83 research outputs found
Actinide collisions for QED and superheavy elements with the time-dependent Hartree-Fock theory and the Balian-V\'en\'eroni variational principle
Collisions of actinide nuclei form, during very short times of few zs
( s), the heaviest ensembles of interacting nucleons available on
Earth. Such collisions are used to produce super-strong electric fields by the
huge number of interacting protons to test spontaneous positron-electron pair
emission (vacuum decay) predicted by the quantum electrodynamics (QED) theory.
Multi-nucleon transfer in actinide collisions could also be used as an
alternative way to fusion in order to produce neutron-rich heavy and superheavy
elements thanks to inverse quasifission mechanisms. Actinide collisions are
studied in a dynamical quantum microscopic approach. The three-dimensional
time-dependent Hartree-Fock (TDHF) code {\textsc{tdhf3d}} is used with a full
Skyrme energy density functional to investigate the time evolution of
expectation values of one-body operators, such as fragment position and
particle number. This code is also used to compute the dispersion of the
particle numbers (e.g., widths of fragment mass and charge distributions) from
TDHF transfer probabilities, on the one hand, and using the Balian-Veneroni
variational principle, on the other hand. A first application to test QED is
discussed. Collision times in U+U are computed to determine the
optimum energy for the observation of the vacuum decay. It is shown that the
initial orientation strongly affects the collision times and reaction
mechanism. The highest collision times predicted by TDHF in this reaction are
of the order of zs at a center of mass energy of 1200 MeV. According to
modern calculations based on the Dirac equation, the collision times at
GeV are sufficient to allow spontaneous electron-positron pair
emission from QED vacuum decay, in case of bare uranium ion collision. A second
application of actinide collisions to produce neutron-rich transfermiums is
discussed. A new inverse quasifission mechanism associated to a specific
orientation of the nuclei is proposed to produce transfermium nuclei ()
in the collision of prolate deformed actinides such as Th+Cf.
The collision of the tip of one nucleus with the side of the other results in a
nucleon flux toward the latter. The probability distributions for transfermium
production in such a collision are computed. The produced nuclei are more
neutron-rich than those formed in fusion reactions, thus, leading to more
stable isotopes closer to the predicted superheavy island of stability. In
addition to mass and charge dispersion, the Balian-Veneroni variational
principle is used to compute correlations between and distributions,
which are zero in standard TDHF calculations.Comment: Proceeding of the FUSION11 conferenc
A new inverse quasifission mechanism to produce neutron-rich transfermium nuclei
Based on time-dependent Hartree-Fock theory, a new inverse quasifission
mechanism is proposed to produce neutron-rich transfermium nuclei, in collision
of prolate deformed actinides. Calculations show that collision of the tip of
one nucleus with the side of the other results in a nucleon flux toward the
latter. The role of nucleon evaporation and impact parameter, as well as the
collision time are discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Triangular rogue wave cascades
By numerically applying the recursive Darboux transformation technique, we study high-order rational solutions of the nonlinear Schrödinger equation that appear spatiotemporally as triangular arrays of Peregrine solitons. These can be considered as rogue wave cascades and complement previously discovered circular cluster forms. In this analysis, we reveal a general parametric restriction for their existence and investigate the interplay between cascade and cluster forms. As a result, we demonstrate how to generate many more hybrid rogue wave solutions, including semicircular clusters that resemble claws
Classifying the hierarchy of nonlinear-Schrödinger-equation rogue-wave solutions
We present a systematic classification for higher-order rogue-wave solutions of the nonlinear Schrödinger equation, constructed as the nonlinear superposition of first-order breathers via the recursive Darboux transformation scheme. This hierarchy is subdivided into structures that exhibit varying degrees of radial symmetry, all arising from independent degrees of freedom associated with physical translations of component breathers. We reveal the general rules required to produce these fundamental patterns. Consequently, we are able to extrapolate the general shape for rogue-wave solutions beyond order 6, at which point accuracy limitations due to current standards of numerical generation become non-negligible. Furthermore, we indicate how a large set of irregular rogue-wave solutions can be produced by hybridizing these fundamental structures
Second-order nonlinear Schrödinger equation breather solutions in the degenerate and rogue wave limits
We present an explicit analytic form for the two-breather solution of the nonlinear Schrödinger equation with imaginary eigenvalues. It describes various nonlinear combinations of Akhmediev breathers and Kuznetsov-Ma solitons. The degenerate case, when the two eigenvalues coincide, is quite involved. The standard inverse scattering technique does not generally provide an answer to this scenario. We show here that the solution can still be found as a special limit of the general second-order expression and appears as a mixture of polynomials with trigonometric and hyperbolic functions. A further restriction of this particular case, where the two eigenvalues are equal to i, produces the second-order rogue wave with two free parameters considered as differential shifts. The illustrations reveal a precarious dependence of wave profile on the degenerate eigenvalues and differential shifts. Thus we establish a hierarchy of second-order solutions, revealing the interrelated nature of the general case, the rogue wave, and the degenerate breathers
Microarcsecond Radio Imaging using Earth Orbit Synthesis
The observed interstellar scintillation pattern of an intra-day variable
radio source is influenced by its source structure. If the velocity of the
interstellar medium responsible for the scattering is comparable to the
earth's, the vector sum of these allows an observer to probe the scintillation
pattern of a source in two dimensions and, in turn, to probe two-dimensional
source structure on scales comparable to the angular scale of the scintillation
pattern, typically as for weak scattering. We review the theory on
the extraction of an ``image'' from the scintillation properties of a source,
and show how earth's orbital motion changes a source's observed scintillation
properties during the course of a year. The imaging process, which we call
Earth Orbit Synthesis, requires measurements of the statistical properties of
the scintillations at epochs spread throughout the course of a year.Comment: ApJ in press. 25 pages, 7 fig
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Mammalian Sleep Dynamics: How Diverse Features Arise From a Common Physiological Framework
Mammalian sleep varies widely, ranging from frequent napping in rodents to consolidated blocks in primates and unihemispheric sleep in cetaceans. In humans, rats, mice and cats, sleep patterns are orchestrated by homeostatic and circadian drives to the sleep–wake switch, but it is not known whether this system is ubiquitous among mammals. Here, changes of just two parameters in a recent quantitative model of this switch are shown to reproduce typical sleep patterns for 17 species across 7 orders. Furthermore, the parameter variations are found to be consistent with the assumptions that homeostatic production and clearance scale as brain volume and surface area, respectively. Modeling an additional inhibitory connection between sleep-active neuronal populations on opposite sides of the brain generates unihemispheric sleep, providing a testable hypothetical mechanism for this poorly understood phenomenon. Neuromodulation of this connection alone is shown to account for the ability of fur seals to transition between bihemispheric sleep on land and unihemispheric sleep in water. Determining what aspects of mammalian sleep patterns can be explained within a single framework, and are thus universal, is essential to understanding the evolution and function of mammalian sleep. This is the first demonstration of a single model reproducing sleep patterns for multiple different species. These wide-ranging findings suggest that the core physiological mechanisms controlling sleep are common to many mammalian orders, with slight evolutionary modifications accounting for interspecies differences
Rapid interstellar scintillation of PKS B1257-326: two-station pattern time delays and constraints on scattering and microarcsecond source structure
We report measurements of time delays of up to 8 minutes in the centimeter
wavelength variability patterns of the intra-hour scintillating quasar PKS
1257-326 as observed between the VLA and the ATCA on three separate epochs.
These time delays confirm interstellar scintillation as the mechanism
responsible for the rapid variability, at the same time effectively ruling out
the coexistence of intrinsic intra-hour variability in this source. The time
delays are combined with measurements of the annual variation in variability
timescale exhibited by this source to determine the characteristic length scale
and anisotropy of the quasar's intensity scintillation pattern, as well as
attempting to fit for the bulk velocity of the scattering plasma responsible
for the scintillation. We find evidence for anisotropic scattering and highly
elongated scintillation patterns at both 4.9 and 8.5 GHz, with an axial ratio >
10:1, extended in a northwest direction on the sky. The characteristic scale of
the scintillation pattern along its minor axis is well determined, but the high
anisotropy leads to degenerate solutions for the scintillation velocity. The
decorrelation of the pattern over the baseline gives an estimate of the major
axis length scale of the scintillation pattern. We derive an upper limit on the
distance to the scattering plasma of no more than 10 pc.Comment: 27 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Angular Broadening of Intraday Variable AGN. II. Interstellar and Intergalactic Scattering
We analyze a sample of 58 multi-wavelength, Very Long Baseline Array
observations of active galactic nuclei (AGN) to determine their scattering
properties. Approximately 75% of the sample consists of AGN that exhibit
centimeter-wavelength intraday variability (interstellar scintillation) while
the other 25% do not show intraday variability. We find that interstellar
scattering is measurable for most of these AGN, and the typical broadening
diameter is 2 mas at 1 GHz. We find that the scintillating AGN are typically at
lower Galactic latitudes than the non-scintillating AGN, consistent with the
scenario that intraday variability is a propagation effect from the Galactic
interstellar medium. The magnitude of the inferred interstellar broadening
measured toward the scintillating AGN, when scaled to higher frequencies, is
comparable to the diameters inferred from analyses of the light curves for the
more well-known intraday variable sources. However, we find no difference in
the amount of scattering measured toward the scintillating versus
non-scintillating AGN. A consistent picture is one in which the scintillation
results from localized regions ("clumps") distributed throughout the Galactic
disk, but which individually make little contribution to the angular
broadening. Of the 58 AGN observed, 37 (64%) have measured redshifts. At best,
a marginal trend is found for scintillating (non-scintillating) AGN to have
smaller (larger) angular diameters at higher redshifts. We also use our
observations to try to constrain the possibility of intergalactic scattering.
While broadly consistent with the scenario of a highly turbulent intergalactic
medium, our observations do not place significant constraints on its
properties.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures; AASTeX format; ApJ in pres
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