1,434 research outputs found
A polarized neutron-scattering study of the Cooper-pair moment in Sr2RuO4
We report a study of the magnetization density in the mixed state of the
unconventional superconductor S2RuO4. On entering the superconducting state we
find no change in the magnitude or distribution of the induced moment for a
magnetic field of 1 Tesla applied within the RuO2 planes. Our results are
consistent with a spin-triplet Cooper pairing with spins lying in the basal
plane. This is in contrast with similar experiments performed on conventional
and high-Tc superconductors.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review Letter
A Study of the Reionization History of Intergalactic Helium with FUSE and VLT
We obtained high-resolution VLT and FUSE spectra of the quasar HE2347-4342 to
study the properties of the intergalactic medium between redshifts z=2.0-2.9.
The high-quality optical spectrum allows us to identify approximately 850 HeII
absorption components with column densities between N~5X10^11 and $ 10^18
cm^-2. The reprocessed FUSE spectrum extends the wavelength coverage of the
HeII absorption down to an observed wavelength of 920 A. Approximately 1400
HeII absorption components are identified, including 917 HeII Ly-alpha systems
and some of their HeII Ly-beta, Ly-gamma, and Ly-delta counterparts. The
ionization structure of HeII is complex, with approximately 90 components that
are not detected in the hydrogen spectrum. These components may represent the
effect of soft ionizing sources. The ratio Eta=N(HeII)/N(HI) varies
approximately from unity to more than a thousand, with a median value of 62 and
a distribution consistent with the intrinsic spectral indices of quasars. This
suggests that the dominant ionizing field is from the accumulated quasar
radiation, with contributions from other soft sources such as star-forming
regions and obscured AGN, which do not ionize helium. We find an evolution in
Eta toward smaller values at lower redshift, with the gradual disappearance of
soft components. At redshifts z>2.7, the large but finite increase in the HeII
opacity, Tau=5+/-1, suggests that we are viewing the end stages of a
reionization process that began at an earlier epoch. Fits of the absorption
profiles of unblended lines indicate comparable velocities between hydrogen and
He^+ ions. At hydrogen column densities N<3X10^12 cm^-2 the number of forest
lines shows a significant deficit relative to a power law, and becomes
negligible below N=10^11 cm^-2.Comment: 40 pages, 10 Postscript figures, uses Aastex.sty The Astrophysical
Journal, in pres
The Emergence of the Modern Universe: Tracing the Cosmic Web
This is the report of the Ultraviolet-Optical Working Group (UVOWG)
commissioned by NASA to study the scientific rationale for new missions in
ultraviolet/optical space astronomy approximately ten years from now, when the
Hubble Space Telescope (HST) is de-orbited. The UVOWG focused on a scientific
theme, The Emergence of the Modern Universe, the period from redshifts z = 3 to
0, occupying over 80% of cosmic time and beginning after the first galaxies,
quasars, and stars emerged into their present form. We considered
high-throughput UV spectroscopy (10-50x throughput of HST/COS) and wide-field
optical imaging (at least 10 arcmin square). The exciting science to be
addressed in the post-HST era includes studies of dark matter and baryons, the
origin and evolution of the elements, and the major construction phase of
galaxies and quasars. Key unanswered questions include: Where is the rest of
the unseen universe? What is the interplay of the dark and luminous universe?
How did the IGM collapse to form the galaxies and clusters? When were galaxies,
clusters, and stellar populations assembled into their current form? What is
the history of star formation and chemical evolution? Are massive black holes a
natural part of most galaxies? A large-aperture UV/O telescope in space
(ST-2010) will provide a major facility in the 21st century for solving these
scientific problems. The UVOWG recommends that the first mission be a 4m
aperture, SIRTF-class mission that focuses on UV spectroscopy and wide-field
imaging. In the coming decade, NASA should investigate the feasibility of an 8m
telescope, by 2010, with deployable optics similar to NGST. No high-throughput
UV/Optical mission will be possible without significant NASA investments in
technology, including UV detectors, gratings, mirrors, and imagers.Comment: Report of UV/O Working Group to NASA, 72 pages, 13 figures, Full
document with postscript figures available at
http://casa.colorado.edu/~uvconf/UVOWG.htm
Diblock copolymers at a homopolymer-homopolymer-interface: a Monte Carlo simulation
The properties of diluted symmetric A-B diblock copolymers at the interface
between A and B homopolymer phases are studied by means of Monte Carlo (MC)
simulations of the bond fluctuation model. We calculate segment density
profiles as well as orientational properties of segments, of A and B blocks,
and of the whole chain. Our data support the picture of oriented ``dumbbells'',
which consist of mildly perturbed A and B Gaussian coils. The results are
compared to a self consistent field theory (SCFT) for single copolymer chains
at a homopolymer interface. We also discuss the number of interaction contacts
between monomers, which provide a measure for the ``active surface'' of
copolymers or homopolymers close to the interface
- …