4,260 research outputs found
Formation of plasma around a small meteoroid: 1. Kinetic theory
This article is a companion to Dimant and Oppenheim [2017] https://doi.org/10.1002/2017JA023963.This paper calculates the spatial distribution of the plasma responsible for radar head echoes by applying the kinetic theory developed in the companion paper. This results in a set of analytic expressions for the plasma density as a function of distance from the meteoroid. It shows that at distances less than a collisional mean free path from the meteoroid surface, the plasma density drops in proportion to 1/R where R is the distance from the meteoroid center; and, at distances much longer than the mean‐free‐path behind the meteoroid, the density diminishes at a rate proportional to 1/R2. The results of this paper should be used for modeling and analysis of radar head echoes.This work was supported by NSF grant AGS-1244842. (AGS-1244842 - NSF
Steering effects on growth instability during step-flow growth of Cu on Cu(1,1,17)
Kinetic Monte Carlo simulation in conjunction with molecular dynamics
simulation is utilized to study the effect of the steered deposition on the
growth of Cu on Cu(1,1,17). It is found that the deposition flux becomes
inhomogeneous in step train direction and the inhomogeneity depends on the
deposition angle, when the deposition is made along that direction. Steering
effect is found to always increase the growth instability, with respect to the
case of homogeneous deposition. Further, the growth instability depends on the
deposition angle and direction, showing minimum at a certain deposition angle
off-normal to (001) terrace, and shows a strong correlation with the
inhomogeneous deposition flux. The increase of the growth instability is
ascribed to the strengthened step Erlich Schwoebel barrier effects that is
caused by the enhanced deposition flux near descending step edge due to the
steering effect.Comment: 5 page
Final state interactions in B+- to K+ K- K+- decays
Charged B decays to three charged kaons are analysed in the framework of the
QCD factorization approach. The strong final state K+K-interactions are
described using the kaon scalar and vector form factors. The scalar non-strange
and strange form factors at low K+K- effective masses are constrained by chiral
perturbation theory and satisfy the two-body unitarity conditions. The latter
stem from the properties of the meson-meson amplitudes which describe all
possible S-wave transitions between three coupled channels consisting of two
kaons, two pions and four pions. The vector form factors are fitted to the data
on the electromagnetic kaon interactions. The model results are compared with
the Belle and BaBar data. Away from phi(1020) resonance, in the S-wave
dominated K+K- mass spectra, a possibility for a large CP asymmetry is
identified.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, modified version published in Physics Letters
A new look at C*-simplicity and the unique trace property of a group
We characterize when the reduced C*-algebra of a group has unique tracial
state, respectively, is simple, in terms of Dixmier-type properties of the
group C*-algebra. We also give a simple proof of the recent result by
Breuillard, Kalantar, Kennedy and Ozawa that the reduced C*-algebra of a group
has unique tracial state if and only if the amenable radical of the group is
trivial.Comment: 8 page
Domain Wall Fermions and Chiral Symmetry Restoration Rate
Domain Wall Fermions utilize an extra space time dimension to provide a
method for restoring the regularization induced chiral symmetry breaking in
lattice vector gauge theories even at finite lattice spacing. The breaking is
restored at an exponential rate as the size of the extra dimension increases.
As a precursor to lattice QCD studies the dependence of the restoration rate to
the other parameters of the theory and, in particular, the lattice spacing is
investigated in the context of the two flavor lattice Schwinger model.Comment: 3 pages, LaTex, 5 ps figures, contribution to LATTICE97 proceeding
Quenched QCD with domain wall fermions
We report on simulations of quenched QCD using domain wall fermions, where we
focus on basic questions about the formalism and its ability to produce
expected low energy hadronic physics for light quarks. The work reported here
is on quenched lattices at and 5.85, using values
for the length of the fifth dimension between 10 and 48. We report results for
parameter choices which lead to the desired number of flavors, a study of
undamped modes in the extra dimension and hadron masses.Comment: Contribution to Lattice '98. Presented by R. Mawhinney. 3 pages, 3
figure
Scalar resonances in a unitary -wave model for
We propose a model for decays following
experimental results which indicate that the two-pion interaction in the
-wave is dominated by the scalar resonances and
. The weak decay amplitude for , where is a
resonance that subsequently decays into , is constructed in a
factorization approach. In the -wave, we implement the strong decay by means of a scalar form factor. This provides a unitary
description of the pion-pion interaction in the entire kinematically allowed
mass range from threshold to about 3 GeV. In order to
reproduce the experimental Dalitz plot for \Dppp, we include contributions
beyond the -wave. For the -wave, dominated by the , we use a
Breit-Wigner description. Higher waves are accounted for by using the usual
isobar prescription for the and . The major
achievement is a good reproduction of the experimental
distribution, and of the partial as well as the total \Dppp branching ratios.
Our values are generally smaller than the experimental ones. We discuss this
shortcoming and, as a byproduct, we predict a value for the poorly known transition form factor at .Comment: 23 pages, 2 figures. Two new equations. The value for the strength of
the contribution of the scalar form factor now agrees with other results in
the literature. Main results unchanged. Version to appear in Phys. Rev.
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