6,888 research outputs found
On the r-mode spectrum of relativistic stars
We present a mathematically rigorous proof that the r-mode spectrum of
relativistic stars to the rotational lowest order has a continuous part. A
rigorous definition of this spectrum is given in terms of the spectrum of a
continuous linear operator. This study verifies earlier results by Kojima
(1998) about the nature of the r-mode spectrum.Comment: 6 pages, no figure
A new result on the Klein-Gordon equation in the background of a rotating black hole
This short paper should serve as basis for further analysis of a previously
found new symmetry of the solutions of the wave equation in the gravitational
field of a Kerr black hole. Its main new result is the proof of essential
self-adjointness of the spatial part of a reduced normalized wave operator of
the Kerr metric in a weighted L^2-space. As a consequence, it leads to a purely
operator theoretic proof of the well-posedness of the initial value problem of
the reduced Klein-Gordon equation in that field in that L^2-space and in this
way generalizes a corresponding result of Kay (1985) in the case of the
Schwarzschild black hole. It is believed that the employed methods are
applicable to other separable wave equations
Experimental studies of Strong Electroweak Symmetry Breaking in gauge boson scattering and three gauge boson production
If no light Higgs boson exist, the interaction among the gauge bosons becomes
strong at high energies (~1TeV). The effects of strong electroweak symmetry
breaking (SEWSB) could manifest themselves as anomalous couplings before they
give rise to new physical states, thus measurement of all couplings and their
possible deviation from Standard Model (SM) values could give valuable
information for understanding the true nature of symmetry breaking sector. Here
we present a detailed study of the measurement of quartic gauge couplings in
weak boson scattering processes and a possibility for same measurement in
triple weak boson production. Expected limits on the parameters alpha_4
alpha_5,alpha_6, alpha_7 and alpha_10 in electroweak chiral Lagrangian are
given.Comment: talk presented at LCWS05, Stanford, USA, March 200
Hemodynamic and inotropic effects of endothelin-1 in vivo
Endothelin-1 (ET-1) is known to have strong vasoactive properties. Contradictory results have been reported with regard to its inotropic effects. This study examined the dose-dependent (500, 1000, 2500, 5000 and 10,000 ng ET-1/kg vs. NaCl controls) hemodynamic and inotropic effects of ET-1 in 53 open-chest rats during and after a 7-min infusion. Besides measurements in the intact circulation the myocardial function was examined by isovolumic registrations independent of peripheral vascular effects. A transient ET-1 induced (500, 1000, 2500, 5000 ng ET-1/kg) decrease of the left ventricular systolic pressure (LVSP) and the mean aortic pressure (AoPmean) was followed by a dose-related rise of these pressures (LVSP: -1%, -1%, +8%, +16% vs. preinfusion values; AoPmean: -11%, +9%, +39%, +52%). Heart rate (HR) was not influenced by ET-1. Due to the dose-dependent decrease of the stroke volume (SV) the cardiac output (CO) was reduced (CO: -8%, -23%, -40%, -50%). After an initial vasodilatation ET-1 elevates the total peripheral resistance (TPR: -1%, +49%, +139%, +215%) dose-dependently. 10,000 ng ET-1/kg was a lethal dose resulting in cardiac failure within minutes (low output). Since the maximum of the isovolumic LVSP (peak LVSP) and the corresponding dP/dtmax (peak dP/dtmax) were unchanged under ET-1, the isovolumic measurements do not indicate a positive inotropic effect of ET-1 in vivo in contrast to published results of in vitro experiments. It may be possible that a direct positive inotropic effect of ET-1 observed in in vitro studies is counterbalanced in vivo by an indirect negative inotropic effect due to the coronary-constrictive effect of ET-1
Investigation of nonlinear absorption processes with femtosecond light pulses in lithium niobate crystals
The propagation of high-power femtosecond light pulses in lithium niobate crystals (LiNbO3) is investigated experimentally and theoretically in collinear pump-probe transmission experiments. It is found within a wide intensity range that a strong decrease of the pump transmission coefficient at wavelength 388 nm fully complies with the model of two-photon absorption; the corresponding nonlinear absorption coefficient is betap~=3.5 cm/GW. Furthermore, strong pump pulses induce a considerable absorption for the probe at 776 nm. The dependence of the probe transmission coefficient on the time delay Deltat between probe and pump pulses is characterized by a narrow dip (at Deltat~=0) and a long (on the picosecond time scale) lasting plateau. The dip is due to direct two-photon transitions involving pump and probe photons; the corresponding nonlinear absorption coefficient is betar~=0.9 cm/GW. The plateau absorption is caused by the presence of pump-excited charge carriers; the effective absorption cross section at 776 nm is sigmar~=8×10^–18 cm^2. The above nonlinear absorption parameters are not strongly polarization sensitive. No specific manifestations of the relaxation of hot carriers are found for a pulse duration of ~=0.24 ps
Femtosecond time-resolved absorption processes in lithium niobate crystals
emtosecond pump pulses are strongly attenuated in lithium niobate owing to two-photon absorption; the relevant nonlinear coefficient beta_p ranges from ~3.5 cm/GW for lambda_p = 388 nm to ~0.1 cm/GW for 514 nm. In collinear pump-probe experiments the probe transmission at the double pump wavelength 2lambda_p=776 nm is controlled by two different processes: A direct absorption process involving pump and probe photons (beta_r ~ or = 0.9 cm/GW) leads to a pronounced short-duration transmission dip, whereas the probe absorption by pump-excited charge carriers results in a long-duration plateau. Coherent pump-probe interactions are of no importance. Hot-carrier relaxation occurs on the time scale of < or ~0.1 ps
Dynamics of photoinduced Charge Density Wave-metal phase transition in K0.3MoO3
We present first systematic studies of the photoinduced phase transition from
the ground charge density wave (CDW) state to the normal metallic (M) state in
the prototype quasi-1D CDW system K0.3MoO3. Ultrafast non-thermal CDW melting
is achieved at the absorbed energy density that corresponds to the electronic
energy difference between the metallic and CDW states. The results imply that
on the sub-picosecond timescale when melting and subsequent initial recovery of
the electronic order takes place the lattice remains unperturbed.Comment: Phys. Rev. Lett., accepted for publicatio
Violations of Lorentz Covariance in Light Front Quark Models
Electromagnetic form factors of the nucleon from relativistic quark models
are analyzed: results from null-plane projection of the Feynman triangle
diagram are compared with a Bakamjian-Thomas model. The magnetic form factors
of the models differ by about 15% at spacelike momentum transfer 0.5 GeV^2,
while the charge form factors are much closer. Spurious contributions to
electromagnetic form factors due to violations of rotational symmetry are
eliminated from both models. One method changes magnetic form factors by about
10%, whereas the charge form factors stay nearly the same. Another one changes
the charge form factor of the Bakamjian-Thomas model by more than 50%.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures, Late
Hydrodynamic Description of Granular Convection
We present a hydrodynamic model that captures the essence of granular
dynamics in a vibrating bed. We carry out the linear stability analysis and
uncover the instability mechanism that leads to the appearance of the
convective rolls via a supercritical bifurcation of a bouncing solution. We
also explicitly determine the onset of convection as a function of control
parameters and confirm our picture by numerical simulations of the continuum
equations.Comment: 14 pages, RevTex 11pages + 3 pages figures (Type csh
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