23,245 research outputs found
Two-photon excitation of nitric oxide fluorescence as a temperature indicator in unsteady gas-dynamic processes
A laser induced fluorescence technique, suitable for measuring fluctuating temperatures in cold turbulent flows containing very low concentrations of nitric oxide is described. Temperatures below 300 K may be resolved with signal to noise ratios greater than 50 to 1 using high peak power, tunable dye lasers. The method relies on the two photon excitation of selected ro-vibronic transitions. The analysis includes the effects of fluorescence quenching and shows the technique to be effective at all densities below ambient. Signal to noise ratio estimates are based on a preliminary measurement of the two photon absorptivity for a selected rotational transition in the NO gamma (0,0) band
The two-photon absorptivity of rotational transitions in the A2 Sigma hyperon + (v prime = O) - X-2 pion (v prime prime = O) gamma band of nitric oxide
A predominantly single-mode pulsed dye laser system giving a well characterized spatial and temporal output suitable for absolute two-photon absorptivity measurements was used to study the NO gamma(0,0) S11 + R21 (J double prime = 7-1/2) transition. Using a calibrated induced-fluorescence technique, an absorptivity parameter of 2.8 + or - 1.4 x 10 to the minus 51st power cm to the 6th power was obtained. Relative strengths of other rotational transitions in the gamma(0,0) band were also measured and shown to compare well with predicted values in all cases except the O12 (J double prime = 10-1/2) transition
Optical measurements of fluctuating temperatures in a supersonic turbulent flow using one- and two-photon, laser-induced fluorescence
A laser-induced fluorescence technique was developed that provides a practical means of nonintrusively measuring the instantaneous temperatures in low-temperature turbulent flows. The capabilities of the method are reviewed, and its application to a simple, two-dimensional, turbulent boundary-layer flow at Mach 2 is reported. Measurements of the average temperature distribution through the boundary layer and the magnitudes of temperature fluctuations about their average values are presented
Some exact results on the matter star-product in the half-string formalism
We show that the D25 sliver wavefunction, just as the D-instanton sliver,
factorizes when expressed in terms of half-string coordinates. We also
calculate analytically the star-product of two zero-momentum eigenstates of
using the vertex in the oscillator basis, thereby showing that the
star-product in the matter sector can indeed be seen as multiplication of
matrices acting on the space of functionals of half strings. We then use the
above results to establish that the matrices , conjectured by
Rastelli, Sen and Zwiebach to be left and right projectors on the sliver, are
indeed so.Comment: 27 pages; footnote adde
The Spectrum of the Neumann Matrix with Zero Modes
We calculate the spectrum of the matrix M' of Neumann coefficients of the
Witten vertex, expressed in the oscillator basis including the zero-mode a_0.
We find that in addition to the known continuous spectrum inside [-1/3,0) of
the matrix M without the zero-modes, there is also an additional eigenvalue
inside (0,1). For every eigenvalue, there is a pair of eigenvectors, a
twist-even and a twist-odd. We give analytically these eigenvectors as well as
the generating function for their components. Also, we have found an
interesting critical parameter b_0 = 8 ln 2 on which the forms of the
eigenvectors depend.Comment: 25+1 pages, 3 Figures; typos corrected and some comments adde
Siegel Gauge in Vacuum String Field Theory
We study the star algebra of ghost sector in vacuum string field theory
(VSFT). We show that the star product of two states in the Siegel gauge is BRST
exact if we take the BRST charge to be the one found in hep-th/0108150, and the
BRST exact states are nil factors in the star algebra. By introducing a new
star product defined on the states in the Siegel gauge, the equation of motion
of VSFT is characterized as the projection condition with respect to this new
product. We also comment on the comma form of string vertex in the ghost
sector.Comment: 13 pages, lanlmac; v3: comment adde
Star Algebra Spectroscopy
The spectrum of the infinite dimensional Neumann matrices M^{11}, M^{12} and
M^{21} in the oscillator construction of the three-string vertex determines key
properties of the star product and of wedge and sliver states. We study the
spectrum of eigenvalues and eigenvectors of these matrices using the derivation
K_1 = L_1 + L_{-1} of the star algebra, which defines a simple infinite matrix
commuting with the Neumann matrices. By an exact calculation of the spectrum of
K_1, and by consideration of an operator generating wedge states, we are able
to find analytic expressions for the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of the
Neumann matrices and for the spectral density. The spectrum of M^{11} is
continuous in the range [-1/3, 0) with degenerate twist even and twist odd
eigenvectors for every eigenvalue except for -1/3.Comment: LaTeX, 30 pages, 2 figure
Ratio of Tensions from Vacuum String Field Theory
We show analytically that the ratio of the norm of sliver states agrees with
the ratio of D-brane tensions. We find that the correct ratio appears as a
twist anomaly.Comment: 13 pages, lanlmac; version to appear in JHE
An Exact Prediction of N=4 SUSYM Theory for String Theory
We propose that the expectation value of a circular BPS-Wilson loop in N=4
SUSYM can be calculated exactly, to all orders in a 1/N expansion and to all
orders in g^2 N. Using the AdS/CFT duality, this result yields a prediction of
the value of the string amplitude with a circular boundary to all orders in
alpha' and to all orders in g_s. We then compare this result with string
theory. We find that the gauge theory calculation, for large g^2 N and to all
orders in the 1/N^2 expansion does agree with the leading string theory
calculation, to all orders in g_s and to lowest order in alpha'. We also find a
relation between the expectation value of any closed smooth Wilson loop and the
loop related to it by an inversion that takes a point along the loop to
infinity, and compare this result, again successfully, with string theory.Comment: LaTeX, 22 pages, 3 figures. Argument corrected and two new sections
adde
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