1,288 research outputs found
HST Observations of SGR 0526-66: New Constraints on Accretion and Magnetar Models
Soft Gamma-ray Repeaters (SGRs) are among the most enigmatic sources known
today. Exhibiting huge X- and Gamma-ray bursts and flares, as well as soft
quiescent X-ray emission, their energy source remains a mystery. Just as
mysterious are the Anomalous X-ray pulsars (AXPs), which share many of the same
characteristics. Thanks to recent Chandra observations, SGR 0526-66, the first
SGR, now appears to be a transition object bridging the two classes, and
therefore observations of it have implications for both SGRs and AXPs. The two
most popular current models for their persistent emission are accretion of a
fossil disk or decay of an enormous (~10^15 G) magnetic field in a magnetar. We
show how deep optical observations of SGR 0526-66, the only SGR with small
enough optical extinction for meaningful observations, show no evidence of an
optical counterpart. These observation place strong new constraints on both
accretion disk and magnetar models, and suggest that the spectral energy
distribution may peak in the hard-UV. Almost all accretion disks are excluded
by the optical data, and a magnetar would require a ~10^15-10^16 G field.Comment: 23 pages, 5 figures. Accepted by Ap
Photonic Crystal Vertical Cavity Lasers
Photonic crystal confinement in vertical cavity surface-emitting lasers (VCSELs) is a robust and reliable technology for achieving operation in the fundamental lateral mode and is potentially applicable to a variety of materials systems and operating wavelengths. We demonstrate photonic crystal VCSELs operating in a single transverse mode with over 30 dB side mode suppression and over 1 mW of output power. These lasers have been subjected to a post-process technique to introduce the etched holes making up the photonic crystals that surround a centralized defect in which lasing occurs. We also show that coupling between adjacent defects in a photonic lattice is possible, further increasing the power available in the devices
Orbital quantization in the high magnetic field state of a charge-density-wave system
A superposition of the Pauli and orbital coupling of a high magnetic field to
charge carriers in a charge-density-wave (CDW) system is proposed to give rise
to transitions between subphases with quantized values of the CDW wavevector.
By contrast to the purely orbital field-induced density-wave effects which
require a strongly imperfect nesting of the Fermi surface, the new transitions
can occur even if the Fermi surface is well nested at zero field. We suggest
that such transitions are observed in the organic metal
-(BEDT-TTF)KHg(SCN) under a strongly tilted magnetic field.Comment: 14 pages including 4 figure
Liquid Crystal-Solid Interface Structure at the Antiferroelectric-Ferroelectric Phase Transition
Total Internal Reflection (TIR) is used to probe the molecular organization
at the surface of a tilted chiral smectic liquid crystal at temperatures in the
vicinity of the bulk antiferroelectric-ferroelectric phase transition. Data are
interpreted using an exact analytical solution of a real model for
ferroelectric order at the surface. In the mixture T3, ferroelectric surface
order is expelled with the bulk ferroelectric-antiferroelectric transition. The
conditions for ferroelectric order at the surface of an antiferroelectric bulk
are presented
Response of Temperate, Subtropical and Tropical Soybean Genotypes to Type-B Overflow Tidal Swamp of Indonesia
Twenty-nine soybean genotypes originating from various countries were evaluated on the tidal swamp of Indonesia to obtain information of agronomic character diversity as the soybean response to the environment and to obtain adaptive genotypes that can be used to develop soybean genotypes for the land. This study was conducted in a complete randomized block design with 3 replications. Diverse genetic backgrounds, countries and climatic regions of the 29 soybean genotypes were responsible for the difference in agronomic responses among the genotypes. All temperate and sub-tropical genotypes were able to produce seeds in the tropical type-B overflow tidal swamp. Adaptability based on seed yield resulted in 1 highly adaptive, 17 adaptive, 5 moderately adaptive and 6 non-adaptive genotypes. Adaptive and highly adaptive genotypes produced 1.56 - 2.58 tons ha-1 of seeds. Karasumame (Naihou), a subtropical genotype, produced the highest seed yield which was 65% higher than Indonesia average soybean productivity and 225% higher than soybean productivity with non-saturated soil culture technology on the tidal swamp. This study concluded that temperate and subtropical genotypes could be used as germplasm sources for soybean development in the tropical type-B overflow tidal swamp in Indonesia
Universal scaling behavior of coupled chains of interacting fermions
The single-particle hopping between two chains is investigated by
exact-diagonalizations techniques supplemented by finite-size scaling analysis.
In the case of two coupled strongly-correlated chains of spinless fermions, the
Taylor expansion of the expectation value of the single-particle interchain
hopping operator of an electron at momentum k_F in powers of the interchain
hopping t_perp is shown to become unstable in the thermodynamic limit. In the
regime alpha<alpha_{tp} (alpha_{tp} simeq 0.41) where transverse two-particle
hopping is less relevant than single-particle hopping, the finite-size effects
can be described in terms of a universal scaling function. From this analysis
it is found that the single-particle transverse hopping behaves as
t_perp^{alpha/(1-alpha)} in agreement with a RPA-like treatment of the
interchain coupling. For alpha>alpha_{tp}, the scaling law is proven to change
its functional form, thus signaling, for the first time numerically, the onset
of coherent transverse two-particle hopping.Comment: 12 pages, Late
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