100,637 research outputs found
Reactions of metastable nitrogen atoms
Line absorption analysis and reaction kinetics of two metastable nitrogen atomic energy level
Short Gamma-Ray Bursts with Extended Emission Observed with Swift/BAT and Fermi/GBM
Some short GRBs are followed by longer extended emission, lasting anywhere
from ~10 to ~100 s. These short GRBs with extended emission (EE) can possess
observational characteristics of both short and long GRBs (as represented by
GRB 060614), and the traditional classification based on the observed duration
places some of them in the long GRB class. While GRBs with EE pose a challenge
to the compact binary merger scenario, they may therefore provide an important
link between short and long duration events. To identify the population of GRBs
with EE regardless of their initial classifications, we performed a systematic
search of short GRBs with EE using all available data (up to February 2013) of
both Swift/BAT and Fermi/GBM. The search identified 16 BAT and 14 GBM detected
GRBs with EE, several of which are common events observed with both detectors.
We investigated their spectral and temporal properties for both the spikes and
the EE, and examined correlations among these parameters. Here we present the
results of the systematic search as well as the properties of the identified
events. Finally, their properties are also compared with short GRBs with EE
observed with BATSE, identified through our previous search effort. We found
several strong correlations among parameters, especially when all of the
samples were combined. Based on our results, a possible progenitor scenario of
two-component jet is discussed.Comment: Published in MNRAS; matched to the published versio
Oscillator strength of the resonance transitions of ground-state N and O
Oscillator strength of resonance transitions of ground state nitrogen and oxyge
On the General Ericksen-Leslie System: Parodi's Relation, Well-posedness and Stability
In this paper we investigate the role of Parodi's relation in the
well-posedness and stability of the general Ericksen-Leslie system modeling
nematic liquid crystal flows. First, we give a formal physical derivation of
the Ericksen-Leslie system through an appropriate energy variational approach
under Parodi's relation, in which we can distinguish the
conservative/dissipative parts of the induced elastic stress. Next, we prove
global well-posedness and long-time behavior of the Ericksen-Leslie system
under the assumption that the viscosity is sufficiently large. Finally,
under Parodi's relation, we show the global well-posedness and Lyapunov
stability for the Ericksen-Leslie system near local energy minimizers. The
connection between Parodi's relation and linear stability of the
Ericksen-Leslie system is also discussed
Creep fatigue life prediction for engine hot section materials (ISOTROPIC)
The specific activities summarized include: verification experiments (base program); thermomechanical cycling model; multiaxial stress state model; cumulative loading model; screening of potential environmental and protective coating models; and environmental attack model
Influence of Correlated Hybridization on the Conductance of Molecular Transistors
We study the spin-1/2 single-channel Anderson impurity model with correlated
(occupancy dependent) hybridization for molecular transistors using the
numerical renormalization-group method. Correlated hybridization can induce
nonuniversal deviations in the normalized zero-bias conductance and, for some
parameters, modestly enhance the spin polarization of currents in applied
magnetic field. Correlated hybridization can also explain a gate-voltage
dependence to the Kondo scale similar to what has been observed in recent
experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Thermalization and temperature distribution in a driven ion chain
We study thermalization and non-equilibrium dynamics in a dissipative quantum
many-body system -- a chain of ions with two points of the chain driven by
thermal bath under different temperature. Instead of a simple linear
temperature gradient as one expects from the classical heat diffusion process,
the temperature distribution in the ion chain shows surprisingly rich patterns,
which depend on the ion coupling rate to the bath, the location of the driven
ions, and the dissipation rates of the other ions in the chain. Through
simulation of the temperature evolution, we show that these unusual temperature
distribution patterns in the ion chain can be quantitatively tested in
experiments within a realistic time scale.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
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