40,735 research outputs found
Statistical physics of cerebral embolization leading to stroke
We discuss the physics of embolic stroke using a minimal model of emboli
moving through the cerebral arteries. Our model of the blood flow network
consists of a bifurcating tree, into which we introduce particles (emboli) that
halt flow on reaching a node of similar size. Flow is weighted away from
blocked arteries, inducing an effective interaction between emboli. We justify
the form of the flow weighting using a steady flow (Poiseuille) analysis and a
more complicated nonlinear analysis. We discuss free flowing and heavily
congested limits and examine the transition from free flow to congestion using
numerics. The correlation time is found to increase significantly at a critical
value, and a finite size scaling is carried out. An order parameter for
non-equilibrium critical behavior is identified as the overlap of blockages'
flow shadows. Our work shows embolic stroke to be a feature of the cerebral
blood flow network on the verge of a phase transition.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures. Major rewrite including improved justification
of the model and a finite size scalin
Classification of -Wave and Systems
An exotic meson, the with , has been seen to
decay into a p-wave system. If this decay conserves flavor SU(3),
then it can be shown that this exotic meson must be a four-quark state () belonging to a flavor representation
of SU(3). In contrast, the with a substantial decay mode into
is likely to be a member of a flavor octet.Comment: 8 page
Constraining Modular Inflation in the MSSM from Giant Q-Ball Formation
We discuss constraints on which flat directions can have large vacuum
expectation values (VEVs) after inflation. We show that only flat directions
which are not charged under B-L and develop positive pressure due to
renormalization group effects can have large VEVs of order \Mp. For example,
within the MSSM only the flat direction is found to be viable. This
strongly constrains the embedding of a broad class of inflationary models in
the MSSM or some other supersymmetric extension of the SM. For flat directions
with negative pressure, the condensate fragments into very large Q-balls which
we call Q-giants. We discuss the formation, evolution and reheating of these
Q-giants and show that they decay too late. The analysis requires taking into
account new phases of the flat directions, which have been overlooked in the
formation and dynamics of the Q-balls. These constraints may be ameliorated by
invoking a short period of thermal inflation. The latter, however, is viable in
a very narrow window of parameter space and requires fine tuning.Comment: 40 pages, 3 figure
Phase equilibrium modeling for high temperature metallization on GaAs solar cells
Recent trends in performance specifications and functional requirements have brought about the need for high temperature metallization technology to be developed for survivable DOD space systems and to enhance solar cell reliability. The temperature constitution phase diagrams of selected binary and ternary systems were reviewed to determine the temperature and type of phase transformation present in the alloy systems. Of paramount interest are the liquid-solid and solid-solid transformations. Data are being utilized to aid in the selection of electrical contact materials to gallium arsenide solar cells. Published data on the phase diagrams for binary systems is readily available. However, information for ternary systems is limited. A computer model is being developed which will enable the phase equilibrium predictions for ternary systems where experimental data is lacking
Non-monotonic temperature dependent transport in graphene grown by Chemical Vapor Deposition
Temperature-dependent resistivity of graphene grown by chemical vapor
deposition (CVD) is investigated. We observe in low mobility CVD graphene
device a strong insulating behavior at low temperatures and a metallic behavior
at high temperatures manifesting a non-monotonic in the temperature dependent
resistivity.This feature is strongly affected by carrier density modulation. To
understand this anomalous temperature dependence, we introduce thermal
activation of charge carriers in electron-hole puddles induced by randomly
distributed charged impurities. Observed temperature evolution of resistivity
is then understood from the competition among thermal activation of charge
carriers, temperature-dependent screening and phonon scattering effects. Our
results imply that the transport property of transferred CVD-grown graphene is
strongly influenced by the details of the environmentComment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Shortcuts in a Nonlinear Dynamical Braneworld in Six Dimensions
We consider a dynamical brane world in a six-dimensional spacetime containing
a singularity. Using the Israel conditions we study the motion of a 4-brane
embedded in this setup. We analyse the brane behaviour when its position is
perturbed about a fixed point and solve the full nonlinear dynamics in the
several possible scenarios. We also investigate the possible gravitational
shortcuts and calculate the delay between graviton and photon signals and the
ratio of the corresponding subtended horizons.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figures. References and discussion added. Title changed
to match the version accepted in Class. and Quant. Gra
Exact solutions for models of evolving networks with addition and deletion of nodes
There has been considerable recent interest in the properties of networks,
such as citation networks and the worldwide web, that grow by the addition of
vertices, and a number of simple solvable models of network growth have been
studied. In the real world, however, many networks, including the web, not only
add vertices but also lose them. Here we formulate models of the time evolution
of such networks and give exact solutions for a number of cases of particular
interest. For the case of net growth and so-called preferential attachment --
in which newly appearing vertices attach to previously existing ones in
proportion to vertex degree -- we show that the resulting networks have
power-law degree distributions, but with an exponent that diverges as the
growth rate vanishes. We conjecture that the low exponent values observed in
real-world networks are thus the result of vigorous growth in which the rate of
addition of vertices far exceeds the rate of removal. Were growth to slow in
the future, for instance in a more mature future version of the web, we would
expect to see exponents increase, potentially without bound.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Covariant Helicity-Coupling Amplitudes: A New Formulation
We have worked out covariant amplitudes for any two-body decay of a resonance
with an arbitrary non-zero mass, which involves arbitrary integer spins in the
initial and the final states. One key new ingredient for this work is the
application of the total intrinsic spin operator which is given
directly in terms of the generators of the Poincar\'e group.
Using the results of this study, we show how to explore the Lorentz factors
which appear naturally, if the momentum-space wave functions are used to form
the covariant decay amplitudes. We have devised a method of constructing our
covariant decay amplitudes, such that they lead to the Zemach amplitudes when
the Lorentz factors are set one
Virgo Galaxies with Long One-Sided HI Tails
In a new HI imaging survey of Virgo galaxies (VIVA: VLA Imaging of Virgo
galaxies in Atomic gas), we find 7 spiral galaxies with long HI tails. The
morphology varies but all the tails are extended well beyond the optical radii
on one side. These galaxies are found in intermediate-low density regions
(0.6-1 Mpc in projection from M87). The tails are all pointing roughly away
from M87, suggesting that these tails may have been created by a global cluster
mechanism. While the tidal effects of the cluster potential are too small, a
rough estimate suggests that simple ram-pressure stripping indeed could have
formed the tails in all but two cases. At least three systems show HI
truncation to within the stellar disk, providing evidence for a gas-gas
interaction. Although most of these galaxies do not appear disturbed optically,
some have close neighbors, suggesting that tidal interactions may have moved
gas outwards making it more susceptible to the ICM ram-pressure or viscosity.
Indeed, a simulation study of one of the tail galaxies, NGC 4654, suggests that
the galaxy is most likely affected by the combined effect of a gravitational
interaction and ram-pressure stripping. We conclude that these one-sided HI
tail galaxies have recently arrived in the cluster, falling in on highly radial
orbits. It appears that galaxies begin to lose their gas already at
intermediate distances from the cluster center through ram-pressure or
turbulent viscous stripping and tidal interactions with neighbours, or a
combination of both.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures (including 1 plate), accepted for accepted for
publication in ApJ Letter (vol. 659, L115), a version with full resolution
Plate 1 is available from
http://www.astro.umass.edu/~achung/astro-ph/viva_tail.pd
Radion Potential and Brane Dynamics
We examine the cosmology of the Randall-Sundrum model in a dynamic setting
where scalar fields are present in the bulk as well as the branes. This
generates a mechanism similar to that of Goldberger-Wise for radion
stabilization and the recovery of late-cosmology features in the branes. Due to
the induced radion dynamics, the inflating branes roll towards the minimum of
the radion potential, thereby exiting inflation and reheating the Universe. In
the slow roll part of the potential, the 'TeV' branes have maximum inflation
rate and energy as their coupling to the radion and bulk modes have minimum
suppresion. Hence, when rolling down the steep end of the potential towards the
stable point, the radion field (which appears as the inflaton of the effective
4D theory in the branes) decays very fast, reheats the Universe .This process
results decayin a decrease of brane's canonical vacuum energy .
However, at the minimum of the potential is small but not
neccessarily zero and the fine-tuning issue remains .Density perturbation
constraints introduce an upper bound when the radion stabilizies. Due to the
large radion mass and strong suppression to the bulk modes, moduli problems and
bulk reheating do not occur. The reheat temperature and a sufficient number of
e-folding constraints for the brane-universe are also satisfied. The model
therefore recovers the radiation dominated FRW universe.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures,extraneous sentences removed, 2 footnotes added,
some typos correcte
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