37,114 research outputs found
Higher harmonics of the magnetoplasmon in strongly coupled Coulomb and Yukawa systems
The generation of higher harmonics of the magnetoplasmon frequency which has
recently been reported in strongly coupled two-dimensional Yukawa systems is
investigated in detail and, in addition, extended to two-dimensional Coulomb
systems. We observe higher harmonics over a much larger frequency range than
before and compare the theoretical prediction with the simulations. The
influence of the coupling, structure, and thermal energy on the excitation of
these modes is examined in detail. We also report on the effect of friction on
the mode spectra to make predictions about the experimental observability of
this new effect
Non-resonant kaon pair production and medium effects in proton-nucleus collisions
We study the non-resonant (non-) production of pairs by
protons of 2.83 GeV kinetic energy on C, Cu, Ag, and Au targets within the
collision model, based on the nuclear spectral function, for incoherent primary
proton--nucleon and secondary pion--nucleon creation processes. The model takes
into account the initial proton and final kaon absorption, target nucleon
binding and Fermi motion as well as nuclear mean-field potential effects on
these processes. We calculate the antikaon momentum dependences of the
exclusive absolute and relative pair yields in the acceptance window
of the ANKE magnetic spectrometer, used in a recent experiment performed at
COSY, within the different scenarios for the antikaon-nucleus optical
potential. We demonstrate that the above observables are strongly sensitive to
this potential. Therefore, they can be useful to help determine the
optical potential from the direct comparison of the results of our calculations
with the data from the respective ANKE-at-COSY experiment. We also show that
the pion--nucleon production channels dominate in the low-momentum ,
production in the considered kinematics and, hence, they have to be accounted
for in the analysis of these data.Comment: 19 page
Medium effects in pair production by 2.83 GeV protons on nuclei
We study pair production in the interaction of protons of 2.83
GeV kinetic energy with C, Cu, Ag, and Au target nuclei in the framework of the
nuclear spectral function approach for incoherent primary proton--nucleon and
secondary pion--nucleon production processes, and processes associated with the
creation of intermediate pairs. The approach accounts for the
initial proton and final hyperon absorption, final meson
distortion in nuclei, target nucleon binding, and Fermi motion, as well as
nuclear mean-field potential effects on these processes. We calculate the
momentum dependence of the absolute yield from the
target nuclei considered, in the kinematical conditions of the ANKE experiment,
performed at COSY, within the different scenarios for the -nucleus
effective scalar potential. We show that the above observable is appreciably
sensitive to this potential in the low-momentum region. Therefore, direct
comparison of the results of our calculations with the data from the
ANKE-at-COSY experiment can help to determine the above potential at finite
momenta. We also demonstrate that the two-step pion--nucleon production
channels dominate in the low-momentum production in the chosen
kinematics and, therefore, they have to be taken into account in the analysis
of these data.Comment: 29 page
PID and PID-like controller design by pole assignment within D-stable regions
This paper presents a new PID and PID-like controller design method that permits the designer to control the desired dynamic performance of a closed-loop system by first specifying a set of desired D-stable regions in the complex plane and then running a numerical optimisation algorithm to find the controller parameters such that all the roots of the closed-loop system are within the specified regions. This method can be used for stable and unstable plants with high order degree, for plants with time delay, for controller with more than three design parameters, and for various controller configurations. It also allows a unified treatment of the controller design for both continuous and discrete systems. Examples and comparative simulation results are pro-vided to illustrate its merit
Non-LTE spectral models for the gaseous debris-disk component of Ton 345
For a fraction of single white dwarfs with debris disks, an additional
gaseous disk was discovered. Both dust and gas are thought to be created by the
disruption of planetary bodies. The composition of the extrasolar planetary
material can directly be analyzed in the gaseous disk component, and the disk
dynamics might be accessible by investigating the temporal behavior of the Ca
II infrared emission triplet, hallmark of the gas disk.
We obtained new optical spectra for the first helium-dominated white dwarf
for which a gas disk was discovered (Ton 345) and modeled the non-LTE spectra
of viscous gas disks composed of carbon, oxygen, magnesium, silicon, sulfur,
and calcium with chemical abundances typical for solar system asteroids. Iron
and its possible line-blanketing effects on the model structure and spectral
energy distribution was still neglected. A set of models with different radii,
effective temperatures, and surface densities as well as chondritic and
bulk-Earth abundances was computed and compared with the observed line profiles
of the Ca II infrared triplet.
Our models suggest that the Ca II emission stems from a rather narrow gas
ring with a radial extent of R=0.44-0.94 Rsol, a uniform surface density
Sigma=0.3 g/cm2, and an effective temperature of Teff=6000 K. The often assumed
chemical mixtures derived from photospheric abundances in polluted white dwarfs
- similar to a chondritic or bulk-Earth composition - produce unobserved
emission lines in the model and therefore have to be altered. We do not detect
any line-profile variability on timescales of hours, but we confirm the
long-term trend over the past decade for the red-blue asymmetry of the
double-peaked lines.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, 2 table
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