6,421 research outputs found
Status of center dominance in various center gauges
We review arguments for center dominance in center gauges where vortex
locations are correctly identified. We introduce an appealing interpretation of
the maximal center gauge, discuss problems with Gribov copies, and a cure to
the problems through the direct Laplacian center gauge. We study correlations
between direct and indirect Laplacian center gauges.Comment: Presented by S. Olejnik at the NATO Advanced Research Workshop
"Confinement, Topology, and other Non-Perturbative Aspects of QCD", Jan.
21-27, 2002, Stara Lesna, Slovakia. 10 pages, 3 figures (8 EPS files), uses
crckapb.st
Molecular Gas during the Post-Starburst Phase: Low Gas Fractions in Green Valley Seyfert Post-Starburst Galaxies
Post-starbursts (PSBs) are candidate for rapidly transitioning from
star-bursting to quiescent galaxies. We study the molecular gas evolution of
PSBs at z ~ 0.03 - 0.2. We undertook new CO (2-1) observations of 22 Seyfert
PSBs candidates using the ARO Submillimeter Telescope. This sample complements
previous samples of PSBs by including green valley PSBs with Seyfert-like
emission, allowing us to analyze for the first time the molecular gas
properties of 116 PSBs with a variety of AGN properties. The distribution of
molecular gas to stellar mass fractions in PSBs is significantly different than
normal star-forming galaxies in the COLD GASS survey. The combined samples of
PSBs with Seyfert-like emission line ratios have a gas fraction distribution
which is even more significantly different and is broader (~ 0.03-0.3). Most of
them have lower gas fractions than normal star-forming galaxies. We find a
highly significant correlation between the WISE 12 micron to 4.6 micron flux
ratios and molecular gas fractions in both PSBs and normal galaxies. We detect
molecular gas in 27% of our Seyfert PSBs. Taking into account the upper limits,
the mean and the dispersion of the distribution of the gas fraction in our
Seyfert PSB sample are much smaller (mean = 0.025, std dev. = 0.018) than
previous samples of Seyfert PSBs or PSBs in general (mean ~ 0.1 - 0.2, std dev.
~ 0.1 - 0.2).Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures accepted in MNRA
Malmquist Bias and the Distance to the Virgo Cluster
This paper investigates the impact of Malmquist bias on the distance to the
Virgo cluster determined by the H_0 Key Project using M100, and consequently on
the derived value of H_0. Malmquist bias is a volume-induced statistical effect
which causes the most probable distance to be different from the raw distance
measured. Consideration of the bias in the distance to the Virgo cluster raises
this distance and lowers the calculated value of H_0. Monte Carlo simulations
of the cluster have been run for several possible distributions of spirals
within the cluster and of clusters in the local universe. Simulations
consistent with known information regarding the cluster and the errors of
measurement result in a bias of about 6.5%-8.5%. This corresponds to an
unbiased distance of 17.2-17.4 Mpc and a value of H_0 in the range 80-82
km/s/Mpc.
The problem of determining the bias to Virgo illustrates several key points
regarding Malmquist bias. Essentially all conventional astronomical distance
measurements are subject to this bias. In addition, the bias accumulates when
an attempt is made to construct "distance ladders" from measurements which are
individually biased. As will be shown in the case of Virgo, the magnitude and
direction of the bias are sensitive to the spatial distribution of the parent
poputation from which the observed object is drawn - a distribution which is
often poorly known. This leads to uncertainty in the magnitude of the bias, and
adds to the importance of minimizing the number of steps in "distance ladders".Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures, Latex, To appear in Ap
Remarks on the Gribov Problem in Direct Maximal Center Gauge
We review the equivalence of maximal center gauge fixing to the problem of
finding the best fit, to a given lattice gauge field, by a thin vortex
configuration. This fit is necessarily worst at the location of P-plaquettes.
We then compare the fits achieved in Gribov copies generated by (i)
over-relaxation; (ii) over-relaxation after Landau gauge preconditioning; and
(iii) simulated annealing. Simulated annealing yields the best fit if all links
on the lattice are included, but the situation changes if we consider only the
lattice volume exterior to P-plaquettes. In this exterior region, the fit is
best for Gribov copies generated by over-relaxation, and worst for Gribov
copies generated after Landau gauge preconditioning. The two fitting criteria
(including or not including the P-plaquettes) yield string tensions differing
by -34% to +20% respectively, relative to the full string tension. Our usual
procedure (``quenched minimization'') seems to be a compromise between these
criteria, and yields string tensions at an intermediate value close to the full
string tension.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
On the Use of Approximation Methods for Microcrack Shielding Problems
There is experimental evidence that stress-induced microcracking near a macrocrack tip enhances the fracture toughness of brittle materials. In considering the interaction of the macrocrack with multiple microcracks using a discrete model, it is essential to use approximation methods in order to keep the amount of the computation to a tractable level. However, when crack distances are small, the results of the approximation methods can be significantly different from the numerical solution based upon the exact formulation. The results obtained by these approximation methods will be compared with the numerical solution to show the applicability ranges in which the errors are acceptably small. The use of results obtained by the approximation methods outside applicability ranges in literature is shown to lead to incorrect conclusions concerning microcrack shielding
Long Distance Coupling of a Quantum Mechanical Oscillator to the Internal States of an Atomic Ensemble
We propose and investigate a hybrid optomechanical system consisting of a
micro-mechanical oscillator coupled to the internal states of a distant
ensemble of atoms. The interaction between the systems is mediated by a light
field which allows to couple the two systems in a modular way over long
distances. Coupling to internal degrees of freedom of atoms opens up the
possibility to employ high-frequency mechanical resonators in the MHz to GHz
regime, such as optomechanical crystal structures, and to benefit from the rich
toolbox of quantum control over internal atomic states. Previous schemes
involving atomic motional states are rather limited in both of these aspects.
We derive a full quantum model for the effective coupling including the main
sources of decoherence. As an application we show that sympathetic ground-state
cooling and strong coupling between the two systems is possible.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Synthetic crossed-lamellar microstructures in oxide ceramics
A process has been developed to produce a crossed-lamellar-type microstructure in mullite combining tape casting, oriented lamination, and templated grain growth. Ceramic laminates were produced with aligned rod-like grains with the alignment direction varying from layer-to-layer with abrupt interfaces between layers. Other designed microstructures are also possible using this process
Low Thermal Expansion Coatings for Carbon/Carbon Composites
Two classes of materials are considered for low expansion protective
coatings for carbon/carbon composites. They include composites containing
particles which undergo allotropic phase transformations accompanied by
negative volume changes with increasing temperature and anisotropic oxides
which demonstrate low expansion due to microcracking. Conditions for
failure of coatings by either cracking or spallation due to thermal
mismatch are evaluated
The cross-frequency mediation mechanism of intracortical information transactions
In a seminal paper by von Stein and Sarnthein (2000), it was hypothesized
that "bottom-up" information processing of "content" elicits local, high
frequency (beta-gamma) oscillations, whereas "top-down" processing is
"contextual", characterized by large scale integration spanning distant
cortical regions, and implemented by slower frequency (theta-alpha)
oscillations. This corresponds to a mechanism of cortical information
transactions, where synchronization of beta-gamma oscillations between distant
cortical regions is mediated by widespread theta-alpha oscillations. It is the
aim of this paper to express this hypothesis quantitatively, in terms of a
model that will allow testing this type of information transaction mechanism.
The basic methodology used here corresponds to statistical mediation analysis,
originally developed by (Baron and Kenny 1986). We generalize the classical
mediator model to the case of multivariate complex-valued data, consisting of
the discrete Fourier transform coefficients of signals of electric neuronal
activity, at different frequencies, and at different cortical locations. The
"mediation effect" is quantified here in a novel way, as the product of "dual
frequency RV-coupling coefficients", that were introduced in (Pascual-Marqui et
al 2016, http://arxiv.org/abs/1603.05343). Relevant statistical procedures are
presented for testing the cross-frequency mediation mechanism in general, and
in particular for testing the von Stein & Sarnthein hypothesis.Comment: https://doi.org/10.1101/119362 licensed as CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0
International license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
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