48,389 research outputs found
A Model of Low-lying States in Strongly Interacting Electroweak Symmetry-Breaking Sector
It is proposed that, in a strongly-interacting electroweak sector, besides
the Goldstone bosons, the coexistence of a scalar state () and vector
resonances such as [)], [] and
[] is required by the proper Regge behavior of the
forward scattering amplitudes. This is a consequence of the following
well-motivated assumptions: (a). Adler-Weisberger-type sum rules and the
superconvergence relations for scattering amplitudes hold in this strongly
interacting sector; (b). the sum rules at are saturated by a minimal set
of low-lying states with appropriate quantum numbers. It therefore suggests
that a complete description should include all these resonances. These states
may lead to distinctive experimental signatures at future colliders.Comment: revised version, to appear in Modern Physics Letters A; file also
available via anonymous ftp at ftp://ucdhep.ucdavis.edu/han/sews/lowlying.p
Parallel processing architecture for computing inverse differential kinematic equations of the PUMA arm
In advanced robot control problems, on-line computation of inverse Jacobian solution is frequently required. Parallel processing architecture is an effective way to reduce computation time. A parallel processing architecture is developed for the inverse Jacobian (inverse differential kinematic equation) of the PUMA arm. The proposed pipeline/parallel algorithm can be inplemented on an IC chip using systolic linear arrays. This implementation requires 27 processing cells and 25 time units. Computation time is thus significantly reduced
Magnetoresistance in the superconducting state at the (111) LaAlO/SrTiO interface
Condensed matter systems that simultaneously exhibit superconductivity and
ferromagnetism are rare due the antagonistic relationship between conventional
spin-singlet superconductivity and ferromagnetic order. In materials in which
superconductivity and magnetic order is known to coexist (such as some
heavy-fermion materials), the superconductivity is thought to be of an
unconventional nature. Recently, the conducting gas that lives at the interface
between the perovskite band insulators LaAlO (LAO) and SrTiO (STO) has
also been shown to host both superconductivity and magnetism. Most previous
research has focused on LAO/STO samples in which the interface is in the (001)
crystal plane. Relatively little work has focused on the (111) crystal
orientation, which has hexagonal symmetry at the interface, and has been
predicted to have potentially interesting topological properties, including
unconventional superconducting pairing states. Here we report measurements of
the magnetoresistance of (111) LAO/STO heterostructures at temperatures at
which they are also superconducting. As with the (001) structures, the
magnetoresistance is hysteretic, indicating the coexistence of magnetism and
superconductivity, but in addition, we find that this magnetoresistance is
anisotropic. Such an anisotropic response is completely unexpected in the
superconducting state, and suggests that (111) LAO/STO heterostructures may
support unconventional superconductivity.Comment: 6 Pages 4 figure
Anisotropic, multi-carrier transport at the (111) LaAlO/SrTiO interface
The conducting gas that forms at the interface between LaAlO and
SrTiO has proven to be a fertile playground for a wide variety of physical
phenomena. The bulk of previous research has focused on the (001) and (110)
crystal orientations. Here we report detailed measurements of the
low-temperature electrical properties of (111) LAO/STO interface samples. We
find that the low-temperature electrical transport properties are highly
anisotropic, in that they differ significantly along two mutually orthogonal
crystal orientations at the interface. While anisotropy in the resistivity has
been reported in some (001) samples and in (110) samples, the anisotropy in the
(111) samples reported here is much stronger, and also manifests itself in the
Hall coefficient as well as the capacitance. In addition, the anisotropy is not
present at room temperature and at liquid nitrogen temperatures, but only at
liquid helium temperatures and below. The anisotropy is accentuated by exposure
to ultraviolet light, which disproportionately affects transport along one
surface crystal direction. Furthermore, analysis of the low-temperature Hall
coefficient and the capacitance as a function of back gate voltage indicates
that in addition to electrons, holes contribute to the electrical transport.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
The correlation function of galaxy clusters and detection of baryon acoustic oscillations
We calculate the correlation function of 13,904 galaxy clusters of z \leq 0.4
selected from the cluster catalog of Wen, Han & Liu. The correlation function
can be fitted with a power-law model \xi(r)=(r/R_0)^{\gamma} on the scales of
10h^(-1)Mpc \leq r \leq 50h^(-1)Mpc, with a larger correlation length of
R_0=18.84\pm0.27 h^(-1)Mpc for clusters with a richness of R \geq 15 and a
smaller length of R_0=16.15 \pm 0.13 h^(-1)Mpc for clusters with a richness of
R \geq 5. The power law index of \gamma=2.1 is found to be almost the same for
all cluster subsamples. A pronounced baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) peak is
detected at r ~ 110 h^(-1)Mpc with a significance of ~ 1.9\sigma. By analyzing
the correlation function in the range of 20 h^(-1)Mpc \leq r \leq 200
h^(-1)Mpc, we find the constraints on distance parameters are
D_v(0.276)=1077\pm55(1\sigma) Mpc and h=0.73 \pm 0.039 (1\sigma), which are
consistent with the WMAP 7-year cosmology. However, the BAO signal from the
cluster sample is stronger than expected and leads to a rather low matter
density \Omega_m h^2=0.093\pm0.0077 (1\sigma), which deviates from the WMAP
7-year result by more than 3 \sigma. The correlation function of the GMBCG
cluster sample is also calculated and our detection of the BAO feature is
confirmed.Comment: 7 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
The triple degenerate star WD1704+481
WD1704+481 is a visual binary in which both components are white dwarfs. We
present spectra of the H-alpha line of both stars which show that one component
(WD1704+481.2 = Sanduleak B = GR 577) is a close binary with two white dwarf
components. Thus, WD1704+481 is the first known triple degenerate star. From
radial velocity measurements of the close binary we find an orbital period of
0.1448d, a mass ratio, q=Mbright/Mfaint of q=0.70+-0.03 and a difference in the
gravitational redshifts of 11.5+-2.3km/s. The masses of the close pair of white
dwarfs predicted by the mass ratio and gravitational redshift difference
combined with theoretical cooling curves are 0.39+-0.05 solar mass and
0.56+-0.07 solar masses. WD1704+481 is therefore also likely to be the first
example of a double degenerate in which the less massive white dwarf is
composed of helium and the other white dwarf is composed of carbon and oxygen.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Birthrates and delay times of Type Ia supernovae
Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) play an important role in diverse areas of
astrophysics, from the chemical evolution of galaxies to observational
cosmology. However, the nature of the progenitors of SNe Ia is still unclear.
In this paper, according to a detailed binary population synthesis study, we
obtained SN Ia birthrates and delay times from different progenitor models, and
compared them with observations. We find that the Galactic SN Ia birthrate from
the double-degenerate (DD) model is close to those inferred from observations,
while the birthrate from the single-degenerate (SD) model accounts for only
about 1/2-2/3 of the observations. If a single starburst is assumed, the
distribution of the delay times of SNe Ia from the SD model is a weak
bimodality, where the WD + He channel contributes to the SNe Ia with delay
times shorter than 100Myr, and the WD + MS and WD + RG channels to those with
age longer than 1Gyr.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, accepted by Science in China Series G (Dec.30,
2009
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