the summation of ring diagrams, to study the ratio
of the Higgs field VEV to the critical temperature. We make a
number of improvements over previous treatments, including a consistent
treatment of Goldstone bosons in , an accurate analytic approximation
to valid for any mass-to-temperature ratios, and use of the
experimentally measured top quark mass. For two-Higgs doublet models, we
identify a significant region of parameter space where is large
enough for electroweak baryogenesis, and we argue that this identification
should persist even at higher orders in perturbation theory. In the case of the
minimal supersymmetric standard model, our results indicate that the extra
Higgs bosons have little effect on the strength of the phase transition.Comment: 18 pp., 5 figures, uses epsf.tex. Corrected matching conditions for
analytic approximation to thermal effective potential, eq. (10), and typos in
eq. (5
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