5,054 research outputs found
Long Range Forces from Two Neutrino Exchange Revisited
The exchange of two massless neutrinos gives rise to a long range force which
couples to weakly charged matter. As has been noted previously in the
literature, the potential for this force is \VN \propto G_{F}^2 / r^5 with
monopole-monople, spin-spin and more complicated interactions. Unfortunately,
this is far too small to be observed in present day experiments. We calculate
\VN explicitly in the electroweak theory, and show that under very general
assumptions forces arising from the exchange of two massless fermions can at
best yield potentials.Comment: 5 pages + 1 figure (not included), UFIFT-HEP-92-28/HUTP-92-A04
Application of ERTS-1 data to the protection and management of New Jersey's coastal environment
The author has identified the following significant results. Photomaps, using MSS bands 5 and 7, have been prepared delineating the coastal zone as described in the Coastal Area Facility Review Act before the State Legislature. An upper wetlands boundary overlay has been prepared at 1:500,000 scale. The movement and dispersion of wastes in the New York Bight area are being plotted with each orbit. The possible impact of these wastes on the New Jersey shoreline is being quantified
Application of ERTS-A data to the protection and management of New Jersey's coastal environment
The author has identified the following significant results. Apparent sewage sludge disposal by barge has been detected approximately 12 miles offshore in an area with an approximate radius of 2.5 nautical miles. Verification is underway to determine whether this dumping is within one of the approved dump sites in the Bight. Analysis of all available historical and routine meteorological data in correlation with the observed phenomenon is necessary before final conclusions can be reached with respect to the effects of currents on the disposal of dumped wastes. Four effluent plumes emanating from the shoreline just south of Sandy Hook were observed and are moving in a southerly direction. Another plume is evident north of Barnegat Inlet and is moving almost directly offshore. This suggests that the more northerly plumes are under the influence of the tidal regime around New York Harbor much more than are the plumes further south along the New Jersey coast. Of further interest are what appear to be an internal wave phenomena approximately 75 miles east of the New Jersey coast. This same sort of phenomena has been observed repetitively off the coast of Oregon
Impact of ERTS-1 images on management of New Jersey's coastal zone
The thrust of New Jersey's ERTS investigation is development of procedures for operational use of ERTS-1 data by the Department of Environmental Protection in the management of the State's coastal zone. Four major areas of concern were investigated: detection of land use changes in the coastal zone; monitoring of offshore waste disposal; siting of ocean outfalls; and allocation of funds for shore protection. ERTS imagery was not useful for shore protection purposes; it was of limited practical value in the evaluation of offshore waste disposal and ocean outfall siting. However, ERTS imagery shows great promise for operational detection of land use changes in the coastal zone. Some constraints for practical change detection have been identified
Azimuthal Asymmetry of Direct Photons in High Energy Nuclear Collisions
We show that a sizeable azimuthal asymmetry, characterized by a coefficient
v_2, is to be expected for direct photons produced in non-central high energy
nuclear collisions. This signal is generated by photons radiated by jets
interacting with the surrounding hot plasma. The anisotropy is out of phase by
an angle with respect to that associated with the elliptic anisotropy
of hadrons, leading to negative values of v_2. Such an asymmetry, if observed,
could be a signature for the presence of a quark gluon plasma and would
establish the importance of jet-plasma interactions as a source of
electromagnetic radiation.Comment: New title. Final versio
Effects of Bose-Einstein Condensation on forces among bodies sitting in a boson heat bath
We explore the consequences of Bose-Einstein condensation on
two-scalar-exchange mediated forces among bodies that sit in a boson gas. We
find that below the condensation temperature the range of the forces becomes
infinite while it is finite at temperatures above condensation.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
"Free" Constituent Quarks and Dilepton Production in Heavy Ion Collisions
An approach is suggested, invoking vitally the notion of constituent massive
quarks (valons) which can survive and propagate rather than hadrons (except of
pions) within the hot and dense matter formed below the chiral transition
temperature in course of the heavy ion collisions at high energies. This
approach is shown to be quite good for description of the experimentally
observed excess in dilepton yield at masses 250 MeV < M < 700 MeV over the
prompt resonance decay mechanism (CERES cocktail) predictions. In certain
aspects, it looks to be even more successful, than the conventional approaches:
it seems to match the data somewhat better at dilepton masses before the
two-pion threshold and before the rho-meson peak as well as at higher dilepton
masses (beyond the phi-meson one). The approach implies no specific assumptions
on the equation of state (EOS) or peculiarities of phase transitions in the
expanding nuclear matter.Comment: 13 pages, 3 PNG figures. submitted to Sov. Nucl. Phy
Programmable telemetry system Patent
Time division multiplexed telemetry transmitting system controlled by programmed memor
Application of ERTS-1 data to the protection and management of New Jersey's coastal environment
The author has identified the following significant results. A Coastal Zone Surveillance Program has been developed in which systematic comparisons of early ERTS-1 images and recently acquired images are regularly made to identify areas where changes have occurred. A methodology for assessing and documenting benefits has been established. Quantification of benefits has been directed toward four candidate areas: shore protection, ocean outfalls, coastal land resources, and offshore waste disposal. A refinement in the change detection analysis procedure has led to greater accuracy in spotting developmental changes in the Coastal Zone. Preliminary conclusions drawn from the Shore Erosion case study indicate that in the northern test area (developed beach) erosion has occurred more often, is generally more severe, and the beach is slower to recover than in the southern test area (natural beach). From these data it appears that it may be possible to define areas most likely to experience further erosion. The assumption of continued erosion in areas that have at one time experienced severe erosion is supported by the simple fact that as a beach narrows wave energy is concentrated on a narrower beach surface. The higher energy condition subsequently results in accelerated erosion
Constraints on Light Pseudoscalars Implied by Tests of the Gravitational Inverse-Square Law
The exchange of light pseudoscalars between fermions leads to a
spin-independent potential in order g^4, where g is the Yukawa
pseudoscalar-fermion coupling constant. This potential gives rise to detectable
violations of both the weak equivalence principle (WEP) and the gravitational
inverse-square law (ISL), even if g is quite small. We show that when
previously derived WEP constraints are combined with those arisingfrom ISL
tests, a direct experimental limit on the Yukawa coupling of light
pseudoscalars to neutrons can be inferred for the first time (g_n^2/4pi < 1.6
\times 10^-7), along with a new (and significantly improved) limit on the
coupling of light pseudoscalars to protons.Comment: 12 pages, Revtex, with 1 Postscript figure (submitted to Physical
Review Letters
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