1,959 research outputs found
A simple functional form for proton-Pb total reaction cross sections
A simple functional form has been found that gives a good representation of
the total reaction cross sections for the scattering from Pb of
protons with energies in the range 30 to 300 MeV.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Total reaction cross sections for neutron-nucleus scattering
Neutron total reaction cross sections at 45, 50, 55, 60, 65, and 75 MeV from
nuclei 12C, 28Si, 56Fe, 90Zr, and 208Pb have been measured and are compared
with (microscopic) optical model predictions. The optical potentials were
obtained in coordinate space by full folding effective nucleon-nucleon
interactions with realistic nuclear ground state density matrices. Good to
excellent agreement is found.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, RevTeX
A simple functional form for proton-nucleus total reaction cross sections
A simple functional form has been found that gives a good representation of
the total reaction cross sections for the scattering of protons from (15)
nuclei spanning the mass range Be to U and for proton
energies ranging from 20 to 300 MeV.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, bib fil
Analysis of tumor as an inverse problem provides a novel theoretical framework for understanding tumor biology and therapy
We use a novel “inverse problem” technique to construct a basic mathematical model of the interacting populations at the tumor-host interface. This approach assumes that invasive cancer is a solution to the set of state equations that govern the interactions of transformed and normal cells. By considering the invading tumor edge as a traveling wave, the general form of the state equations can be inferred. The stability of this traveling wave solution imposes constraints on key biological quantities which appear as parameters in the model equations. Based on these constraints, we demonstrate the limitations of traditional therapeutic strategies in clinical oncology that focus solely on killing tumor cells or reducing their rate of proliferation. The results provide insights into fundamental mechanisms that may prevent these approaches from successfully eradicating most common cancers despite several decades of research. Alternative therapies directed at modifying the key parameters in the state equations to destabilize the propagating solution are proposed
A grid-enabled problem solving environment for parallel computational engineering design
This paper describes the development and application of a piece of engineering software that provides a problem solving environment (PSE) capable of launching, and interfacing with, computational jobs executing on remote resources on a computational grid. In particular it is demonstrated how a complex, serial, engineering optimisation code may be efficiently parallelised, grid-enabled and embedded within a PSE.
The environment is highly flexible, allowing remote users from different sites to collaborate, and permitting computational tasks to be executed in parallel across multiple grid resources, each of which may be a parallel architecture. A full working prototype has been built and successfully applied to a computationally demanding engineering optimisation problem. This particular problem stems from elastohydrodynamic lubrication and involves optimising the computational model for a lubricant based on the match between simulation results and experimentally observed data
Strangeness Production in Neutron Stars
Production of strange quarks in neutron stars is investigated in this work.
Three cases, one in which the energy and neutrinos produced in the strangeness
production reactions are retained in the reaction region, second in which the
neutrinos are allowed to escape the reaction region but the energy is retained
and the third in which both the energy and neutrinos escape the reaction region
are considered. It is shown that the nonleptonic weak process dominates strange
quark production while semileptonic weak processes, which produce neutrinos,
lead to the cooling if the neutrinos escape the reaction region. It is found
that the time required for the saturation of the strangeness fraction is
between and sec, with the shorter time corresponding to the
first two cases. About 0.2 neutrinos/baryon are emitted during the process in
the first two cases where as the neutrino emission is somewhat suppressed in
the last case. The average energy of the neutrinos produced in all the three
cases is found to be several hundred . We also find that a large amount of
energy is released during the strangeness production in the first two cases and
this leads to the heating of the reaction region. Implications of the neutrino
production are investigated.Comment: Latex file. 3 figures available from SKG on request. accepted in Nucl
Phys
An efficient direct solver for a class of mixed finite element problems
In this paper we present an efficient, accurate and parallelizable direct method for the solution of the (indefinite) linear algebraic systems that arise in the solution of fourth-order partial differential equations (PDEs) using mixed finite element approximations. The method is intended particularly for use when multiple right-hand sides occur, and when high accuracy is required in these solutions.
The algorithm is described in some detail and its performance is illustrated through the numerical solution of a biharmonic eigenvalue problem where the smallest eigenpair is approximated using inverse iteration after discretization via the Ciarlet–Raviart mixed finite element method
Quasilocal equilibrium condition for black ring
We use the conservation of the renormalized boundary stress-energy tensor to
obtain the equilibrium condition for a general (thin or fat) black ring
solution. We also investigate the role of the spatial stress in the
thermodynamics of deformation within the quasilocal formalism of Brown and York
and discuss the relation with other methods. In particular, we discuss the
quantum statistical relation for the unbalanced black ring solution.Comment: v2: refs. added, matches the published versio
A Twistor Formulation of the Non-Heterotic Superstring with Manifest Worldsheet Supersymmetry
We propose a new formulation of the type II superstring which is
manifestly invariant under both target-space supersymmetry and worldsheet
super reparametrizations. This gives rise to a set of twistor
(commuting spinor) variables, which provide a solution to the two Virasoro
constraints. The worldsheet supergravity fields are shown to play the r\^ole of
auxiliary fields.Comment: 21p., LaTe
Supersymmetric Two-Time Physics
We construct an Sp(2,R) gauge invariant particle action which possesses
manifest space-time SO(d,2) symmetry, global supersymmetry and kappa
supersymmetry. The global and local supersymmetries are non-abelian
generalizations of Poincare type supersymmetries and are consistent with the
presence of two timelike dimensions. In particular, this action provides a
unified and explicit superparticle representation of the superconformal groups
OSp(N/4), SU(2,2/N) and OSp(8*/N) which underlie various AdS/CFT dualities in
M/string theory. By making diverse Sp(2,R) gauge choices our action reduces to
diverse one-time physics systems, one of which is the ordinary (one-time)
massless superparticle with superconformal symmetry that we discuss explicitly.
We show how to generalize our approach to the case of superalgebras, such as
OSp(1/32), which do not have direct space-time interpretations in terms of only
zero branes, but may be realizable in the presence of p-branes.Comment: Latex, 18 page
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