4,095 research outputs found
Flavor asymmetry of polarized antiquark distributions and semi-inclusive DIS
The -expansion of QCD suggests large flavor asymmetries of the
polarized antiquark distributions in the nucleon. This is confirmed by model
calculations in the large- limit (chiral quark-soliton model), which give
sizable results for and . We compute the contributions of
these flavor asymmetries to the spin asymmetries in hadron production in
semi-inclusive deep-inelastic scattering. We show that the large flavor
asymmetries predicted by the chiral quark-soliton model are consistent with the
recent HERMES data for spin asymmetries in charged hadron production.Comment: 21 pages, LaTeX2e, 9 eps figures include
Channel, tube, and Taylor-Couette flow of complex viscoelastic fluid models
We show how to formulate two-point boundary value problems to compute laminar channel, tube, and Taylor-Couette flow profiles for some complex viscoelastic fluid models of differential type. The models examined herein are the Pom-Pom Model [McLeish and Larson 42:81-110, (1998)] the Pompon Model [Öttinger 40:317-321, (2001)] and the Two Coupled Maxwell Modes Model (Beris and Edwards 1994). For the two-mode Upper-Convected Maxwell Model, we calculate analytical solutions for the three flow geometries and use the solutions to validate the numerical methodology. We illustrate how to calculate the velocity, pressure, conformation tensor, backbone orientation tensor, backbone stretch, and extra stress profiles for various models. For the Pom-Pom Model, we find that the two-point boundary value problem is numerically unstable, which is due to the aphysical non-monotonic shear stress vs shear rate prediction of the model. For the other two models, we compute laminar flow profiles over a wide range of pressure drops and inner cylinder velocities. The volumetric flow rate and the nonlinear viscoelastic material properties on the boundaries of the flow geometries are determined as functions of the applied pressure drop, allowing easy analysis of experimentally measurable quantitie
Evolution since z = 0.5 of the Morphology-Density relation for Clusters of Galaxies
Using traditional morphological classifications of galaxies in 10
intermediate-redshift (z~0.5) clusters observed with WFPC-2 on the Hubble Space
Telescope, we derive relations between morphology and local galaxy density
similar to that found by Dressler for low-redshift clusters. Taken
collectively, the `morphology-density' relationship, M-D, for these more
distant, presumably younger clusters is qualitatively similar to that found for
the local sample, but a detailed comparison shows two substantial differences:
(1) For the clusters in our sample, the M-D relation is strong in centrally
concentrated ``regular'' clusters, those with a strong correlation of radius
and surface density, but nearly absent for clusters that are less concentrated
and irregular, in contrast to the situation for low redshift clusters where a
strong relation has been found for both. (2) In every cluster the fraction of
elliptical galaxies is as large or larger than in low-redshift clusters, but
the S0 fraction is 2-3 times smaller, with a proportional increase of the
spiral fraction. Straightforward, though probably not unique, interpretations
of these observations are (1) morphological segregation proceeds
hierarchically, affecting richer, denser groups of galaxies earlier, and (2)
the formation of elliptical galaxies predates the formation of rich clusters,
and occurs instead in the loose-group phase or even earlier, but S0's are
generated in large numbers only after cluster virialization.Comment: 35 pages, 19 figures, uses psfig. Accepted for publication in Ap
Threshold Resummation for W-Boson Production at RHIC
We study the resummation of large logarithmic perturbative corrections to the
partonic cross sections relevant for the process pp -> W^+- X at the BNL
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). At RHIC, polarized protons are
available, and spin asymmetries for this process will be used for precise
measurements of the up and down quark and anti-quark distributions in the
proton. The corrections arise near the threshold for the partonic reaction and
are associated with soft-gluon emission. We perform the resummation to
next-to-leading logarithmic accuracy, for the rapidity-differential cross
section. We find that resummation leads to relatively moderate effects on the
cross sections and spin asymmetries.Comment: 25 pages, 15 figures as eps files. One reference added and typo
correcte
A First Comparison of the SBF Survey Distances with the Galaxy Density Field: Implications for H_0 and Omega
We compare the peculiar velocities measured in the SBF Survey of Galaxy
Distances with the predictions from the density fields of the IRAS 1.2 Jy
flux-limited redshift survey and the Optical Redshift Survey (ORS) to derive
simultaneous constraints on the Hubble constant and the density parameter
, where is the linear bias. We find
and for the IRAS and ORS
comparisons, respectively, and \kmsMpc (with an additional 9%
uncertainty due to the Cepheids themselves). The match between predicted and
observed peculiar velocities is good for these values of and , and
although there is covariance between the two parameters, our results clearly
point toward low-density cosmologies. Thus, the unresolved discrepancy between
the ``velocity-velocity'' and ``density-density'' measurements of
continues.Comment: 4 pages with 3 embedded ps figures; uses emulateapj.sty (included).
Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Evolution of the Rate and Mode of Star Formation in Galaxies since z=0.7
We present the star formation rate (SFR) and starburst fraction (SBF) for a
sample of field galaxies from the ICBS intermediate-redshift cluster survey. We
use [O II] and Spitzer 24 micron fluxes to measure SFRs, and 24 micron fluxes
and H-delta absorption to measure of SBFs, for both our sample and a
present-epoch field sample from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and Spitzer
Wide-area Infrared Extragalactic (SWIRE) survey. We find a precipitous decline
in the SFR since z=1, in agreement with other studies, as well as a
corresponding rapid decline in the fraction of galaxies undergoing
long-duration moderate-amplitude starbursts. We suggest that the change in both
the rate and mode of star formation could result from the strong decrease since
z=1 of gas available for star formation.Comment: ApJ Letters in pres
Research on the design of adaptive control systems, volume 1 Final report
Adaptive control systems - combined optimization and adaptive control, analysis-synthesis and passive adaptive systems, learning systems, and measurement adaptive system
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