11,859 research outputs found
The stopping of swift protons in matter and its implication for astrophysical fusion reactions
The velocity dependence of the stopping power of swift protons and deuterons
in low energy collisions is investigated. At low projectile energies the
stopping is mainly due to nuclear stopping and charge exchange of the electron.
The second mechanism dominates after Ep >=200 eV. A dynamical treatment of the
charge exchange mechanism based on two-center electronic wavefunctions yields
very transparent results for the exchange probability. We predict that the
stopping cross sections vary approximately as v to the 1.35 power for
projectile protons on hydrogen targets in the 1 keV energy region.Comment: 4 figure
Physiological indicators and yield of the Chinese cabbage cultivated at different soil water tensions
The development and yield of Chinese cabbage is influenced by soil moisture. The
objective of this study was to evaluate the physiological indicators, development, and yield of
Chinese cabbage (Brassica rapa subsp. pekinensis (Lour.) Rupr.) grown at different soil water
tension ranges. Two experiments were conducted (2016–2017) in the Olericulture Sector of the
Federal University of Technology of Paraná. Two cultivars of the Chinese cabbage, Eikoo and
Kinjitsu, and four soil water tension ranges 13–17, 23–27, 33–37, and 43–47 kPa were studied.
Eikoo presented higher relative chlorophyll index, photosynthesis, and fresh leaf mass than did
Kinjitsu. Physiological indicators transpiration (5.8 mmol H2O m-2
s
-1
), photosynthesis
(14.5 µmol CO2 m-2
s
-1
), stomatal conductance (0.31 mol H2O m-2
s
-1
), and WUE (39.4 kg m-3
)
were higher at 13–17 kPa soil water tension. Soil water tension ranges with high water restrictions
reduced the fresh leaf mass of both cultivars. Fresh leaf mass decreased by 236.2 and
191.7 g plant-1
in the highest soil water tension range in 2016 and 2017, respectively, when
compared with the fresh leaf mass at the 13–17 kPa tension range. The lowest water consumption
was observed at the 13–17 kPa tension range. The year 2017 resulted in higher internal CO2
concentration, transpiration rate, fresh leaf mass, number of irrigations and water consumption
compared to the year 2016. Thus, the irrigation regime for the most optimal Chinese cabbage
cultivation should maintain the soil water tension range at 13–17 kPa
Geometric classical and total correlations via trace distance
We introduce the concepts of geometric classical and total correlations
through Schatten 1-norm (trace norm), which is the only Schatten p-norm able to
ensure a well-defined geometric measure of correlations. In particular, we
derive the analytical expressions for the case of two-qubit Bell-diagonal
states, discussing the superadditivity of geometric correlations. As an
illustration, we compare our results with the entropic correlations, discussing
both their hierarchy and monotonicity properties. Moreover, we apply the
geometric correlations to investigate the ground state of spin chains in the
thermodynamic limit. In contrast to the entropic quantifiers, we show that the
classical correlation is the only source of 1-norm geometric correlation that
is able to signaling an infinite-order quantum phase transition.Comment: v2: published versio
Vortex and gap generation in gauge models of graphene
Effective quantum field theoretical continuum models for graphene are
investigated. The models include a complex scalar field and a vector gauge
field. Different gauge theories are considered and their gap patterns for the
scalar, vector, and fermion excitations are investigated. Different gauge
groups lead to different relations between the gaps, which can be used to
experimentally distinguish the gauge theories. In this class of models the
fermionic gap is a dynamic quantity. The finite-energy vortex solutions of the
gauge models have the flux of the "magnetic field" quantized, making the
Bohm-Aharonov effect active even when external electromagnetic fields are
absent. The flux comes proportional to the scalar field angular momentum
quantum number. The zero modes of the Dirac equation show that the gauge models
considered here are compatible with fractionalization
Phase-resolved HST/STIS spectroscopy of the exposed white dwarf in the high-field polar AR UMa
Phase-resolved HST/STIS ultraviolet spectroscopy of the high-field polar AR
UMa confirms that the WD photospheric Ly alpha Zeeman features are formed in a
magnetic field of ~200 MG. In addition to the Ly alpha pi and sigma+
components, we detect the forbidden hydrogen 1s0->2s0 transition, which becomes
``enabled'' in the presence of both strong magnetic and electric fields. Our
attempt in fitting the overall optical+UV low state spectrum with single
temperature magnetic WD models remains rather unsatisfactory, indicating either
a shortcoming in the present models or a new physical process acting in AR UMa.
As a result, our estimate of the WD temperature remains somewhat uncertain,
Twd=20000+-5000K. We detect a broad emission bump centered at ~1445A and
present throughout the entire binary orbit, and a second bump near ~1650A,
which appears only near the inferior conjunction of the secondary star. These
are suggestive of low harmonic cyclotron emission produced by low-level
(M-dot~1e-13 Msun/yr) accretion onto both magnetic poles. However, there is no
evidence in the power spectrum of light variations for accretion in gas blobs.
The observed Ly alpha emission line shows a strong phase dependence with
maximum flux and redshift near orbital phase phi~0.3, strongly indicating an
origin on the trailing hemisphere of the secondary star. An additional Ly alpha
absorption feature with similar phasing as the Ly alpha emission, but a
\~700km/s blueshift could tentatively be ascribed to absorption of WD emission
in a moderately fast wind. We derive a column density of neutral hydrogen of
NH=(1.1+-1.0)1e18 cm**-2, the lowest of any known polar.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figures, AAS TeX 5.0, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
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