10,002 research outputs found
Applications of PTTI to new techniques for determining crustal movements, polar motion, and the rotation of the earth
New extra-terrestrial techniques are discussed for geodesy and geodynamics include laser range measurements to the moon or to artificial satellites, Doppler measurements with the Transit satellite system, and both independent-clock and linked-antenna microwave interferometry. The ways in which PTTI measurements are used in these techniques will be reviewed, and the accuracies expected during the latter half of the 1970's will be discussed. At least 3 of the techniques appear capable of giving accuracies of 5 cm or better in each coordinate for many points on the earth's surface, and comparable accuracies for the earth's rotation and polar motion. For fixed stations or for sites a few hundred km apart, baseline lengths accurate to 1 cm may be achieved. Ways in which the complementary aspects of the different techniques can be exploited will be discussed, as well as how they tie in with improved ground techniques for determining crustal movements. Some recent results from the extra-terrestrial methods will be mentioned
TOPEX orbit determination using GPS signals plus a sidetone ranging system
The GPS orbit determination was studied to see how well the radial coordinate for altimeter satellites such as TOPEX could be found by on board measurements of GPS signals, including the reconstructed carrier phase. The inclusion on altimeter satellites of an additional high accuracy tracking system is recommended. It is suggested that a sidetone ranging system is used in conjunction with TRANET 2 beacons
Fission modes of 256Fm and 258Fm in a microscopic approach
A static microscopic study of potential-energy surfaces within the
Skyrme-Hartree-Fock-plus-BCS model is carried out for the 256Fm and 258Fm
isotopes with the goal of deducing some properties of spontaneous fission. The
calculated fission modes are found to be in agreement with the experimentaly
observed asymmetric-to-symmetric transition in the fragment-mass distributions
and with the high- and low-total-kinetic-energy modes experimentally observed
in 258Fm. Most of the results are similar to those obtained in
macroscopic-microscopic models as well as in recent Hartree-Fock-Bogolyubov
calculations with the Gogny interaction, with a few differences in their
interpretations. In particular an alternative explanation is proposed for the
low-energy fission mode of 258Fm.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, 3 tables, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Microscopic study of 240Pu, mean-field and beyond
The influence of exact angular-momentum projection and configuration mixing
on properties of a heavy, well-deformed nucleus is discussed for the example of
Pu240. Starting from a self-consistent model using Skyrme interactions, we
analyze the resulting modifications of the deformation energy, the fission
barrier height, the excitation energy of the superdeformed minimum associated
with the fission isomer, the structure of the lowest rotational bands with
normal deformation and superdeformation, and the corresponding quadrupole
moments and transition moments. We present results obtained with the Skyrme
interactions SLy4 and SLy6, which have slightly different surface tensions.Comment: 7 pages REVTEX4, 4 figures. accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Does the complex deformation of the Riemann equation exhibit shocks?
The Riemann equation , which describes a one-dimensional
accelerationless perfect fluid, possesses solutions that typically develop
shocks in a finite time. This equation is \cP\cT symmetric. A one-parameter
\cP\cT-invariant complex deformation of this equation,
( real), is solved exactly using the
method of characteristic strips, and it is shown that for real initial
conditions, shocks cannot develop unless is an odd integer.Comment: latex, 8 page
The evolution of the color gradients of early-type cluster galaxies
We investigate the origin of color gradients in cluster early-type galaxies
to probe whether pure age or pure metallicity gradients can explain the
observed data in local and distant (z approx 0.4) samples. We measure the
surface brightness profiles of the 20 brightest early-type galaxies of
CL0949+44 (hereafter CL0949) at redshift z=0.35-0.38 from HST WF2 frames taken
in the filters F555W, F675W, F814W. We determine the color profiles (V-R)(r),
(V-I)(r), and (R-I)(r) as a function of the radial distance r in arcsec, and
fit logarithmic gradients in the range -0.2 to 0.1 mag per decade. These values
are similar to what is found locally for the colors (U-B), (U-V), (B-V) which
approximately match the (V-R), (V-I), (R-I) at redshift approx 0.4. We analyse
the results with up to date stellar population models. We find that passive
evolution of metallicity gradients (approx 0.2 dex per radial decade) provides
a consistent explanation of the local and distant galaxies' data. Invoking pure
age gradients (with fixed metallicity) to explain local color gradients
produces too steep gradients at redshifts z approx 0.4. Pure age gradients are
consistent with the data only if large present day ages (>=15 Gyr) are assumed
for the galaxy centers.Comment: 23 pages, 19 figures, Accepted for publication in A&
Prospects for direct detection of circular polarization of gravitational-wave background
We discussed prospects for directly detecting circular polarization signal of
gravitational wave background. We found it is generally difficult to probe the
monopole mode of the signal due to broad directivity of gravitational wave
detectors. But the dipole (l=1) and octupole (l=3) modes of the signal can be
measured in a simple manner by combining outputs of two unaligned detectors,
and we can dig them deeply under confusion and detector noises. Around f~0.1mHz
LISA will provide ideal data streams to detect these anisotropic components
whose magnitudes are as small as ~1 percent of the detector noise level in
terms of the non-dimensional energy density \Omega_{GW}(f).Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, PRL in pres
Shape coexistence in neutron-deficient Kr isotopes: Constraints on the single-particle spectrum of self-consistent mean-field models from collective excitations
We discuss shape coexistence in the neutron-deficient Kr72-Kr78 isotopes in
the framework of configuration mixing calculations of particle-number and
angular-momentum projected axial mean-field states obtained from
self-consistent calculations with the Skyrme interaction SLy6 and a
density-dependent pairing interaction. While our calculation reproduces
qualitatively and quantitatively many of the global features of these nuclei,
such as coexistence of prolate and oblate shapes, their strong mixing at low
angular momentum, and the deformation of collective bands, the ordering of our
calculated low-lying levels is at variance with experiment. We analyse the role
of the single-particle spectrum of the underlying mean-field for the spectrum
of collective excitations.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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