2,345 research outputs found
Growing Cayley trees described by Fermi distribution
We introduce a model for growing Cayley trees with thermal noise. The
evolution of these hierarchical networks reduces to the Eden model and the
Invasion Percolation model in the limit , respectively.
We show that the distribution of the bond strengths (energies) is described by
the Fermi statistics. We discuss the relation of the present results with the
scale-free networks described by Bose statistics
Magnetorotational instability in cool cores of galaxy clusters
Clusters of galaxies are embedded in halos of optically thin, gravitationally
stratified, weakly magnetized plasma at the system's virial temperature. Due to
radiative cooling and anisotropic heat conduction, such intracluster medium
(ICM) is subject to local instabilities, which are combinations of the thermal,
magnetothermal and heat-flux-driven buoyancy instabilities. If the ICM rotates
significantly, its stability properties are substantially modified and, in
particular, also the magnetorotational instability (MRI) can play an important
role. We study simple models of rotating cool-core clusters and we demonstrate
that the MRI can be the dominant instability over significant portions of the
clusters, with possible implications for the dynamics and evolution of the cool
cores. Our results give further motivation for measuring the rotation of the
ICM with future X-ray missions such as ASTRO-H and ATHENA.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in Journal of Plasma
Physics, Special Issue "Complex Plasma Phenomena in the Laboratory and in the
Universe
Effects of azimuth-symmetric acceptance cutoffs on the measured asymmetry in unpolarized Drell-Yan fixed target experiments
Fixed-target unpolarized Drell-Yan experiments often feature an acceptance
depending on the polar angle of the lepton tracks in the laboratory frame.
Typically leptons are detected in a defined angular range, with a dead zone in
the forward region. If the cutoffs imposed by the angular acceptance are
independent of the azimuth, at first sight they do not appear dangerous for a
measurement of the cos(2\phi)-asymmetry, relevant because of its association
with the violation of the Lam-Tung rule and with the Boer-Mulders function. On
the contrary, direct simulations show that up to 10 percent asymmetries are
produced by these cutoffs. These artificial asymmetries present qualitative
features that allow them to mimic the physical ones. They introduce some
model-dependence in the measurements of the cos(2\phi)-asymmetry, since a
precise reconstruction of the acceptance in the Collins-Soper frame requires a
Monte Carlo simulation, that in turn requires some detailed physical input to
generate event distributions. Although experiments in the eighties seem to have
been aware of this problem, the possibility of using the Boer-Mulders function
as an input parameter in the extraction of Transversity has much increased the
requirements of precision on this measurement. Our simulations show that the
safest approach to these measurements is a strong cutoff on the Collins-Soper
polar angle. This reduces statistics, but does not necessarily decrease the
precision in a measurement of the Boer-Mulders function.Comment: 13 pages, 14 figure
The gap amplification at a "shape resonance" in a superlattice of quantum stripes: a mechanism for high Tc
The amplification of the superconducting critical temperature Tc from the low
temperature range in homogeneous 2D planes (Tc<23 K) to the high temperature
range (23 K<Tc<150 K) in an artificial heterostructure of quantum stripes is
calculated. The high Tc is obtained by tuning the chemical potential near the
bottom of the nth subband at a "shape resonance", in a range, whithin the
energy cutoff for the pairing interaction. The resonance for the gap at the nth
"shape resonance" is studied for a free electron gas in the BCS approximation
as a function of the stripe width L, and of the number of electrons {\rho} per
unit surface. An amplification factor for coupling 0.1<{\lambda}<0.3 is
obtained at the third shape resonance raising the critical temperature in the
high Tc range.Comment: 9 pages 6 figure
Quantum statistics in complex networks
In this work we discuss the symmetric construction of bosonic and fermionic
networks and we present a case of a network showing a mixed quantum statistics.
This model takes into account the different nature of nodes, described by a
random parameter that we call energy, and includes rewiring of the links. The
system described by the mixed statistics is an inhomogemeous system formed by
two class of nodes. In fact there is a threshold energy such that
nodes with lower energy increase their connectivity
while nodes with higher energy decrease their
connectivity in time.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Nuclear transparency in quasielastic A(e,e'p): intranuclear cascade versus eikonal approximation
The problem of nuclear propagation through the nuclear medium in quasielastic
A(e,e'p) reactions is discussed in the kinematic range 1<Q^2<7 (GeV/c)^2. The
coefficient of nuclear transparency is calculated for each Q^2 in the framework
of the intranuclear cascade model (INC) and of the eikonal approximation (EA).
The predictions of both models are in good agreement with each other and with
experimental data recently obtained at SLAC, BATES and TJNAF. The EA gives an
explanation of the Q^2 behaviour of the transparency coefficient as a kinematic
effect related to the superposition of contributions from each target shell.Comment: RevTeX, 23 pages, 11 figures separately, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Studio di potenziali acquiferi mediante indagini geoelettriche nel villaggio di itigi (Singida - Tanzania)
http://www.fe.infn.it/u/mantovani/CV/Proceedings/Colonna_08.pd
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