2,673 research outputs found
Protons as the prime contributors to the storm time ring current
Following a large magnetic storm (17 June 1972), Explorer 45 measured the equatorial particle populations and magnetic field. Using data obtained during the symmetic recovery phase, it is shown that through a series of self-consistent calculations, the measured protons with energies from 1 to 872 keV, can account for the observed ring current magnetic effects within experimental uncertainities. This enables an upper limit to be set for the heavy ion contribution to the storm time ring current
Self-Referential Noise and the Synthesis of Three-Dimensional Space
Generalising results from Godel and Chaitin in mathematics suggests that
self-referential systems contain intrinsic randomness. We argue that this is
relevant to modelling the universe and show how three-dimensional space may
arise from a non-geometric order-disorder model driven by self-referential
noise.Comment: Figure labels correcte
Two Nucleon-States in a Chiral Quark-Diquark Model
We study the ground and first excited states of nucleons in a chiral
quark-diquark model. We include two quark-diquark channels of the
scalar-isoscalar and axial-vector-isovector types for the nucleon states. The
diquark correlation violating the spin-flavor SU(4) symmetry allows to
treat the two quark-diquark channels independently. Hence the two states appear
as the superpositions of the two quark-diquark channels; one is the nucleon and
the other is a state which does not appear in the SU(4) quark models.
With a reasonable choice of model parameters, the mass of the excited state
appears at around 1.5 GeV, which we identify with the Roper resonance N(1440).Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures. Errors are corrected. Conclusions are not
affecte
High Reynolds number tests of a C-141A aircraft semispan model to investigate shock-induced separation
Results from a high Reynolds number transonic wind tunnel investigation are presented. Wing chordwise pressure distributions were measured over a matrix of Mach numbers and angles-of-attack for which shock-induced separations are known to exist. The range of Reynolds number covered by these data nearly spanned the gap between previously available wind tunnel and flight test data. The results are compared with both flight and low Reynolds number data, and show that use of the semispan test technique produced good correlation with the prior data at both ends of the Reynolds number range, but indicated strong sensitivity to details of the test setup
The modern tools of quantum mechanics (A tutorial on quantum states, measurements, and operations)
This tutorial is devoted to review the modern tools of quantum mechanics,
which are suitable to describe states, measurements, and operations of
realistic, not isolated, systems in interaction with their environment, and
with any kind of measuring and processing devices. We underline the central
role of the Born rule and and illustrate how the notion of density operator
naturally emerges, together the concept of purification of a mixed state. In
reexamining the postulates of standard quantum measurement theory, we
investigate how they may formally generalized, going beyond the description in
terms of selfadjoint operators and projective measurements, and how this leads
to the introduction of generalized measurements, probability operator-valued
measures (POVM) and detection operators. We then state and prove the Naimark
theorem, which elucidates the connections between generalized and standard
measurements and illustrates how a generalized measurement may be physically
implemented. The "impossibility" of a joint measurement of two non commuting
observables is revisited and its canonical implementations as a generalized
measurement is described in some details. Finally, we address the basic
properties, usually captured by the request of unitarity, that a map
transforming quantum states into quantum states should satisfy to be physically
admissible, and introduce the notion of complete positivity (CP). We then state
and prove the Stinespring/Kraus-Choi-Sudarshan dilation theorem and elucidate
the connections between the CP-maps description of quantum operations, together
with their operator-sum representation, and the customary unitary description
of quantum evolution. We also address transposition as an example of positive
map which is not completely positive, and provide some examples of generalized
measurements and quantum operations.Comment: Tutorial. 26 pages, 1 figure. Published in a special issue of EPJ -
ST devoted to the memory of Federico Casagrand
Calculation of the Chiral Lagrangian Coefficients
We present a systematic way to combine the global color model and the
instanton liquid model to calculate the chiral
Lagrangian coefficients. Our numerical results are in agreement well with the
experimental values.Comment: 7 pages, To appear in Chin.Phys.Lett, Year 200
pi-pi scattering in a QCD based model field theory
A model field theory, in which the interaction between quarks is mediated by
dressed vector boson exchange, is used to analyse the pionic sector of QCD. It
is shown that this model, which incorporates dynamical chiral symmetry
breaking, asymptotic freedom and quark confinement, allows one to calculate
, , and the partial wave amplitudes in -
scattering and obtain good agreement with the experimental data, with the
latter being well described up to energies \mbox{ MeV}.Comment: 23 Pages, 4 figures in PostScript format, PHY-7512-TH-93, REVTEX
Available via anonymous ftp in /pub: login anonymou get pipi93.tex Fig1.ps
Fig2.ps Fig3.ps Fig4.p
Ground-state Spectrum of Light-quark Mesons
A confining, Goldstone theorem preserving, separable Ansatz for the ladder
kernel of the two-body Bethe-Salpeter equation is constructed from
phenomenologically efficacious , and dressed-quark propagators. The
simplicity of the approach is its merit. It provides a good description of the
ground-state isovector-pseudoscalar, vector and axial-vector meson spectrum;
facilitates an exploration of the relative importance of various components of
the two-body Bethe-Salpeter amplitudes, showing that sub-leading Dirac
components are quantitatively important in the isovector-pseudoscalar meson
channels; and allows a scrutiny of the domain of applicability of ladder
truncation studies. A colour-antitriplet diquark spectrum is obtained.
Shortcomings of separable Ans\"atze and the ladder kernel are highlighted.Comment: 30 pages, LaTeX/REVTEX 3.0, no figure
Efficiency in nanostructured thermionic and thermoelectric devices
Advances in solid-state device design now allow the spectrum of transmitted
electrons in thermionic and thermoelectric devices to be engineered in ways
that were not previously possible. Here we show that the shape of the electron
energy spectrum in these devices has a significant impact on their performance.
We distinguish between traditional thermionic devices where electron momentum
is filtered in the direction of transport only and a second type, in which the
electron filtering occurs according to total electron momentum. Such 'total
momentum filtered' kr thermionic devices could potentially be implemented in,
for example, quantum dot superlattices. It is shown that whilst total momentum
filtered thermionic devices may achieve efficiency equal to the Carnot value,
traditional thermionic devices are limited to efficiency below this. Our second
main result is that the electronic efficiency of a device is not only improved
by reducing the width of the transmission filter as has previously been shown,
but also strongly depends on whether the transmission probability rises sharply
from zero to full transmission. The benefit of increasing efficiency through a
sharply rising transmission probability is that it can be achieved without
sacrificing device power, in contrast to the use of a narrow transmission
filter which can greatly reduce power. We show that devices which have a
sharply-rising transmission probability significantly outperform those which do
not and it is shown such transmission probabilities may be achieved with
practical single and multibarrier devices. Finally, we comment on the
implications of the effect the shape of the electron energy spectrum on the
efficiency of thermoelectric devices.Comment: 11 pages, 15 figure
Chiral effective action with heavy quark symmetry
We derive an effective action combining chiral and heavy quark symmetry,
using approximate bosonization techniques of QCD. We explicitly show that the
heavy-quark limit is compatible with the large (number of color) limit in
the meson sector, and derive specific couplings between the light and heavy
mesons (, , ...) and their chiral partners. The relevance of this
effective action to solitons with heavy quarks describing heavy baryons is
discussed.Comment: 14 pages, SUNY-NTG-92/2
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