34,713 research outputs found
Magnetic fields in nearby galaxies
We describe a recent full-polarization radio continuum survey, performed
using the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT), of several nearby
galaxies in the Spitzer Infrared Nearby Galaxies Survey (SINGS) sample. The
WSRT-SINGS survey has been utilized to study the polarized emission and Faraday
rotation measures (RMs) in the targets, and reveals an important new
observational trend. The azimuthal distribution of polarized flux seems to be
intimately related to the kinematic orientation of galaxies, such that in
face-on galaxies the lowest level of polarized flux is detected along the
kinematic major axis. In highly inclined galaxies, the polarized flux is
minimized on both ends of the major axis, and peaks near the minor axis. Using
models of various three-dimensional magnetic field geometries, and including
the effects of turbulent depolarization in the midplane, we are able to
reproduce the qualitative distribution of polarized flux in the target
galaxies, its variation with inclination, and the distribution of RMs, thereby
constraining the global magnetic field structure in galaxies. Future radio
telescope facilities, now being planned and constructed, will have properties
making them extremely well-suited to perform vastly larger surveys of this
type, and are thereby poised to significantly increase our understanding of the
global structure of galactic magnetic fields. We discuss progress that can be
made using surveys which will be realized with these new facilities, focusing
in particular on the Aperture Tile in Focus (APERTIF) and Australian Square
Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) telescopes, both based on Focal Plane Array
(FPA) designs, which are expected to be particularly useful for wide-field
polarization applications.Comment: In proceedings of "Panoramic Radio Astronomy" conference held 2-5
June 2009, Groningen, the Netherlands. 6 pages, 2 figure
Boundary conditions at the mobility edge
It is shown that the universal behavior of the spacing distribution of
nearest energy levels at the metal--insulator Anderson transition is indeed
dependent on the boundary conditions. The spectral rigidity also
depends on the boundary conditions but this dependence vanishes at high energy
. This implies that the multifractal exponent of the participation
ratio of wave functions in the bulk is not affected by the boundary conditions.Comment: 4 pages of revtex, new figures, new abstract, the text has been
changed: The large energy behavior of the number variance has been found to
be independent of the boundary condition
Analysis methodology for flow-level evaluation of a hybrid mobile-sensor network
Our society uses a large diversity of co-existing wired and wireless networks in order to satisfy its communication needs. A cooper- ation between these networks can benefit performance, service availabil- ity and deployment ease, and leads to the emergence of hybrid networks. This position paper focuses on a hybrid mobile-sensor network identify- ing potential advantages and challenges of its use and defining feasible applications. The main value of the paper, however, is in the proposed analysis approach to evaluate the performance at the mobile network side given the mixed mobile-sensor traffic. The approach combines packet- level analysis with modelling of flow-level behaviour and can be applied for the study of various application scenarios. In this paper we consider two applications with distinct traffic models namely multimedia traffic and best-effort traffic
Pomeron Vertices in Perturbative QCD in Diffractive Scattering
We analyse the momentum space triple Pomeron vertex in perturbative QCD. In
addition to the standard form of this vertex which is used in the context of
total cross-sections at high energies and in the QCD reggeon field theory,
there exists an alternative form which has to be used in the study of high-mass
diffraction. We review and analyse the relation between these two versions. We
discuss some implications for the BK-equation. In the second part of our paper
we extend this analysis to the Pomeron-Odderon-Odderon vertex.Comment: 23 pages, 5 figures, Late
Solitonic-exchange mechanism of surface~diffusion
We study surface diffusion in the framework of a generalized
Frenkel-Kontorova model with a nonconvex transverse degree of freedom. The
model describes a lattice of atoms with a given concentration interacting by
Morse-type forces, the lattice being subjected to a two-dimensional substrate
potential which is periodic in one direction and nonconvex (Morse) in the
transverse direction. The results are used to describe the complicated
exchange-mediated diffusion mechanism recently observed in MD simulations [J.E.
Black and Zeng-Ju Tian, Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 71}, 2445-2448(1993)].Comment: 22 Revtex pages, 9 figures to appear in Phys. Rev.
Unitarity of the tree approximation to the Glauber AA amplitude for large A
The nucleus-nucleus Glauber amplitude in the tree approximation is studied
for heavy participant nuclei. It is shown that, contrary to previous published
results, it is not unitary for realistic values of nucleon-nucleon
cross-sections.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure, 1 table. Submitted to Yad. Fi
Decoherence in a system of many two--level atoms
I show that the decoherence in a system of degenerate two--level atoms
interacting with a bosonic heat bath is for any number of atoms governed by
a generalized Hamming distance (called ``decoherence metric'') between the
superposed quantum states, with a time--dependent metric tensor that is
specific for the heat bath.The decoherence metric allows for the complete
characterization of the decoherence of all possible superpositions of
many-particle states, and can be applied to minimize the over-all decoherence
in a quantum memory. For qubits which are far apart, the decoherence is given
by a function describing single-qubit decoherence times the standard Hamming
distance. I apply the theory to cold atoms in an optical lattice interacting
with black body radiation.Comment: replaced with published versio
Exact Study of the Effect of Level Statistics in Ultrasmall Superconducting Grains
The reduced BCS model that is commonly used for ultrasmall superconducting
grains has an exact solution worked out long ago by Richardson in the context
of nuclear physics. We use it to check the quality of previous treatments of
this model, and to investigate the effect of level statistics on pairing
correlations. We find that the ground state energies are on average somewhat
lower for systems with non-uniform than uniform level spacings, but both have
an equally smooth crossover from the bulk to the few-electron regime. In the
latter, statistical fluctuations in ground state energies strongly depend on
the grain's electron number parity.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figs, RevTe
- …