5,180 research outputs found
The Outburst of the Blazar AO 0235+164 in 2006 December: Shock-in-Jet Interpretation
We present the results of polarimetric ( band) and multicolor photometric
() observations of the blazar AO 0235+16 during an outburst in 2006
December. The data reveal a short timescale of variability (several hours),
which increases from optical to near-IR wavelengths; even shorter variations
are detected in polarization. The flux density correlates with the degree of
polarization, and at maximum degree of polarization the electric vector tends
to align with the parsec-scale jet direction. We find that a variable component
with a steady power-law spectral energy distribution and very high optical
polarization (30-50%) is responsible for the variability. We interpret these
properties of the blazar withina model of a transverse shock propagating down
the jet. In this case a small change in the viewing angle of the jet, by
, and a decrease in the shocked plasma compression by a factor of
1.5 are sufficient to account for the variability.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figures, accepted for Ap
Transport in Graphene superimposed by a moving Electrical Superlattice Potential
We calculate dc-conductivities of ballistic graphene undulated by a overlying
moving unidirectional electrical superlattice (SL) potential whose SL-velocity
is smaller than the electron velocity. We obtain no dependence of the
conductivity on the velocity along the direction of the superlattice
wavevector. In the orthogonal direction however, the dependence is strong on
the velocity especially at voltages where a new Dirac point emerges for zero
velocity. It is shown that the infinite graphene system can serve as an ideal
motion detector at potentials where the first new Dirac point emerges. There
the conductivity is zero at vanishing SL velocities and jumps to infinity when
the SL starts moving. For finite systems at voltages where the number of new
Dirac points is of the order of the ratio of the electron velocity by the
SL-velocity, the modifications to the conductivity of a moving SL is at least
of similar magnitude as the conductivity of the stagnant SL.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, Appendix B added, version published in PR
Color Variability of the Blazar AO 0235+16
Multicolor (UBVRIJHK) observations of the blazar AO 0235+16 are analyzed. The
light curves were compiled at the Turin Observatory from literature data and
the results of observations obtained in the framework of the WEBT program
(http://www.to.astro/blazars/webt/). The color variability of the blazar was
studied in eight time intervals with a sufficient number of multicolor optical
observations; JHK data are available for only one of these. The spectral energy
distribution (SED) of the variable component remained constant within each
interval, but varied strongly from one interval to another. After correction
for dust absorption, the SED can be represented by a power law in all cases,
providing evidence for a synchrotron nature of the variable component. We show
that the variability at both optical and IR wavelengths is associated with the
same variable source.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in Astronomy
Report
Stochastic model of optical variability of BL Lacertae
We use optical photometric and polarimetric data of BL Lacertae that cover a
period of 22 years to study the variability of the source. The long-term
observations are employed for establishing parameters of a stochastic model
consisting of the radiation from a steady polarized source and a number of
variable components with different polarization parameters, proposed by
Hagen-Thorn et al. earlier. We infer parameters of the model from the
observations using numerical simulations based on a Monte Carlo method, with
values of each model parameter selected from a Gaussian distribution. We
determine the best set of model parameters by comparing model distributions to
the observational ones using the chi-square criterion. We show that the
observed photometric and polarimetric variability can be explained within a
model with a steady source of high polarization, ~40%, and with direction of
polarization parallel to the parsec scale jet, along with 10+-5 sources of
variable polarization.Comment: 4 pages, 10 figures, published by Astronomy and Astrophysics; v2:
typos correcte
Optical Phonon Lineshapes and Transport in Metallic Carbon Nanotubes under High Bias Voltage
We calculate the current-voltage characteristic of metallic nanotubes at high
bias voltage showing that a bottleneck exists for short nanotubes in contrast
to large ones. We attribute this to a redistribution of lower-lying acoustic
phonons caused by phonon-phonon scattering with hot optical phonons. The
current-voltage characteristic and the electron and phonon distribution
functions are derived analytically, and serve to obtain in a self-contained way
the frequency shift and line broadening of the zone center optical phonons due
to the electron-phonon coupling at high bias. We obtain a positive frequency
shift from the zero bias shift and no broadening of the optical phonon mode at
very high voltages, in agreement with recent experiments.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, minor changes, pusblished in PR
The Stellar Content of the Polar Rings in the Galaxies NGC 2685 and NGC 4650A
We present the results of stellar photometry of polar-ring galaxies NGC 2685
and NGC 4650A, using the archival data obtained with the Hubble Space
Telescope's Wide Field Planetary Camera 2. Polar rings of these galaxies were
resolved into ~800 and ~430 stellar objects in the B, V and Ic bands,
considerable part of which are blue supergiants located in the young stellar
complexes. The stellar features in the CM-diagrams are best represented by
isochrones with metallicity Z = 0.008. The process of star formation in the
polar rings of both galaxies was continuous and the age of the youngest
detected stars is about 9 Myr for NGC 2685 and 6.5 Myr for NGC 4650A.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, AJ 2004 February, accepte
Path integral and stochastic differential equations
The statistics of rare events, the so-called black-swan events, is governed by
non-Gaussian distributions with heavy power-like tails. We calculate the Green
functions of the associated Fokker-Planck equations and solve the related
stochastic differential equations. We also discuss the subject in the
framework of path integration
Gravitational waves in general relativity: XIV. Bondi expansions and the ``polyhomogeneity'' of \Scri
The structure of polyhomogeneous space-times (i.e., space-times with metrics
which admit an expansion in terms of ) constructed by a
Bondi--Sachs type method is analysed. The occurrence of some log terms in an
asymptotic expansion of the metric is related to the non--vanishing of the Weyl
tensor at Scri. Various quantities of interest, including the Bondi mass loss
formula, the peeling--off of the Riemann tensor and the Newman--Penrose
constants of motion are re-examined in this context.Comment: LaTeX, 28pp, CMA-MR14-9
Galilean Lee Model of the Delta Function Potential
The scattering cross section associated with a two dimensional delta function
has recently been the object of considerable study. It is shown here that this
problem can be put into a field theoretical framework by the construction of an
appropriate Galilean covariant theory. The Lee model with a standard Yukawa
interaction is shown to provide such a realization. The usual results for delta
function scattering are then obtained in the case that a stable particle exists
in the scattering channel provided that a certain limit is taken in the
relevant parameter space. In the more general case in which no such limit is
taken finite corrections to the cross section are obtained which (unlike the
pure delta function case) depend on the coupling constant of the model.Comment: 7 pages, latex, no figure
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