341 research outputs found
Tumbleweeds and airborne gravitational noise sources for LIGO
Gravitational-wave detectors are sensitive not only to astrophysical
gravitational waves, but also to the fluctuating Newtonian gravitational forces
of moving masses in the ground and air around the detector. This paper studies
the gravitational effects of density perturbations in the atmosphere, and from
massive airborne objects near the detector. These effects were previously
considered by Saulson; in this paper I revisit these phenomena, considering
transient atmospheric shocks, and the effects of sound waves or objects
colliding with the ground or buildings around the test masses. I also consider
temperature perturbations advected past the detector as a source of
gravitational noise. I find that the gravitational noise background is below
the expected noise floor even of advanced interferometric detectors, although
only by an order of magnitude for temperature perturbations carried along
turbulent streamlines. I also find that transient shockwaves in the atmosphere
could potentially produce large spurious signals, with signal-to-noise ratios
in the hundreds in an advanced interferometric detector. These signals could be
vetoed by means of acoustic sensors outside of the buildings. Massive
wind-borne objects such as tumbleweeds could also produce gravitational signals
with signal-to-noise ratios in the hundreds if they collide with the
interferometer buildings, so it may be necessary to build fences preventing
such objects from approaching within about 30m of the test masses.Comment: 15 pages, 10 PostScript figures, uses REVTeX4.cls and epsfig.st
Hydrogen adsorption and cohesive energy of single-walled carbon nanotubes
Hydrogen adsorption on crystalline ropes of carbon single-walled nanotubes (SWNT) was found to exceed 8 wt.%, which is the highest capacity of any carbon material. Hydrogen is first adsorbed on the outer surfaces of the crystalline ropes. At pressures higher than about 40 bar at 80 K, however, a phase transition occurs where there is a separation of the individual SWNTs, and hydrogen is physisorbed on their exposed surfaces. The pressure of this phase transition provides a tube-tube cohesive energy for much of the material of 5 meV/C atom. This small cohesive energy is affected strongly by the quality of crystalline order in the ropes
Covariant Formulation of Field Theories associated with p-Branes
We discuss the covariant formulation of local field theories described by the
Companion Lagrangian associated with p-branes. The covariantisation is shown to
be useful for clarifying the geometrical meaning of the field equations and
also their relation to the Hamilton-Jacobi formulation of the standard
Dirac-Born-Infeld theory.Comment: 12 pages, Late
On the Theory of Relativistic Strong Plasma Waves
The influence of motion of ions and electron temperature on nonlinear
one-dimensional plasma waves with velocity close to the speed of light in
vacuum is investigated. It is shown that although the wavebreaking field weakly
depends on mass of ions, the nonlinear relativistic wavelength essentially
changes. The nonlinearity leads to the increase of the strong plasma
wavelength, while the motion of ions leads to the decrease of the wavelength.
Both hydrodynamic approach and kinetic one, based on Vlasov-Poisson equations,
are used to investigate the relativistic strong plasma waves in a warm plasma.
The existence of relativistic solitons in a thermal plasma is predicted.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
Evolution of rarefaction pulses into vortex rings
The two-dimensional solitary waves of the Gross-Pitaevskii equation in the
Kadomtsev-Petviashvili limit are unstable with respect to three-dimensional
perturbations. We elucidate the stages in the evolution of such solutions
subject to perturbations perpendicular to the direction of motion. Depending on
the energy (momentum) and the wavelength of the perturbation different types of
three-dimensional solutions emerge. In particular, we present new periodic
solutions having very small energy and momentum per period. These solutions
also become unstable and this secondary instability leads to vortex ring
nucleation.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
On the dispersionless Kadomtsev-Petviashvili equation in n+1 dimensions: exact solutions, the Cauchy problem for small initial data and wave breaking
We study the (n+1)-dimensional generalization of the dispersionless
Kadomtsev-Petviashvili (dKP) equation, a universal equation describing the
propagation of weakly nonlinear, quasi one dimensional waves in n+1 dimensions,
and arising in several physical contexts, like acoustics, plasma physics and
hydrodynamics. For n=2, this equation is integrable, and it has been recently
shown to be a prototype model equation in the description of the two
dimensional wave breaking of localized initial data. We construct an exact
solution of the n+1 dimensional model containing an arbitrary function of one
variable, corresponding to its parabolic invariance, describing waves, constant
on their paraboloidal wave front, breaking simultaneously in all points of it.
Then we use such solution to build a uniform approximation of the solution of
the Cauchy problem, for small and localized initial data, showing that such a
small and localized initial data evolving according to the (n+1)-dimensional
dKP equation break, in the long time regime, if and only if n=1,2,3; i.e., in
physical space. Such a wave breaking takes place, generically, in a point of
the paraboloidal wave front, and the analytic aspects of it are given
explicitly in terms of the small initial data.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures, few formulas adde
Evolution of the Primary Pulse in 1D Granular Crystals Subject to On-Site Perturbations: Analytical Study
Propagation of primary pulse through an un-compressed granular chain subject
to external on-site perturbation is studied. Analytical procedure predicting
the evolution of the primary pulse is devised for the general form of the
on-site perturbation applied on the chain. The validity of the analytical model
is confirmed with several specific granular setups such as, chains mounted on
the nonlinear elastic foundation, chains perturbed by the dissipative forces as
well as randomly perturbed chains. Additional interesting finding made in the
present study corresponds to the chains subject to a special type of
perturbations including the terms leading to dissipation and those acting as an
energy source. It is shown in the study that application of such perturbation
may lead to formation of stable stationary shocks acting as attractors for the
initially unperturbed, propagating Nesterenko solitary waves. Interestingly
enough the developed analytical procedure provides an extremely close
estimations for the amplitudes of these stationary shocks as well as predicts
zones of their stability. In conclusion we would like to stress that the
developed analytical model have demonstrated spectacular correspondence to the
results of direct numerical simulations for all the setups considered in the
study
Out-of-equilibrium states as statistical equilibria of an effective dynamics
We study the formation of coherent structures in a system with long-range
interactions where particles moving on a circle interact through a repulsive
cosine potential. Non equilibrium structures are shown to correspond to
statistical equilibria of an effective dynamics, which is derived using
averaging techniques. This simple behavior might be a prototype of others
observed in more complicated systems with long-range interactions, like
two-dimensional incompressible fluids or self-gravitating systems.Comment: 4 figure
Russia-UK collaboration in paleontology: past, present, and future
There is a long history of collaboration between Russia and the United Kingdom in paleontology. This began, arguably, in 1821, with the seminal work by William Fox-Strangways, who produced a geological map of the area around St Petersburg. Most famously, Roderick Murchison carried out extensive surveying and observations throughout European Russia in 1840 and 1841, and published a major monograph on geology and paleontology of European Russia in 1845. Since then, and continuing today, there have been many fruitful collaborations on Precambrian life, Paleozoic marine organisms, terrestrialization of plants and vertebrates, the Permian–Triassic mass extinction, fossil mammals, human evolution, and conservation paleobiology
Understanding the training and education needs of homecare workers supporting people with dementia and cancer: a systematic review of reviews
Many people with dementia, supported by family carers, prefer to live at home and may rely on homecare support services. People with dementia are also often living with multimorbidities, including cancer. The main risk factor for both cancer and dementia is age and the number of people living with dementia and cancer likely to rise. Upskilling the social care workforce to facilitate more complex care is central to national workforce strategies and challenges. Training and education development must also respond to the key requirements of a homecare workforce experiencing financial, recruitment and retention difficulties. This systematic review of reviews provides an overview of dementia and cancer training and education accessible to the homecare workforce. Findings reveal there is a diverse range of training and education available, with mixed evidence of effectiveness. Key barriers and facilitators to effective training and education are identified in order to inform future training, education and learning development for the homecare workforce supporting people with dementia and cancer
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