8,326 research outputs found
Crystallization of Carbon Oxygen Mixtures in White Dwarf Stars
We determine the phase diagram for dense carbon/ oxygen mixtures in White
Dwarf (WD) star interiors using molecular dynamics simulations involving liquid
and solid phases. Our phase diagram agrees well with predictions from Ogata et
al. and Medin and Cumming and gives lower melting temperatures than Segretain
et al. Observations of WD crystallization in the globular cluster NGC 6397 by
Winget et al. suggest that the melting temperature of WD cores is close to that
for pure carbon. If this is true, our phase diagram implies that the central
oxygen abundance in these stars is less than about 60%. This constraint, along
with assumptions about convection in stellar evolution models, limits the
effective S factor for the C()O reaction to
S_{300} <= 170 keV barns.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Phys. Rev. Lett. in pres
Neutrino Scattering in Heterogeneous Supernova Plasmas
Neutrinos in core collapse supernovae are likely trapped by neutrino-nucleus
elastic scattering. Using molecular dynamics simulations, we calculate neutrino
mean free paths and ion-ion correlation functions for heterogeneous plasmas.
Mean free paths are systematically shorter in plasmas containing a mixture of
ions compared to a plasma composed of a single ion species. This is because
neutrinos can scatter from concentration fluctuations. The dynamical response
function of a heterogeneous plasma is found to have an extra peak at low
energies describing the diffusion of concentration fluctuations. Our exact
molecular dynamics results for the static structure factor reduce to the Debye
Huckel approximation, but only in the limit of very low momentum transfers.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figure
Diffusion of Neon in White Dwarf Stars
Sedimentation of the neutron rich isotope Ne may be an important
source of gravitational energy during the cooling of white dwarf stars. This
depends on the diffusion constant for Ne in strongly coupled plasma
mixtures. We calculate self-diffusion constants from molecular dynamics
simulations of carbon, oxygen, and neon mixtures. We find that in a
mixture does not differ greatly from earlier one component plasma results. For
strong coupling (coulomb parameter few), has a modest
dependence on the charge of the ion species, .
However depends more strongly on for weak coupling (smaller
). We conclude that the self-diffusion constant for
Ne in carbon, oxygen, and neon plasma mixtures is accurately known so
that uncertainties in should be unimportant for simulations of
white dwarf cooling.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, minor changes, Phys. Rev. E in pres
Strong Correlations in Actinide Redox Reactions
Reduction-oxidation (redox) reactions of the redox couples An(VI)/An(V),
An(V)/An(IV), and An(IV)/An(III), where An is an element in the family of early
actinides (U, Np, and Pu), as well as Am(VI)/Am(V) and Am(V)/Am(III), are
modeled by combining density functional theory with a generalized Anderson
impurity model that accounts for the strong correlations between the 5f
electrons. Diagonalization of the Anderson impurity model yields improved
estimates for the redox potentials and the propensity of the actinide complexes
to disproportionate.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figure, 3 tables. Corrections and clarifications; this
version has been accepted for publication in The Journal of Chemical Physic
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Source-receptor relationships between East Asian sulfur dioxide emissions and Northern Hemisphere sulfate concentrations
International audienceWe analyze the effect of varying East Asian (EA) sulfur emissions on sulfate concentrations in the Northern Hemisphere, using a global coupled oxidant-aerosol model (MOZART-2). We conduct a base and five sensitivity simulations, in which sulfur emissions from each continent are tagged, to establish the source-receptor (S-R) relationship between EA sulfur emissions and sulfate concentrations over source and downwind regions. We find that from west to east across the North Pacific, EA sulfate contributes approximately 80%?20% of sulfate at the surface, but at least 50% at 500 hPa. In addition, EA SO2 emissions account for approximately 30%?50% and 10%?20% of North American background sulfate over the western and eastern US, respectively. The contribution of EA sulfate to the western US at the surface is highest in MAM and JJA, but is lowest in DJF. Reducing EA SO2 emissions will significantly decrease the spatial extent of the EA sulfate influence over the North Pacific both at the surface and at 500 mb in all seasons, but the extent of influence is insensitive to emission increases, particularly in DJF and JJA. We find that EA sulfate concentrations over most downwind regions respond nearly linearly to changes in EA SO2 emissions, but sulfate concentrations over the EA source region increase more slowly than SO2 emissions, particularly at the surface and in winter, due to limited availability of oxidants (mostly H2O2). We find that similar estimates of the S-R relationship for trans-Pacific transport of EA sulfate would be obtained using either sensitivity or tagging techniques. Our findings suggest that future changes in EA sulfur emissions may cause little change in the sulfate induced health impact over downwind continents but SO2 emission reductions may significantly reduce the sulfate related climate cooling over the North Pacific and the United States
Unitarity, quasi-normal modes and the AdS_3/CFT_2 correspondence
In general, black-hole perturbations are governed by a discrete spectrum of
complex eigen-frequencies (quasi-normal modes). This signals the breakdown of
unitarity. In asymptotically AdS spaces, this is puzzling because the
corresponding CFT is unitary. To address this issue in three dimensions, we
replace the BTZ black hole by a wormhole, following a suggestion by Solodukhin
[hep-th/0406130]. We solve the wave equation for a massive scalar field and
find an equation for the poles of the propagator. This equation yields a rich
spectrum of {\em real} eigen-frequencies. We show that the throat of the
wormhole is , where is Newton's constant. Thus, the quantum
effects which might produce the wormhole are non-perturbative.Comment: 9 page
String Form Factors
We compute the cross section for scattering of light string probes by
randomly excited closed strings. For high energy probes, the cross section
factorizes and can be used to define effective form factors for the excited
targets. These form factors are well defined without the need for infinite
subtractions and contain information about the shape and size of typical
strings. For highly excited strings the elastic form factor can be written in
terms of the `plasma dispersion function', which describes charge screening in
high temperature plasmas.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures. Typos corrected, 1 footnote (in Section 4) and 1
reference adde
Poincare recurrences of Schwarzschild black holes
We discuss massive scalar perturbations of a Schwarzschild black hole. We
argue that quantum effects alter the effective potential near the horizon
resulting in Poincare recurrences in Green functions. Results at the
semi-classical level are independent of the details of the modification of the
potential provided its minimum near the horizon is inversely proportional to
the square of the Poincare time. This modification may be viewed as a change in
the near-horizon geometry. We consider explicitly the examples of a brick wall,
a smooth cutoff and a wormhole-like modification showing that they all lead to
the same results at leading order.Comment: 15 page
Plane waves with weak singularities
We study a class of time dependent solutions of the vacuum Einstein equations
which are plane waves with weak null singularities. This singularity is weak in
the sense that though the tidal forces diverge at the singularity, the rate of
divergence is such that the distortion suffered by a freely falling observer
remains finite. Among such weak singular plane waves there is a sub-class which
do not exhibit large back reaction in the presence of test scalar probes.
String propagation in these backgrounds is smooth and there is a natural way to
continue the metric beyond the singularity. This continued metric admits string
propagation without the string becoming infinitely excited. We construct a one
parameter family of smooth metrics which are at a finite distance in the space
of metrics from the extended metric and a well defined operator in the string
sigma model which resolves the singularity.Comment: 22 pages, Added references and clarifying comment
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