2,279 research outputs found
Materials thermal and thermoradiative properties/characterization technology
Reliable properties data on well characterized materials are necessary for design of experiments and interpretation of experimental results. The activities of CINDAS to provide data bases and predict properties are discussed. An understanding of emissivity behavior is important in order to select appropriate methods for non-contact temperature determination. Related technical issues are identified and recommendations are offered
Quantum Effective Action in Spacetimes with Branes and Boundaries
We construct quantum effective action in spacetime with branes/boundaries.
This construction is based on the reduction of the underlying Neumann type
boundary value problem for the propagator of the theory to that of the much
more manageable Dirichlet problem. In its turn, this reduction follows from the
recently suggested Neumann-Dirichlet duality which we extend beyond the tree
level approximation. In the one-loop approximation this duality suggests that
the functional determinant of the differential operator subject to Neumann
boundary conditions in the bulk factorizes into the product of its Dirichlet
counterpart and the functional determinant of a special operator on the brane
-- the inverse of the brane-to-brane propagator. As a byproduct of this
relation we suggest a new method for surface terms of the heat kernel
expansion. This method allows one to circumvent well-known difficulties in heat
kernel theory on manifolds with boundaries for a wide class of generalized
Neumann boundary conditions. In particular, we easily recover several lowest
order surface terms in the case of Robin and oblique boundary conditions. We
briefly discuss multi-loop applications of the suggested Dirichlet reduction
and the prospects of constructing the universal background field method for
systems with branes/boundaries, analogous to the Schwinger-DeWitt technique.Comment: LaTeX, 25 pages, final version, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Fusion of neutron rich oxygen isotopes in the crust of accreting neutron stars
Fusion reactions in the crust of an accreting neutron star are an important
source of heat, and the depth at which these reactions occur is important for
determining the temperature profile of the star. Fusion reactions depend
strongly on the nuclear charge . Nuclei with can fuse at low
densities in a liquid ocean. However, nuclei with Z=8 or 10 may not burn until
higher densities where the crust is solid and electron capture has made the
nuclei neutron rich. We calculate the factor for fusion reactions of
neutron rich nuclei including O + O and Ne + Ne. We
use a simple barrier penetration model. The factor could be further
enhanced by dynamical effects involving the neutron rich skin. This possible
enhancement in should be studied in the laboratory with neutron rich
radioactive beams. We model the structure of the crust with molecular dynamics
simulations. We find that the crust of accreting neutron stars may contain
micro-crystals or regions of phase separation. Nevertheless, the screening
factors that we determine for the enhancement of the rate of thermonuclear
reactions are insensitive to these features. Finally, we calculate the rate of
thermonuclear O + O fusion and find that O should burn at
densities near g/cm. The energy released from this and similar
reactions may be important for the temperature profile of the star.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figs, minor changes, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Proper time and path integral representations for the commutation function
On the example of the quantized spinor field, interacting with arbitrary
external electromagnetic field, the commutation function is studied. It is
shown that a proper time representation is available in any dimensions. Using
it, all the light cone singularities of the function are found explicitly,
generalizing the Fock formula in four dimensions, and a path integral
representation is constructed.Comment: 20 pages, LaTeX, uses pictex macro
The Fermion Self-Energy during Inflation
We compute the one loop fermion self-energy for massless Dirac + Einstein in
the presence of a locally de Sitter background. We employ dimensional
regularization and obtain a fully renormalized result by absorbing all
divergences with BPHZ counterterms. An interesting technical aspect of this
computation is the need for a noninvariant counterterm owing to the breaking of
de Sitter invariance by our gauge condition. Our result can be used in the
quantum-corrected Dirac equation to search for inflation-enhanced quantum
effects from gravitons, analogous to those which have been found for massless,
minimally coupled scalars.Comment: 63 pages, 3 figures (uses axodraw.sty), LaTeX 2epsilon. Revised
version (to appear in Classical and Quantum Gravity) corrects some typoes and
contains some new reference
Measurement and analysis of a small nozzle plume in vacuum
Pitot pressures and flow angles are measured in the plume of a nozzle flowing nitrogen and exhausting to a vacuum. Total pressures are measured with Pitot tubes sized for specific regions of the plume and flow angles measured with a conical probe. The measurement area for total pressure extends 480 mm (16 exit diameters) downstream of the nozzle exit plane and radially to 60 mm (1.9 exit diameters) off the plume axis. The measurement area for flow angle extends to 160 mm (5 exit diameters) downstream and radially to 60 mm. The measurements are compared to results from a numerical simulation of the flow that is based on kinetic theory and uses the direct-simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) method. Comparisons of computed results from the DSMC method with measurements of flow angle display good agreement in the far-field of the plume and improve with increasing distance from the exit plane. Pitot pressures computed from the DSMC method are in reasonably good agreement with experimental results over the entire measurement area
Superfield extended BRST quantization in general coordinates
We propose a superfield formalism of Lagrangian BRST-antiBRST quantization of
arbitrary gauge theories in general coordinates with the base manifold of
fields and antifields desribed in terms of both bosonic and fermionic
variables.Comment: LaTex, 10 page
A multiband radiometer and data acquisition system for remote sensing field research
Specifications are described for a recently developed prototype multispectral data acquisition system which consists of multiband radiometer with 8 bands between 0.4 and 12.5 micrometers and a data recording module to record data from the radometer and ancillary sources. The systems is adaptable to helicopter, truck, or tripod platforms, as well as hand-held operation. The general characteristics are: (1) comparatively inexpensive to acquire, maintain and operate; (2) simple to operate and calibrate; (3) complete with data hardware and software; and (4) well documented for use by researchers. The instrument system is to be commercially available and can be utilized by many researchers to obtain large numbers of accurate, calibrated spectral measurements. It can be a key element in improving and advancing the capability for field research in remote sensing
Representations of p-brane topological charge algebras
The known extended algebras associated with p-branes are shown to be
generated as topological charge algebras of the standard p-brane actions. A
representation of the charges in terms of superspace forms is constructed. The
charges are shown to be the same in standard/extended superspace formulations
of the action.Comment: 22 pages. Typos fixed, refs added. Minor additions to comments
sectio
A representation formula for maps on supermanifolds
In this paper we analyze the notion of morphisms of rings of superfunctions
which is the basic concept underlying the definition of supermanifolds as
ringed spaces (i.e. following Berezin, Leites, Manin, etc.). We establish a
representation formula for all morphisms from the algebra of functions on an
ordinary manifolds to the superalgebra of functions on an open subset of
R^{p|q}. We then derive two consequences of this result. The first one is that
we can integrate the data associated with a morphism in order to get a (non
unique) map defined on an ordinary space (and uniqueness can achieved by
restriction to a scheme). The second one is a simple and intuitive recipe to
compute pull-back images of a function on a manifold by a map defined on a
superspace.Comment: 23 page
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