3,255 research outputs found
Bound states and the classical double copy
We extend the perturbative classical double copy to the analysis of bound
systems. We first obtain the leading order perturbative gluon radiation field
sourced by a system of interacting color charges in arbitrary time dependent
orbits, and test its validity by taking relativistic bremsstrahlung and
non-relativistic bound state limits. By generalizing the color to kinematic
replacement rules recently used in the context of classical bremsstrahlung, we
map the gluon emission amplitude to the radiation fields of dilaton gravity
sourced by interacting particles in generic (self-consistent) orbits. As an
application, we reproduce the leading post-Newtonian radiation fields and
energy flux for point masses in non-relativistic orbits from the double copy of
gauge theory.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure, minor revisions to section II
Results of oral TRH test in the differentiation of compensated and decompensated autonomous thyroid nodules
Spectral energy distributions of quasars selected in the mid-infrared
We present preliminary results on fitting of SEDs to 142 z>1 quasars selected
in the mid-infrared. Our quasar selection finds objects ranging in extinction
from highly obscured, type-2 quasars, through more lightly reddened type-1
quasars and normal type-1s. We find a weak tendency for the objects with the
highest far-infrared emission to be obscured quasars, but no bulk systematic
offset between the far-infrared properties of dusty and normal quasars as might
be expected in the most naive evolutionary schemes. The hosts of the type-2
quasars have stellar masses comparable to those of radio galaxies at similar
redshifts. Many of the type-1s, and possibly one of the type-2s require a very
hot dust component in addition to the normal torus emission.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of The Spectral
Energy Distribution of Galaxies, Preston, September 2011, eds R.J. Tuffs &
C.C. Popesc
Trapping of Pd, Au, and Cu by implantation-induced nanocavities and dislocations in Si
The gettering of metallic impurities by nanocavities formed in Si is a topic of both scientific importance and technological significance. Metallic precipitates observed in the regions where nanocavities were formed have been considered the result of the metal filling the nanocavities, either as elemental metal or a silicide phase. However, our transmission electron microscopy observations demonstrate that many of these precipitates are concentrated along dislocations, rather than randomly distributed as expected for precipitates formed by the filling of nanocavities. Consequently, the gettering contribution of dislocations in the lattice caused by nanocavity formation must be considered. For Pd, dislocations are the preferred sites for the precipitation of the metal silicide. We compare results of gettering by nanocavities and dislocations for Pd, Au, and Cu to determine which structure is the dominant influence for the formation of precipitates of these metals and/or their silicides
Longitudinal multivariate tensor- and searchlight-based morphometry using permutation testing
Tensor based morphometry [1] was used to detect
statistically significant regions of neuroanatomical
change over time in a comparison between 36 probable
Alzheimer's Disease patients and 20 age- and sexmatched
controls. Baseline and twelve-month repeat
Magnetic Resonance images underwent tied spatial
normalisation [10] and longitudinal high-dimensional
warps were then estimated. Analyses involved univariate
and multivariate data derived from the longitudinal
deformation fields. The most prominent findings were
expansion of the fluid spaces, and contraction of the
hippocampus and temporal region. Multivariate measures
were notably more powerful, and have the potential to
identify patterns of morphometric difference that would
be overlooked by conventional mass-univariate analysis
Are All Static Black Hole Solutions Spherically Symmetric?
The static black hole solutions to the Einstein-Maxwell equations are all
spherically symmetric, as are many of the recently discovered black hole
solutions in theories of gravity coupled to other forms of matter. However,
counterexamples demonstrating that static black holes need not be spherically
symmetric exist in theories, such as the standard electroweak model, with
electrically charged massive vector fields. In such theories, a magnetically
charged Reissner-Nordstrom solution with sufficiently small horizon radius is
unstable against the development of a nonzero vector field outside the horizon.
General arguments show that, for generic values of the magnetic charge, this
field cannot be spherically symmetric. Explicit construction of the solution
shows that it in fact has no rotational symmetry at all.Comment: 6 pages, plain TeX. Submitted to GRF Essay Competitio
Amorphization of Cu nanoparticles: effects on surface plasmon resonance
Crystalline copper nanoparticles (NPs) were formed in silica by multi-energy MeV ion implantations and then transformed to amorphous NPs by irradiation with 5 MeV Sn3+ ions. Optical absorptionspectra of both the phases were evaluated in the ultra-violet to near-infrared regions. Compared with corresponding crystalline NPs of the same mean diameter, the amorphous NPs showed a low-energy shift of the surface plasmon resonance around 2.2 eV and less prominent absorptionstructure around 4 eV. These differences are explained by a strongly reduced electron mean-free-path in the amorphous NPs due to the loss of lattice periodicity
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