24,652 research outputs found

    Resonance bifurcations from robust homoclinic cycles

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    We present two calculations for a class of robust homoclinic cycles with symmetry Z_n x Z_2^n, for which the sufficient conditions for asymptotic stability given by Krupa and Melbourne are not optimal. Firstly, we compute optimal conditions for asymptotic stability using transition matrix techniques which make explicit use of the geometry of the group action. Secondly, through an explicit computation of the global parts of the Poincare map near the cycle we show that, generically, the resonance bifurcations from the cycles are supercritical: a unique branch of asymptotically stable period orbits emerges from the resonance bifurcation and exists for coefficient values where the cycle has lost stability. This calculation is the first to explicitly compute the criticality of a resonance bifurcation, and answers a conjecture of Field and Swift in a particular limiting case. Moreover, we are able to obtain an asymptotically-correct analytic expression for the period of the bifurcating orbit, with no adjustable parameters, which has not proved possible previously. We show that the asymptotic analysis compares very favourably with numerical results.Comment: 24 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Nonlinearit

    Derivation of the Lorentz Force Law, the Magnetic Field Concept and the Faraday-Lenz Law using an Invariant Formulation of the Lorentz Transformation

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    It is demonstrated how the right hand sides of the Lorentz Transformation equations may be written, in a Lorentz invariant manner, as 4--vector scalar products. This implies the existence of invariant length intervals analogous to invariant proper time intervals. This formalism, making essential use of the 4-vector electromagnetic potential concept, provides a short derivation of the Lorentz force law of classical electrodynamics, the conventional definition of the magnetic field, in terms of spatial derivatives of the 4--vector potential and the Faraday-Lenz Law. An important distinction between the physical meanings of the space-time and energy-momentum 4--vectors is pointed out.Comment: 15 pages, no tables 1 figure. Revised and extended version of physics/0307133 Some typos removed and minor text improvements in this versio

    Observations of spatial and velocity structure in the Orion Molecular Cloud

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    Observations are reported of H2 IR emission in the S(1) v=1-0 line at 2.121 microns in the Orion Molecular Cloud, OMC1, using the GriF instrument on the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope. GriF is a combination of adaptive optics and Fabry-Perot interferometry, yielding a spatial resolution of 0.15" to 0.18" and a velocity discrimination as high as 1 km/s. Thanks to the high spatial and velocity resolution of the GriF data, 193 bright H2 emission regions can be identified in OMC1. The general characteristics of these features are described in terms of radial velocities, brightness and spatial displacement of maxima of velocity and brightness, the latter to yield the orientation of flows in the plane of the sky. Strong spatial correlation between velocity and bright H2 emission is found and serves to identify many features as shocks. Important results are: (i) velocities of the excited gas illustrate the presence of a zone to the south of BN-IRc2 and Peak 1, and the west of Peak 2, where there is a powerful blue-shifted outflow with an average velocity of -18 km/s. This is shown to be the NIR counterpart of an outflow identified in the radio from source I, a very young O-star. (ii) There is a band of weak velocity features (<5 km/s) in Peak 1 which may share a common origin through an explosive event, in the BN-IRc2 region, with the fast-moving fingers (or bullets) to the NW of OMC1. (iii) A proportion of the flows are likely to represent sites of low mass star formation and several regions show multiple outflows, probably indicative of multiple star formation within OMC1. The high spatial and velocity resolution of the GriF data show these and other features in more detail than has previously been possible.Comment: 27 pages, 19 figures, submitted to A&A Version 2: Several additions, including a section on protostellar candidates in OMC1, have been made based on the referee's suggestions v3: corrected typograph

    Microscopic imaging of muons and 120 GeV/c pion interactions in a single, low-noise 256x256 Si pixel detector

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    With a 256x256 pixel matrix on a 300\mum thick silicon sensor, placed parallel to the particles in the CERN H6 beam, it proves possible to record electronically in real time the microscopic details of particle trajectories and interactions. The Medipix2 readout chip, matched to this matrix of 55\mum square pixels, contains a tuneable discriminator and a pulse counter in each pixel. The noise of the signal processing chain in each pixel is on average 135e^- (equivalent electrons) r.m.s. A threshold not much higher than 800e^- allows discrimination of full signals ~3800e^- as well as partial signals from a minimum ionizing particle in adjacent 55\mum thick pixels. With binary pixel information, exploiting charge diffusion and redundancy in the large matrix, the vectors of trajectories can be reconstructed with angular accuracy <1mradian and positions with respect to the detector coordinates often with sub-\mum precison. Close tracks can be resolved down to 100\mum distance. The width of the trail in the matrix sometimes can provide information on the energy deposition as well. A variety of applications can be imagined, the more so if several such detectors could be stacked to create a true 3-dimensional position-sensitive volume

    The Indirect Limit on the Standard Model Higgs Boson Mass from the Precision FERMILAB, LEP and SLD Data

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    Standard Model fits are performed on the most recent leptonic and b quark Z decay data from LEP and SLD, and FERMILAB data on top quark production, to obtain mtm_t and mHm_H. Poor fits are obtained, with confidence levels \simeq 2%. Removing the b quark data improves markedly the quality of the fits and reduces the 95% CL upper limit on mHm_H by \simeq 50 GeV.Comment: 6 pages 3 tables i figur

    Shadowing Effects on the Nuclear Suppression Factor, R_dAu, in d+Au Interactions

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    We explore how nuclear modifications to the nucleon parton distributions affect production of high transverse momentum hadrons in deuteron-nucleus collisions. We calculate the charged hadron spectra to leading order using standard fragmentation functions and shadowing parameterizations. We obtain the d+Au to pp ratio both in minimum bias collisions and as a function of centrality. The minimum bias results agree reasonably well with the BRAHMS data while the calculated centrality dependence underestimates the data and is a stronger function of p_T than the data indicate.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, final version, Phys. Rev. C in pres

    Convergence and Gauge Dependence Properties of the Resummed One-loop Quark-Quark Scattering Amplitude in Perturbative QCD

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    The one-loop QCD effective charge αseff\alpha_s^{eff} for quark-quark scattering is derived by diagrammatic resummation of the one-loop amplitude using an arbitary covariant gauge. Except for the particular choice of gauge parameter ξ=3\xi = -3, αseff\alpha_s^{eff} is found to {\it increase} with increasing physical scale, QQ, as lnQ\ln Q or ln2Q\ln^2 Q. For ξ=3\xi = -3, αseff\alpha_s^{eff} decreases with increasing QQ and satisfies a renormalisation group equation. Also, except for the case ξ=19/9\xi = 19/9, convergence radii of geometric series are found to impose upper limits on QQ.Comment: 28 pages, 5 tables, 5 figures. v3 The one-loop amplitudes in Section 2 are recalculated using dimensional regularisation, and several errors in the on-shell calculation of Reference[1] are pointed out. v4 one figure removed one added. Three tables and new text in Section 5 added. Published versio

    Unrelated Helpers in a Primitively Eusocial Wasp: Is Helping Tailored Towards Direct Fitness?

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    The paper wasp Polistes dominulus is unique among the social insects in that nearly one-third of co-foundresses are completely unrelated to the dominant individual whose offspring they help to rear and yet reproductive skew is high. These unrelated subordinates stand to gain direct fitness through nest inheritance, raising the question of whether their behaviour is adaptively tailored towards maximizing inheritance prospects. Unusually, in this species, a wealth of theory and empirical data allows us to predict how unrelated subordinates should behave. Based on these predictions, here we compare helping in subordinates that are unrelated or related to the dominant wasp across an extensive range of field-based behavioural contexts. We find no differences in foraging effort, defense behaviour, aggression or inheritance rank between unrelated helpers and their related counterparts. Our study provides no evidence, across a number of behavioural scenarios, that the behaviour of unrelated subordinates is adaptively modified to promote direct fitness interests
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