273 research outputs found
Scattering polarization of hydrogen lines in the presence of turbulent electric fields
We study the broadband polarization of hydrogen lines produced by scattering
of radiation, in the presence of isotropic electric fields. In this paper, we
focus on two distinct problems: a) the possibility of detecting the presence of
turbulent electric fields by polarimetric methods, and b) the influence of such
fields on the polarization due to a macroscopic, deterministic magnetic field.
We found that isotropic electric fields decrease the degree of linear
polarization in the scattered radiation, with respect to the zero-field case.
On the other hand, a distribution of isotropic electric fields superimposed
onto a deterministic magnetic field can generate a significant increase of the
degree of magnetic-induced, net circular polarization. This phenomenon has
important implications for the diagnostics of magnetic fields in plasmas using
hydrogen lines, because of the ubiquitous presence of the Holtsmark,
microscopic electric field from neighbouring ions. In particular, previous
solar magnetographic studies of the Balmer lines of hydrogen may need to be
revised because they neglected the effect of turbulent electric fields on the
polarization signals. In this work, we give explicit results for the
Lyman-alpha and Balmer-alpha lines.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure
Constraining a possible time variation of the gravitational constant G with terrestrial nuclear laboratory data
Testing the constancy of the gravitational constant G has been a longstanding
fundamental question in natural science. As first suggested by Jofr\'{e},
Reisenegger and Fern\'{a}ndez [1], Dirac's hypothesis of a decreasing
gravitational constant with time due to the expansion of the Universe would
induce changes in the composition of neutron stars, causing dissipation and
internal heating. Eventually, neutron stars reach their quasi-stationary states
where cooling due to neutrino and photon emissions balances the internal
heating. The correlation of surface temperatures and radii of some old neutron
stars may thus carry useful information about the changing rate of G. Using the
density dependence of the nuclear symmetry energy constrained by recent
terrestrial laboratory data on isospin diffusion in heavy-ion reactions at
intermediate energies and the size of neutron skin in within the
gravitochemical heating formalism, we obtain an upper limit of the relative
changing rate of consistent with the
best available estimates in the literature.Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures, and 2 tables. Accepted version to appear in PRC
(2007
Optimal income tax enforcement in the presence of tax avoidance
This collection provides a comprehensive guide to students and academics on the subjects of tax avoidance from an interdisciplinary perspective
Selective Absorption Processes as the Origin of Puzzling Spectral Line Polarization from the Sun
Magnetic fields play a key role in most astrophysical systems, from the Sun
to active galactic nuclei. They can be studied through their effects on atomic
energy levels, which produce polarized spectral lines. In particular,
anisotropic radiation pumping processes (which send electrons to higher atomic
levels) induce population imbalances that are modified by weak magnetic fields.
Here we report peculiarly polarized light in the He I 10830-\AA multiplet
observed in a coronal filament located at the centre of the solar disk. We show
that the polarized light arises from selective absorption from the ground level
of the triplet system of helium, and that it implies the presence of magnetic
fields of the order of a few gauss that are highly inclined with respect to the
solar radius vector. This disproves the common belief that population
imbalances in long-lived atomic levels are insignificant in the presence of
inclined fields with strengths in the gauss range, and demonstrates the
operation of the ground-level Hanle effect in an astrophysical plasma.Comment: 22 pages and 4 figure
The role of eggs in the diet: nutraceutical and epigenetic aspects
The use of eggs in human diet has been object of many prejudices
which are not yet completely disappeared The evolution of knowledge
in the field of nutrition has, partially, countered these prejudices
by highlighting the biological importance of several compounds
present in the eggs. The nutritional and commercial revaluation
of the eggs are passed through the enrichment of the lipid
fraction in ω3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA ω3) which, have
shown positive effects against cardiovascular diseases and development
of the central nervous system and retina. The enrichment of
eggs lipid with ω3 fatty acids is carried out by the integration of
feeding hens with oils rich in ω3 fatty acids such as plant or
marine oils. The results showed that the accumulation of ω3 in the
egg yolk lipids is strongly affected by the type of oil used as supplement
and by the amounts of oils administrated to the hens
Model selection for spectro-polarimetric inversions
Inferring magnetic and thermodynamic information from spectropolarimetric
observations relies on the assumption of a parameterized model atmosphere whose
parameters are tuned by comparison with observations. Often, the choice of the
underlying atmospheric model is based on subjective reasons. In other cases,
complex models are chosen based on objective reasons (for instance, the
necessity to explain asymmetries in the Stokes profiles) but it is not clear
what degree of complexity is needed. The lack of an objective way of comparing
models has, sometimes, led to opposing views of the solar magnetism because the
inferred physical scenarios are essentially different. We present the first
quantitative model comparison based on the computation of the Bayesian evidence
ratios for spectropolarimetric observations. Our results show that there is not
a single model appropriate for all profiles simultaneously. Data with moderate
signal-to-noise ratios favor models without gradients along the line-of-sight.
If the observations shows clear circular and linear polarization signals above
the noise level, models with gradients along the line are preferred. As a
general rule, observations with large signal-to-noise ratios favor more complex
models. We demonstrate that the evidence ratios correlate well with simple
proxies. Therefore, we propose to calculate these proxies when carrying out
standard least-squares inversions to allow for model comparison in the future.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures, 8 tables, accepted for publication in Ap
Limits on the Time Evolution of Space Dimensions from Newton's Constant
Limits are imposed upon the possible rate of change of extra spatial
dimensions in a decrumpling model Universe with time variable spatial
dimensions (TVSD) by considering the time variation of (1+3)-dimensional
Newton's constant. Previous studies on the time variation of (1+3)-dimensional
Newton's constant in TVSD theory had not been included the effects of the
volume of the extra dimensions and the effects of the surface area of the unit
sphere in D-space dimensions. Our main result is that the absolute value of the
present rate of change of spatial dimensions to be less than about
10^{-14}yr^{-1}. Our results would appear to provide a prima facie case for
ruling the TVSD model out. We show that based on observational bounds on the
present-day variation of Newton's constant, one would have to conclude that the
spatial dimension of the Universe when the Universe was at the Planck scale to
be less than or equal to 3.09. If the dimension of space when the Universe was
at the Planck scale is constrained to be fractional and very close to 3, then
the whole edifice of TVSD model loses credibility.Comment: 22 pages, accepted for publication in Int.J.Mod.Phys.
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