1,498 research outputs found
Electrostrictive counter-force on fluid microdroplet in short laser pulse
When a micrometer-sized fluid droplet is illuminated by a laser pulse, there
is a fundamental distinction between two cases. If the pulse is short in
comparison with the transit time for sound across the droplet, the disruptive
optical Abraham-Minkowski radiation force is countered by electrostriction and
the net stress is compressive. In contrast, if the pulse is long on this scale,
electrostriction is cancelled by elastic pressure and the surviving term of the
electromagnetic force, the Abraham-Minkowski force, is disruptive and deforms
the droplet. Ultrashort laser pulses are routinely used in modern experiments,
and impressive progress has moreover been made on laser manipulation of liquid
surfaces in recent times, making a theory for combining the two pertinent. We
analyze the electrostrictive contribution analytically and numerically for a
spherical droplet.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Optics Letter
37 GHz methanol masers : Horsemen of the Apocalypse for the class II methanol maser phase?
We report the results of a search for class II methanol masers at 37.7, 38.3
and 38.5 GHz towards a sample of 70 high-mass star formation regions. We
primarily searched towards regions known to show emission either from the 107
GHz class II methanol maser transition, or from the 6.035 GHz excited OH
transition. We detected maser emission from 13 sources in the 37.7 GHz
transition, eight of these being new detections. We detected maser emission
from three sources in the 38 GHz transitions, one of which is a new detection.
We find that 37.7 GHz methanol masers are only associated with the most
luminous 6.7 and 12.2 GHz methanol maser sources, which in turn are
hypothesised to be the oldest class II methanol sources. We suggest that the
37.7 GHz methanol masers are associated with a brief evolutionary phase (of
1000-4000 years) prior to the cessation of class II methanol maser activity in
the associated high-mass star formation region.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Casimir attraction in multilayered plane parallel magnetodielectric systems
A powerful procedure is presented for calculating the Casimir attraction
between plane parallel multilayers made up of homogeneous regions with
arbitrary magnetic and dielectric properties by use of the Minkowski
energy-momentum tensor. The theory is applied to numerous geometries and shown
to reproduce a number of results obtained by other authors. Although the
various pieces of theory drawn upon are well known, the relative ease with
which the Casimir force density in even complex planar structures may be
calculated, appears not to be widely appreciated, and no single paper to the
author's knowledge renders explicitly the procedure demonstrated herein.
Results may be seen as an important building block in the settling of issues of
fundamental interest, such as the long-standing dispute over the thermal
behaviour of the Casimir force or the question of what is the correct stress
tensor to apply, a discussion re-quickened by the newly suggested alternative
theory due to Raabe and Welsch.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures. Version 2: Updated contact details. Minor
changes and correction
Discovery of Two New Class II Methanol Maser Transitions in G345.01+1.79
We have used the Swedish ESO Submillimetre Telescope (SEST) to search for new
class II methanol maser transitions towards the southern source G345.01+1.79.
Over a period of 5 days we observed 11 known or predicted class II methanol
maser transitions. Emission with the narrow line width and characteristic
velocity of class II methanol masers (in this source) was detected in 8 of
these transitions, two of which have not previously been reported as masers.
The new class II methanol maser transitions are the 13(-3)-12(-4)E transition
at 104.1 GHz and the 5(1)-4(2)E transition at 216.9 GHz. Both of these are from
transition series for which there are no previous known class II methanol maser
transitions. This takes the total number of known class II methanol maser
series to 10, and the total number of transitions (or transition groups) to 18.
The observed 104.1 GHz maser suggests the presence of two or more regions of
masing gas with similar line of sight velocities, but quite different physical
conditions. Although these newly discovered transitions are likely to be
relatively rare, where they are observed combined studies using the Australia
Telescope Compact Array and the Atacama Large Millimeter Array offer the
prospect to be able to undertake multi-transition methanol maser studies with
unprecedented detail.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
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