1,570 research outputs found
Stationary structure of relativistic superfluid neutron stars
We describe recent progress in the numerical study of the structure of
rapidly rotating superfluid neutron star models in full general relativity. The
superfluid neutron star is described by a model of two interpenetrating and
interacting fluids, one representing the superfluid neutrons and the second
consisting of the remaining charged particles (protons, electrons, muons). We
consider general stationary configurations where the two fluids can have
different rotation rates around a common rotation axis. The previously
discovered existence of configurations with one fluid in a prolate shape is
confirmed.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Conference proceedings for the 26th Spanish
Relativity Meeting (ERE 2002), Menorca, Spain, 22-24 Sept. 200
Generation of scalar-tensor gravity effects in equilibrium state boson stars
Boson stars in zero-, one-, and two-node equilibrium states are modeled
numerically within the framework of Scalar-Tensor Gravity. The complex scalar
field is taken to be both massive and self-interacting. Configurations are
formed in the case of a linear gravitational scalar coupling (the Brans-Dicke
case) and a quadratic coupling which has been used previously in a cosmological
context. The coupling parameters and asymptotic value for the gravitational
scalar field are chosen so that the known observational constraints on
Scalar-Tensor Gravity are satisfied. It is found that the constraints are so
restrictive that the field equations of General Relativity and Scalar-Tensor
gravity yield virtually identical solutions. We then use catastrophe theory to
determine the dynamically stable configurations. It is found that the maximum
mass allowed for a stable state in Scalar-Tensor gravity in the present
cosmological era is essentially unchanged from that of General Relativity. We
also construct boson star configurations appropriate to earlier cosmological
eras and find that the maximum mass for stable states is smaller than that
predicted by General Relativity, and the more so for earlier eras. However, our
results also show that if the cosmological era is early enough then only states
with positive binding energy can be constructed.Comment: 20 pages, RevTeX, 11 figures, to appear in Class. Quantum Grav.,
comments added, refs update
Anisotropic stresses in inhomogeneous universes
Anisotropic stress contributions to the gravitational field can arise from
magnetic fields, collisionless relativistic particles, hydrodynamic shear
viscosity, gravitational waves, skew axion fields in low-energy string
cosmologies, or topological defects. We investigate the effects of such
stresses on cosmological evolution, and in particular on the dissipation of
shear anisotropy. We generalize some previous results that were given for
homogeneous anisotropic universes, by including small inhomogeneity in the
universe. This generalization is facilitated by a covariant approach. We find
that anisotropic stress dominates the evolution of shear, slowing its decay.
The effect is strongest in radiation-dominated universes, where there is slow
logarithmic decay of shear.Comment: 7 pages Revte
Long-wavelength approximation for string cosmology with barotropic perfect fluid
The field equations derived from the low energy string effective action with
a matter tensor describing a perfect fluid with a barotropic equation of state
are solved iteratively using the long-wavelength approximation, i.e. the field
equations are expanded by the number of spatial gradients. In the zero order, a
quasi-isotropic solution is presented and compared with the general solution of
the pure dilaton gravity. Possible cosmological models are analyzed from the
point of view of the pre-big bang scenario. The second order solutions are
found and their growing and decaying parts are studied.Comment: 19 pages, 1 figur
Spm Oxidation and Parallel Writing on Zirconium Nitride Thin Films
Systematic investigation of the SPM oxidation process of sputter-deposited ZrN thin films is reported. During the intrinsic part of the oxidation, the density of the oxide increases until the total oxide thickness is approximately twice the feature height. Further oxide growth is sustainable as the system undergoes plastic flow followed by delamination from the ZrN-silicon interface keeping the oxide density constant. ZrN exhibits superdiffusive oxidation kinetics in these single tip SPM studies. We extend this work to the fabrication of parallel oxide patterns 70 nm in height covering areas in the square centimeter range. This simple, quick, and well-controlled parallel nanolithographic technique has great potential for biomedical template fabrication. (c) 2005 American Vacuum Society
Parallel Writing on Zirconium Nitride Thin Films by Local Oxidation Nanolithography
Parallel pattern transfer of submicrometer-scale oxide features onto zirconium nitride thin films is reported. The oxidation reaction was verified by Auger microprobe analysis and secondary ion mass spectrometry. Oxide features of similar to70 nm in height can be formed and selectively etched in a dilute aqueous hydrogen fluoride solution. This provides an interesting route to potential new applications for high-melting point, biocompatible surfaces that possess small feature sizes with controlled geometries. (C) 2004 American Institute of Physics
The New Albany Shale gas play in southern Indiana
This poster was presented at the 2006 Eastern Section American Association of Petroleum Geologists, 35th Annual Meeting, in Buffalo, N.Y., October 8-11, 2006.The New Albany Shale (Devonian and Mississippian) in Indiana is mostly brownish-black organic-rich shale with lesser greenish-gray shale. The formation is 100 to 140 feet thick in southeastern Indiana and dips and thickens to the southwest into the Illinois Basin, where it attains a thickness of more than 360 feet in Posey County.
Gas production from New Albany Shale began in 1885 and drilling activity continued into the 1930s, when interest waned in favor of more lucrative opportunities elsewhere. Renewed activity, driven by higher gas prices, has been brisk since the mid-1990s, witnessed by the completion of more than 400 productive wells. The majority of these wells were drilled in Harrison County, where production typically occurs at depths from 500 to 1,100 feet and production rates generally range from 20 to 450 MCFGPD. In the past 2 years, Daviess County and surrounding areas have become the focus of New Albany exploration after the El Paso Production No. 2-10 Peterson horizontal discovery well was rumored to have tested 1.3 MMCFGPD at an approximate measured depth of 2,200 feet.
New Albany production is mostly from the organic-rich Clegg Creek Member. Gas compositions (C1-C4 and CO2) and carbon and hydrogen isotopic signatures indicate that both purely thermogenic and mixed thermogenic and biogenic gases are produced from the New Albany. Produced water ranges from brine to water diluted through recharge by modern precipitation; the brine zones contain primarily thermogenic gas and the diluted water zones contain gas of mixed thermogenic and biogenic origin
Unconstrained Hamiltonian formulation of General Relativity with thermo-elastic sources
A new formulation of the Hamiltonian dynamics of the gravitational field
interacting with(non-dissipative) thermo-elastic matter is discussed. It is
based on a gauge condition which allows us to encode the six degrees of freedom
of the ``gravity + matter''-system (two gravitational and four
thermo-mechanical ones), together with their conjugate momenta, in the
Riemannian metric q_{ij} and its conjugate ADM momentum P^{ij}. These variables
are not subject to constraints. We prove that the Hamiltonian of this system is
equal to the total matter entropy. It generates uniquely the dynamics once
expressed as a function of the canonical variables. Any function U obtained in
this way must fulfil a system of three, first order, partial differential
equations of the Hamilton-Jacobi type in the variables (q_{ij},P^{ij}). These
equations are universal and do not depend upon the properties of the material:
its equation of state enters only as a boundary condition. The well posedness
of this problem is proved. Finally, we prove that for vanishing matter density,
the value of U goes to infinity almost everywhere and remains bounded only on
the vacuum constraints. Therefore the constrained, vacuum Hamiltonian (zero on
constraints and infinity elsewhere) can be obtained as the limit of a ``deep
potential well'' corresponding to non-vanishing matter. This unconstrained
description of Hamiltonian General Relativity can be useful in numerical
calculations as well as in the canonical approach to Quantum Gravity.Comment: 29 pages, TeX forma
Simulated VLBI Images From Relativistic Hydrodynamic Jet Models
A series of simulated maps showing the appearance in total intensity of flows
computed using a recently developed relativistic hydrodynamic code (Duncan \&
Hughes 1994: ApJ, 436, L119) are presented. The radiation transfer calculations
were performed by assuming the flow is permeated by a magnetic field and fast
particle distribution in energy equipartition, with energy density proportional
to the hydrodynamic energy density (i.e., pressure). We find that relativistic
flows subject to strong perturbations exhibit a density structure consisting of
a series of nested bow shocks, and that this structure is evident in the
intensity maps for large viewing angles. However, for viewing angles
, differential Doppler boosting leads to a series of axial knots
of emission, similar to the pattern exhibited by many VLBI sources. The
appearance of VLBI knots is determined primarily by the Doppler boosting of
parts of a more extended flow. To study the evolution of a perturbed jet, a
time series of maps was produced and an integrated flux light curve created.
The light curve shows features characteristic of a radio loud AGN: small
amplitude variations and a large outburst. We find that in the absence of
perturbations, jets with a modest Lorentz factor () exhibit complex
intensity maps, while faster jets (Lorentz factor ) are largely
featureless. We also study the appearance of kiloparsec jet-counterjet pairs by
producing simulated maps at relatively large viewing angles; we conclude that
observed hot spot emission is more likely to be associated with the Mach disk
than with the outer, bow shock.Comment: 27 pages, uses aasms4.sty; 18 PostScript figures (1.57Mb gziped,
8.67Mb gunziped) available from
http://www.astro.lsa.umich.edu/users/hughes/icon_dir/rad.html or by anonymous
ftp from ra.astro.lsa.umich.edu in pub/get/hughes. Submitted to Ap.
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