3,252 research outputs found
From kinetic theory to dissipative fluid dynamics
We present the results of deriving the Israel-Stewart equations of
relativistic dissipative fluid dynamics from kinetic theory via Grad's
14-moment expansion. Working consistently to second order in the Knudsen
number, these equations contain several new terms which are absent in previous
treatments.Comment: 7 pages, proceedings of the Erice School on Nuclear Physics "Heavy
Ion collisions from the Coulomb Barrier up to the Quark Gluon Plasma", Erice,
Sicily, Sep. 16 - 24, 200
A rotating helical filament in the L1251 dark cloud
(Abridged) Aims. We derive the physical properties of a filament discovered
in the dark cometary-shaped cloud L1251. Methods. Mapping observations in the
NH3(1,1) and (2,2) inversion lines, encompassing 300 positions toward L1251,
were performed with the Effelsberg 100-m telescope at a spatial resolution of
40 arcsec and a spectral resolution of 0.045 km/s. Results. The filament L1251A
consists of three condensations (alpha, beta, and gamma) of elongated
morphology, which are combined in a long and narrow structure covering a 38
arcmin by 3 arcmin angular range. The opposite chirality (dextral and
sinistral) of the alpha+beta and gamma condensations indicates magnetic field
helicities of two types, negative and positive, which were most probably caused
by dynamo mechanisms. We estimated the magnetic Reynolds number Rm > 600 and
the Rossby number R < 1, which means that dynamo action is important.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in A&
Star-forming regions of the Aquila rift cloud complex. II. Turbulence in molecular cores probed by NH3 emission
(Abridged) Aims. We intend to derive statistical properties of stochastic gas
motion inside the dense low mass star forming molecular cores traced by
NH3(1,1) and (2,2) emission lines. Methods. We use the spatial two-point
autocorrelation (ACF) and structure functions calculated from maps of the
radial velocity fields. Results. We find oscillating ACFs which eventually
decay to zero with increasing lags on scales of 0.04 <= l <= 0.5 pc. The
current paradigm supposes that the star formation process is controlled by the
interplay between gravitation and turbulence, the latter preventing molecular
cores from a rapid collapse due to their own gravity. Thus, oscillating ACFs
may indicate a damping of the developed turbulent flows surrounding the dense
but less turbulent core - a transition to dominating gravitational forces and,
hence, to gravitational collapse.Comment: 11 pages, 16 figures, 3 tables, to be published in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Lattice two-point functions and conformal invariance
A new realization of the conformal algebra is studied which mimics the
behaviour of a statistical system on a discrete albeit infinite lattice. The
two-point function is found from the requirement that it transforms covariantly
under this realization. The result is in agreement with explicit lattice
calculations of the Ising model and the dimensional spherical
model. A hard core is found which is not present in the continuum. For a
semi-infinite lattice, profiles are also obtained.Comment: 5 pages, plain Tex with IOP macros, no figure
DGSAT: Dwarf Galaxy Survey with Amateur Telescopes II. A catalogue of isolated nearby edge-on disk galaxies and the discovery of new low surface brightness systems
The connection between the bulge mass or bulge luminosity in disk galaxies
and the number, spatial and phase space distribution of associated dwarf
galaxies is a discriminator between cosmological simulations related to galaxy
formation in cold dark matter and generalized gravity models. Here, a nearby
sample of isolated Milky Way class edge-on galaxies is introduced, to
facilitate observational campaigns to detect the associated families of dwarf
galaxies at low surface brightness. Three galaxy pairs with at least one of the
targets being edge-on are also introduced. About 60% of the catalogued isolated
galaxies contain bulges of different size, while the remaining objects appear
to be bulge-less. Deep images of NGC 3669 (small bulge, with NGC 3625 at the
edge of the image) and NGC 7814 (prominent bulge), obtained with a 0.4-m
aperture, are also presented, resulting in the discovery of two new dwarf
galaxy candidates, NGC3669-DGSAT-3 and NGC7814-DGSAT-7. Eleven additional low
surface brightness galaxies are identified, previously notified with low
quality measurement flags in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). Integrated
magnitudes, surface brightnesses, effective radii, Sersic indices, axis ratios,
and projected distances to their putative major hosts are displayed. At least
one of the galaxies, NGC3625-DGSAT-4, belongs with a surface brightness of
approximately 26 mag per arcsec^2 and effective radius >1.5 kpc to the class of
ultra-diffuse galaxies (UDGs). NGC3669-DGSAT-3, the galaxy with lowest surface
brightness in our sample, may also be an UDG.Comment: 12 pages including 6 figures, 4 tables, a brief appendix, accepted
for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics (A&A). Paper slightly modified
after A&A language editing, updating very few references and correcting a
small typo at the start of the Appendi
Noise-induced dynamical transition in systems with symmetric absorbing states
We investigate the effect of noise strength on the macroscopic ordering
dynamics of systems with symmetric absorbing states. Using an explicit
stochastic microscopic model, we present evidence for a phase transition in the
coarsening dynamics, from an Ising-like to a voter-like behavior, as the noise
strength is increased past a nontrivial critical value. By mapping to a thermal
diffusion process, we argue that the transition arises due to locally-absorbing
states being entered more readily in the high-noise regime, which in turn
prevents surface tension from driving the ordering process.Comment: v2 with improved introduction and figures, to appear in PRL. 4 pages,
4 figure
Three-dimensional Roton-Excitations and Supersolid formation in Rydberg-excited Bose-Einstein Condensates
We study the behavior of a Bose-Einstein condensate in which atoms are weakly
coupled to a highly excited Rydberg state. Since the latter have very strong
van der Waals interactions, this coupling induces effective, nonlocal
interactions between the dressed ground state atoms, which, opposed to dipolar
interactions, are isotropically repulsive. Yet, one finds partial attraction in
momentum space, giving rise to a roton-maxon excitation spectrum and a
transition to a supersolid state in three-dimensional condensates. A detailed
analysis of decoherence and loss mechanisms suggests that these phenomena are
observable with current experimental capabilities.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Concentration for One and Two Species One-Dimensional Reaction-Diffusion Systems
We look for similarity transformations which yield mappings between different
one-dimensional reaction-diffusion processes. In this way results obtained for
special systems can be generalized to equivalent reaction-diffusion models. The
coagulation (A + A -> A) or the annihilation (A + A -> 0) models can be mapped
onto systems in which both processes are allowed. With the help of the
coagulation-decoagulation model results for some death-decoagulation and
annihilation-creation systems are given. We also find a reaction-diffusion
system which is equivalent to the two species annihilation model (A + B ->0).
Besides we present numerical results of Monte Carlo simulations. An accurate
description of the effects of the reaction rates on the concentration in
one-species diffusion-annihilation model is made. The asymptotic behavior of
the concentration in the two species annihilation system (A + B -> 0) with
symmetric initial conditions is studied.Comment: 20 pages latex, uuencoded figures at the en
Research Sites of the H2STORE Project and the Relevance of Lithological Variations for Hydrogen Storage at Depths
AbstractThe H2STORE collaborative project investigates potential geohydraulic, petrophysical, mineralogical, microbiological and geochemical interactions induced by the injection of hydrogen into depleted gas reservoirs and CO2- and town gas storage sites. In this context the University of Jena performs mineralogical and geochemical investigations on reservoir and cap rocks to evaluate the relevance of preferential sedimentological features, which will control fluid (hydrogen) pathways, thus provoking fluid-rock interactions and related variations in porosity and permeability. Thereby reservoir sand- and sealing mudstones of different composition, sampled from distinct depths (different: pressure/temperature conditions) of five German locations are analysed. In combination with laboratory experiments the results will enable the characterization of specific mineral reactions at different physico-chemical conditions and geological settings
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