26,556 research outputs found
Reversibility Checking for Markov Chains
In this paper, we present reversibility preserving operations on Markov chain
transition matrices. Simple row and column operations allow us to create new
reversible transition matrices and yield an easy method for checking a Markov
chain for reversibility
Spectrum of single-photon emission and scattering in cavity optomechanics
We present an analytic solution describing the quantum state of a single
photon after interacting with a moving mirror in a cavity. This includes
situations when the photon is initially stored in a cavity mode as well as when
the photon is injected into the cavity. In addition, we obtain the spectrum of
the output photon in the resolved-sideband limit, which reveals spectral
features of the single-photon strong-coupling regime in this system. We also
clarify the conditions under which the phonon sidebands are visible and the
photon-state frequency shift can be resolved.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Low cost silicon solar array project silicon materials task: Establishment of the feasibility of a process capable of low-cost, high volume production of silane (step 1) and the pyrolysis of silane to semiconductor-grade silicon (step 2)
A quartz fluid bed reactor capable of operating at temperatures of up to 1000 C was designed, constructed, and successfully operated. During a 30 minute experiment, silane was decomposed within the reactor with no pyrolysis occurring on the reactor wall or on the gas injection system. A hammer mill/roller-crusher system appeared to be the most practical method for producing seed material from bulk silicon. No measurable impurities were detected in the silicon powder produced by the free space reactor, using the cathode layer emission spectroscopic technique. Impurity concentration followed by emission spectroscopic examination of the residue indicated a total impurity level of 2 micrograms/gram. A pellet cast from this powder had an electrical resistivity of 35 to 45 ohm-cm and P-type conductivity
A model for the formation of the active region corona driven by magnetic flux emergence
We present the first model that couples the formation of the corona of a
solar active region to a model of the emergence of a sunspot pair. This allows
us to study when, where, and why active region loops form, and how they evolve.
We use a 3D radiation MHD simulation of the emergence of an active region
through the upper convection zone and the photosphere as a lower boundary for a
3D MHD coronal model. The latter accounts for the braiding of the magnetic
fieldlines, which induces currents in the corona heating up the plasma. We
synthesize the coronal emission for a direct comparison to observations.
Starting with a basically field-free atmosphere we follow the filling of the
corona with magnetic field and plasma. Numerous individually identifiable hot
coronal loops form, and reach temperatures well above 1 MK with densities
comparable to observations. The footpoints of these loops are found where small
patches of magnetic flux concentrations move into the sunspots. The loop
formation is triggered by an increase of upwards-directed Poynting flux at
their footpoints in the photosphere. In the synthesized EUV emission these
loops develop within a few minutes. The first EUV loop appears as a thin tube,
then rises and expands significantly in the horizontal direction. Later, the
spatially inhomogeneous heat input leads to a fragmented system of multiple
loops or strands in a growing envelope.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, accepted to publication in A&
Magnetic Jam in the Corona of the Sun
The outer solar atmosphere, the corona, contains plasma at temperatures of
more than a million K, more than 100 times hotter that solar surface. How this
gas is heated is a fundamental question tightly interwoven with the structure
of the magnetic field in the upper atmosphere. Conducting numerical experiments
based on magnetohydrodynamics we account for both the evolving
three-dimensional structure of the atmosphere and the complex interaction of
magnetic field and plasma. Together this defines the formation and evolution of
coronal loops, the basic building block prominently seen in X-rays and extreme
ultraviolet (EUV) images. The structures seen as coronal loops in the EUV can
evolve quite differently from the magnetic field. While the magnetic field
continuously expands as new magnetic flux emerges through the solar surface,
the plasma gets heated on successively emerging fieldlines creating an EUV loop
that remains roughly at the same place. For each snapshot the EUV images
outline the magnetic field, but in contrast to the traditional view, the
temporal evolution of the magnetic field and the EUV loops can be different.
Through this we show that the thermal and the magnetic evolution in the outer
atmosphere of a cool star has to be treated together, and cannot be simply
separated as done mostly so far.Comment: Final version published online on 27 April 2015, Nature Physics 12
pages and 8 figure
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