1,459 research outputs found
Colorless States in Perturbative QCD: Charmonium and Rapidity Gaps
We point out that an unorthodox way to describe the production of rapidity
gaps in deep inelastic scattering, recently proposed by Buchm\"uller and
Hebecker, suggests a description of the production of heavy quark bound states
which is in agreement with data. The approach questions the conventional
treatment of the color quantum number in perturbative QCD.Comment: 14 pages, plain Latex, 9 postscript figures included. Uses epsf.sty.
Postscript file of paper with figures also available at
http://phenom.physics.wisc.edu/pub/preprints/1995/madph-95-919.ps.Z or at
ftp://phenom.physics.wisc.edu/pub/preprints/1995/madph-95-919.ps.
Electromagnetic absorption of a pinned Wigner crystal at finite temperatures
We investigate the microwave absorption of a pinned, two-dimensional Wigner
crystal in a strong magnetic field at finite temperatures. Using a model of a
uniform commensurate pinning potential, we analyze thermal broadening of the
electromagnetic absorption resonance. Surprisingly, we find that the pinning
resonance peak should remain sharp even when the temperature is comparable or
greater than the peak frequency. This result agrees qualitatively with recent
experimental observations of the ac conductivity in two-dimensional hole
systems in a magnetically induced insulating state. It is shown, in analogy
with Kohn's theorem, that the electron-electron interaction does not affect the
response of a harmonically pinned Wigner crystal to a spatially uniform
external field at any temperature. We thus focus on anharmonicity in the
pinning potential as a source of broadening. Using a 1/N expansion technique,
we show that the broadening is introduced through the self-energy corrections
to the magnetophonon Green's functions.Comment: 21 pages, 9 eps figure
Verticale temperatuurgradiënten in geconditioneerde kassen: Effecten op groei, ontwikkeling en onderliggende processen bij tomaat
In de jaren 2003 tot 2007 is het aantal bedrijven waarop (semi)gesloten geteeld wordt geleidelijk toegenomen. Op alle bedrijven bleken echter vragen te bestaan over de reacties van het gewas op het nieuwe klimaat. Daarom is in 2008 door Wageningen UR Glastuinbouw een onderzoek gestart naar de groei van tomaat in geconditioneerde kassen, waarin veel aandacht wordt besteed aan de fysiologische processen in de plant. Het onderzoek wordt gefinancierd vanuit het programma Kas als Energiebron door Productschap Tuinbouw en het ministerie van EL&I en wordt begeleid door een aantal tomatentelers en een adviseur. Het onderzoek dat in dit rapport wordt beschreven had als centrale vraag hoe een verticale temperatuurgradiënt de processen in de plant beïnvloedt
Review of progress in Fast Ignition
Copyright 2005 American Institute of Physics. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics. The following article appeared in Physics of Plasmas, 12(5), 057305, 2005 and may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.187124
Quantum Correlated Interstitials and the Hall Resistivity of the Magnetically Induced Wigner Crystal
We study a trial wavefunction for an interstitial in a Wigner crystal. We
find that the electron correlations, ignored in a conventional Hartree-Fock
treatment, dramatically lower the interstitial energy, especially at fillings
close to an incompressible liquid state. The correlation between the
interstitial electron and the lattice electrons at is introduced by
constructing a trial wave- function which bears a Jastrow factor of a Laughlin
state at . For fillings close to but just below , we find
that a perfect Wigner crystal becomes unstable against formation of such
interstitials. It is argued that conduction due to correlated interstitials in
the presence of weak disorder leads to the {\it classical} Hall resistivity, as
seen experimentally.Comment: 10 pages, RevTe
Symmetries and Elasticity of Nematic Gels
A nematic liquid-crystal gel is a macroscopically homogeneous elastic medium
with the rotational symmetry of a nematic liquid crystal. In this paper, we
develop a general approach to the study of these gels that incorporates all
underlying symmetries. After reviewing traditional elasticity and clarifying
the role of broken rotational symmetries in both the reference space of points
in the undistorted medium and the target space into which these points are
mapped, we explore the unusual properties of nematic gels from a number of
perspectives. We show how symmetries of nematic gels formed via spontaneous
symmetry breaking from an isotropic gel enforce soft elastic response
characterized by the vanishing of a shear modulus and the vanishing of stress
up to a critical value of strain along certain directions. We also study the
phase transition from isotropic to nematic gels. In addition to being fully
consistent with approaches to nematic gels based on rubber elasticity, our
description has the important advantages of being independent of a microscopic
model, of emphasizing and clarifying the role of broken symmetries in
determining elastic response, and of permitting easy incorporation of spatial
variations, thermal fluctuations, and gel heterogeneity, thereby allowing a
full statistical-mechanical treatment of these novel materials.Comment: 21 pages, 4 eps figure
Electron-Electron Interactions and the Hall-Insulator
Using the Kubo formula, we show explicitly that a non-interacting electron
system can not behave like a Hall-insulator, {\it ie.,} a DC resistivity matrix
and finite in the zero temperature
limit, as has been observed recently in experiment. For a strongly interacting
electron system in a magnetic field, we illustrate, by constructing a specific
form of correlations between mobile and localized electrons, that the Hall
resistivity can approximately equal to its classical value. A Hall-insulator is
realized in this model when the density of mobile electrons becomes vanishingly
small. It is shown that in non-interacting electron systems, the
zero-temperature frequency-dependent conductacnce generally does not give the
DC conductance.Comment: 11 pages, RevTeX3.
Update on the correlation of the highest energy cosmic rays with nearby extragalactic matter
Data collected by the Pierre Auger Observatory through 31 August 2007 showed
evidence for anisotropy in the arrival directions of cosmic rays above the
Greisen-Zatsepin-Kuz'min energy threshold, \nobreak{eV}. The
anisotropy was measured by the fraction of arrival directions that are less
than from the position of an active galactic nucleus within 75 Mpc
(using the V\'eron-Cetty and V\'eron catalog). An updated
measurement of this fraction is reported here using the arrival directions of
cosmic rays recorded above the same energy threshold through 31 December 2009.
The number of arrival directions has increased from 27 to 69, allowing a more
precise measurement. The correlating fraction is , compared
with expected for isotropic cosmic rays. This is down from the early
estimate of . The enlarged set of arrival directions is
examined also in relation to other populations of nearby extragalactic objects:
galaxies in the 2 Microns All Sky Survey and active galactic nuclei detected in
hard X-rays by the Swift Burst Alert Telescope. A celestial region around the
position of the radiogalaxy Cen A has the largest excess of arrival directions
relative to isotropic expectations. The 2-point autocorrelation function is
shown for the enlarged set of arrival directions and compared to the isotropic
expectation.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astroparticle Physics on 31 August 201
Alternative farrowing systems: design criteria for farrowing systems based on the biological needs of sows and piglets
The construction of a suitable farrowing environment is a continuing dilemma: the piglet's needs must be matched with those of the sow and the farmer during the main phases that constitute farrowing: nest building, parturition and lactation. Difficulties exist in resolving the various conflicts of interest between and within these three parties (e. g. sow v. farmer: space needed for nest building v. space needed to maximise the amount of farrowing accommodation, or sow v. sow: ensuring the survival of the current litter v. maintaining condition for future litters). Thus, the challenge is to resolve these conflicts and design a system that maximises sow and piglet welfare while maintaining an economically efficient and sustainable enterprise. In order to successfully design a farrowing and lactation environment, it is necessary to consider the biological needs of both the sow and her litter. The natural behaviour of the sow has been well documented and very little variation exists between reports of peri-parturient behaviour observed in extensively kept domestic sows and their wild counterparts. The failure for domestication to significantly alter these behavioural patterns provides evidence that they are biologically significant and that the commercial farrowing environment should attempt to accommodate this behavioural repertoire. In addition, the behavioural needs of the piglets, as well as the physiological needs of both sows and their offspring should be considered. This article aims to review the considerable body of literature detailing the behavioural repertoire of sows and their offspring during the different phases of farrowing, and the accompanying physiological processes. The focus is on identifying biological needs of the animals involved in order to synthesise the appropriate design criteria for farrowing and lactation systems, which should optimise both welfare and animal production.</p
Innovation Management Techniques and Tools: a review from Theory and Practice
Knowledge is considered to be an economic driver in today’s economy. It has become a commodity, a resource that can be packed and transferred. The objective of this paper is to provide a comprehensive review of the scope, trends and major actors (firms, organizations, government, consultants, academia, etc.) in the development and use of methods to manage innovation in a knowledge-driven economy. The paper identifies the main innovation management techniques (IMTs) aiming at the improvement of firm competitiveness by means of knowledge management. It will specifically focus on those IMTs for which knowledge is a relevant part of the innovation process. The research study, based on a survey at the European level, concludes that a knowledge-driven economy affects the innovation process and approach. The traditional idea that innovation is based on research (technology-push theory) and interaction between firms and other actors has been replaced by the current social network theory of innovation, where knowledge plays a crucial role in fostering innovation. Simultaneously, organizations in both public and private sectors have launched initiatives to develop methodologies and tools to support business innovation management. Higher education establishments, business schools and consulting companies are developing innovative and adequate methodologies and tools, while public authorities are designing and setting up education and training schemes aimed at disseminating best practices among all kinds of businesse
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