41,252 research outputs found
Coronal and chromospheric physics
The Solar Maximum Mission support program is mentioned along with investigations of the solar corona, prominences, and chromosphere. The solar limb was studied using far infrared and submillimeter photometry. Stokes profiles obtained from sunspot observations were examined with a polarimetric technique
The Space Telescope Observatory. Special session of Commission 44, IAU 18th General Assembly
An overview of the scientific capabilities and potential of the Space Telescope is presented
Chiral extrapolation beyond the power-counting regime
Chiral effective field theory can provide valuable insight into the chiral
physics of hadrons when used in conjunction with non-perturbative schemes such
as lattice QCD. In this discourse, the attention is focused on extrapolating
the mass of the rho meson to the physical pion mass in quenched QCD (QQCD).
With the absence of a known experimental value, this serves to demonstrate the
ability of the extrapolation scheme to make predictions without prior bias. By
using extended effective field theory developed previously, an extrapolation is
performed using quenched lattice QCD data that extends outside the chiral
power-counting regime (PCR). The method involves an analysis of the
renormalization flow curves of the low energy coefficients in a finite-range
regularized effective field theory. The analysis identifies an optimal
regulator, which is embedded in the lattice QCD data themselves. This optimal
regulator is the regulator value at which the renormalization of the low energy
coefficients is approximately independent of the range of quark masses
considered. By using recent precision, quenched lattice results, the
extrapolation is tested directly by truncating the analysis to a set of points
above 380 MeV, while being blinded of the results probing deeply into the
chiral regime. The result is a successful extrapolation to the chiral regime.Comment: 8 pages, 18 figure
Conservation of long-range synteny and microsynteny between the genomes of two distantly related nematodes
BACKGROUND: Comparisons between the genomes of the closely related nematodes Caenorhabditis elegans and Caenorhabditis briggsae reveal high rates of rearrangement, with a bias towards within-chromosome events. To assess whether this pattern is true of nematodes in general, we have used genome sequence to compare two nematode species that last shared a common ancestor approximately 300 million years ago: the model C. elegans and the filarial parasite Brugia malayi. RESULTS: An 83 kb region flanking the gene for Bm-mif-1 (macrophage migration inhibitory factor, a B. malayi homolog of a human cytokine) was sequenced. When compared to the complete genome of C. elegans, evidence for conservation of long-range synteny and microsynteny was found. Potential C. elegans orthologs for II of the 12 protein-coding genes predicted in the B. malayi sequence were identified. Ten of these orthologs were located on chromosome I, with eight clustered in a 2.3 Mb region. While several, relatively local, intrachromosomal rearrangements have occurred, the order, composition, and configuration of two gene clusters, each containing three genes, was conserved. Comparison of B. malayi BAC-end genome survey sequence to C. elegans also revealed a bias towards intrachromosome rearrangements. CONCLUSIONS: We suggest that intrachromosomal rearrangement is a major force driving chromosomal organization in nematodes, but is constrained by the interdigitation of functional elements of neighboring genes
Coulomb plus power-law potentials in quantum mechanics
We study the discrete spectrum of the Hamiltonian H = -Delta + V(r) for the
Coulomb plus power-law potential V(r)=-1/r+ beta sgn(q)r^q, where beta > 0, q >
-2 and q \ne 0. We show by envelope theory that the discrete eigenvalues
E_{n\ell} of H may be approximated by the semiclassical expression
E_{n\ell}(q) \approx min_{r>0}\{1/r^2-1/(mu r)+ sgn(q) beta(nu r)^q}.
Values of mu and nu are prescribed which yield upper and lower bounds.
Accurate upper bounds are also obtained by use of a trial function of the form,
psi(r)= r^{\ell+1}e^{-(xr)^{q}}. We give detailed results for
V(r) = -1/r + beta r^q, q = 0.5, 1, 2 for n=1, \ell=0,1,2, along with
comparison eigenvalues found by direct numerical methods.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
X-ray and multi-epoch optical/UV investigations of BAL to non-BAL quasar transformations
We report on an X-ray and optical/UV study of eight Broad Absorption Line
(BAL) to non-BAL transforming quasars at 1.7-2.2 over 0.29-4.95
rest-frame years with at least three spectroscopic epochs for each quasar from
the SDSS, BOSS, , and ARC 3.5-m telescopes. New observations
obtained for these objects show their values of and
, as well as their spectral energy distributions, are
consistent with those of non-BAL quasars. Moreover, our targets have X-ray
spectral shapes that are, on average, consistent with weakened absorption with
an effective power-law photon index of . The newer and ARC 3.5-m spectra reveal
that the BAL troughs have remained absent since the BOSS observations where the
BAL disappearance was discovered. The X-ray and optical/UV results in tandem
are consistent with at least the X-ray absorbing material moving out of the
line-of-sight, leaving an X-ray unabsorbed non-BAL quasar. The UV absorber
might have become more highly ionized (in a shielding-gas scenario) or also
moved out of the line-of-sight (in a wind-clumping scenario).Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA
X-ray Insights into the Nature of Quasars with Redshifted Broad Absorption Lines
We present observations of seven broad absorption line (BAL)
quasars at -2.516 with redshifted BAL troughs (RSBALs). Five of our
seven targets were detected by in 4-13 ks exposures with ACIS-S. The
values, values, and spectral energy
distributions of our targets demonstrate they are all X-ray weak relative to
expectations for non-BAL quasars, and the degree of X-ray weakness is
consistent with that of appropriately-matched BAL quasars generally.
Furthermore, our five detected targets show evidence for hard X-ray spectral
shapes with a stacked effective power-law photon index of . These findings support the presence of heavy X-ray
absorption ( cm) in RSBAL quasars,
likely by the shielding gas found to be common in BAL quasars more generally.
We use these X-ray measurements to assess models for the nature of RSBAL
quasars, finding that a rotationally-dominated outflow model is favored while
an infall model also remains plausible with some stipulations. The X-ray data
disfavor a binary quasar model for RSBAL quasars in general.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, and 3 table
Transverse laser cooling of a thermal atomic beam of dysprosium
A thermal atomic beam of dysprosium (Dy) atoms is cooled using the
transition at 421 nm. The cooling is
done via a standing light wave orthogonal to the atomic beam. Efficient
transverse cooling to the Doppler limit is demonstrated for all observable
isotopes of dysprosium. Branching ratios to metastable states are demonstrated
to be . A scheme for enhancement of the
nonzero-nuclear-spin-isotope cooling, as well as a method for direct
identification of possible trap states, is proposed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures v2: 7 pages, 7 figure
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