57,492 research outputs found
Ricci Solitons on Lorentzian Manifolds with Large Isometry Groups
We show that Lorentzian manifolds whose isometry group is of dimension at
least are expanding, steady and shrinking Ricci solitons
and steady gradient Ricci solitons. This provides examples of complete locally
conformally flat and symmetric Lorentzian Ricci solitons which are not rigid
The mass function of hydrogen-rich white dwarfs: robust observational evidence for a distinctive high-mass excess near 1Msun
The mass function of hydrogen-rich atmosphere white dwarfs has been
frequently found to reveal a distinctive high-mass excess near 1Msun. However,
a significant excess of massive white dwarfs has not been detected in the mass
function of the largest white dwarf catalogue to date from the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey. Hence, whether a high-mass excess exists or not has remained an
open question. In this work we build the mass function of the latest catalogue
of data release 10 SDSS hydrogen-rich white dwarfs, including the cool and
faint population (i.e. effective temperatures 6,000 <~ Teff <~ 12,000 K,
equivalent to 12 mag <~ Mbol <~ 13 mag). We show that the high-mass excess is
clearly present in our mass function, and that it disappears only if the
hottest (brightest) white dwarfs (those with Teff >~ 12,000 K, Mbol <~ 12 mag)
are considered. This naturally explains why previous SDSS mass functions failed
at detecting a significant excess of high-mass white dwarfs. Thus, our results
provide additional and robust observational evidence for the existence of a
distinctive high-mass excess near 1Msun. We investigate possible origins of
this feature and argue that the most plausible scenario that may lead to an
observed excess of massive white dwarfs is the merger of the degenerate core of
a giant star with a main sequence or a white dwarf companion during or shortly
after a common envelope event.Comment: Accepted for publication by MNRA
Algebraic and combinatorial aspects of sandpile monoids on directed graphs
The sandpile group of a graph is a well-studied object that combines ideas
from algebraic graph theory, group theory, dynamical systems, and statistical
physics. A graph's sandpile group is part of a larger algebraic structure on
the graph, known as its sandpile monoid. Most of the work on sandpiles so far
has focused on the sandpile group rather than the sandpile monoid of a graph,
and has also assumed the underlying graph to be undirected. A notable exception
is the recent work of Babai and Toumpakari, which builds up the theory of
sandpile monoids on directed graphs from scratch and provides many connections
between the combinatorics of a graph and the algebraic aspects of its sandpile
monoid.
In this paper we primarily consider sandpile monoids on directed graphs, and
we extend the existing theory in four main ways. First, we give a combinatorial
classification of the maximal subgroups of a sandpile monoid on a directed
graph in terms of the sandpile groups of certain easily-identifiable subgraphs.
Second, we point out certain sandpile results for undirected graphs that are
really results for sandpile monoids on directed graphs that contain exactly two
idempotents. Third, we give a new algebraic constraint that sandpile monoids
must satisfy and exhibit two infinite families of monoids that cannot be
realized as sandpile monoids on any graph. Finally, we give an explicit
combinatorial description of the sandpile group identity for every graph in a
family of directed graphs which generalizes the family of (undirected)
distance-regular graphs. This family includes many other graphs of interest,
including iterated wheels, regular trees, and regular tournaments.Comment: v2: Cleaner presentation, new results in final section. Accepted for
publication in J. Combin. Theory Ser. A. 21 pages, 5 figure
Critical Phenomena Inside Global Monopoles
The gravitational collapse of a triplet scalar field is examined assuming a
hedgehog ansatz for the scalar field. Whereas the seminal work by Choptuik with
a single, strictly spherically symmetric scalar field found a discretely
self-similar (DSS) solution at criticality with echoing period ,
here a new DSS solution is found with period . This new critical
solution is also observed in the presence of a symmetry breaking potential as
well as within a global monopole. The triplet scalar field model contains
Choptuik's original model in a certain region of parameter space, and hence his
original DSS solution is also a solution. However, the choice of a hedgehog
ansatz appears to exclude the original DSS.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Stable isotopic analysis of atmospheric methane by infrared spectroscopy by use of diode laser difference-frequency generation
An infrared absorption spectrometer has been constructed to measure the stable isotopic composition of atmospheric methane samples. The spectrometer employs periodically poled lithium niobate to generate 15 ΌW of tunable difference-frequency radiation from two near-infrared diode lasers that probe the Μ3 rotational-vibrational band of methane at 3.4 Όm. To enhance the signal, methane is extracted from 25 l of air by use of a cryogenic chromatographic column and is expanded into the multipass cell for analysis. A measurement precision of 12Ⱐis demonstrated for both Ύ13C and ΎD
Weak positive cloud-to-ground flashes in Northeastern Colorado
The frequency distributions of the peak magnetic field associated with the first detected return stroke of positive and negative cloud-to-ground (CG) flashes were studied using lightning data from northeastern Colorado. These data were obtained during 1985 with a medium-to-high gain network of three direction finders (DF's). The median signal strength of positive flashes was almost two times that of the negatives for flashes within 300 km of the DF's, which have an inherent detection-threshold bias that tends to discriminate against weak signals. This bias increases with range, and affects the detection of positive and negative flashes in different ways, because of the differing character of their distributions. Positive flashes appear to have a large percentage of signals clustered around very weak values that are lost to the medium-to-high gain Colorado Detection System very quickly with increasing range. The resulting median for positive signals could thus appear to be much larger than the median for negative signals, which are more clustered around intermediate values. When only flashes very close to the DF's are considered, however, the two distributions have almost identical medians. The large percentage of weak positive signals detected close to the DF's has not been explored previously. They have been suggested to come from intracloud discharges and thus are improperly classified as CG flashes. Evidence in hand, points to their being real positive, albeit weak CG flashes. Whether or not they are real positive ground flashes, it is important to be aware of their presence in data from magnetic DF networks
International Students in Their Own Country: Motivation of Vietnamese Graduate Students to Attend a Collaborative Transnational University
Higher education institutions in Vietnam have embraced opportunities to collaborate internationally to address specific educational needs that have emerged as a result of an accelerated economic and political society. The shift to a global market-driven economy has resulted in the need to produce better prepared graduates, advance in technology, and a shift in teaching and learning practices. In this study, we examine the motivations of 22 Vietnamese graduate students to attend Vietnamese-German University (VGU). The site is of particular importance because VGU is a true collaboration between two different governments, resulting in a collaborative transnational university. The findings from this study indicate three connected pull factors for graduate students: instruction conducted in English, benefits of a German degree, and the low cost for an international degree. Implications from findings illuminate why Vietnamese graduate students make educational choices and provide insights on their academic experiences as they relate to societal priorities
- âŠ