21,906 research outputs found

    Radiation-driven winds of hot luminous stars. XVI. Expanding atmospheres of massive and very massive stars and the evolution of dense stellar clusters

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    Context: Starbursts, and particularly their high-mass stars, play an essential role in the evolution of galaxies. The winds of massive stars not only significantly influence their surroundings, but the mass loss also profoundly affects the evolution of the stars themselves. In addition to the evolution of each star, the evolution of the dense cores of massive starburst clusters is affected by N-body interactions, and the formation of very massive stars via mergers may be decisive for the evolution of the cluster. Aims: To introduce an advanced diagnostic method of O-type stellar atmospheres with winds, including an assessment of the accuracy of the determinations of abundances, stellar and wind parameters. Methods: We combine consistent models of expanding atmospheres with detailed stellar evolutionary calculations of massive and very massive single stars with regard to the evolution of dense stellar clusters. Accurate predictions of the mass loss rates of very massive stars requires a highly consistent treatment of the statistical equilibrium and the hydrodynamic and radiative processes in the expanding atmospheres. Results: We present computed mass loss rates, terminal wind velocities, and spectral energy distributions of massive and very massive stars of different metallicities, calculated from atmospheric models with an improved level of consistency. Conclusions: Stellar evolutionary calculations using our computed mass loss rates show that low-metallicity very massive stars lose only a very small amount of their mass, making it unlikely that very massive population III stars cause a significant helium enrichment of the interstellar medium. Solar-metallicity stars have higher mass-loss rates, but these are not so high to exclude very massive stars formed by mergers in dense clusters from ending their life massive enough to form intermediate-mass black holes.Comment: Accepted by A&

    Doubled Full Shot Noise in Quantum Coherent Superconductor - Semiconductor Junctions

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    We performed low temperature shot noise measurements in Superconductor (TiN) - strongly disordered normal metal (heavily doped Si) weakly transparent junctions. We show that the conductance has a maximum due to coherent multiple reflections at low energy and that shot noise is then twice the Poisson noise (S=4eI). The shot noise changes to the normal value (S=2eI) due to a large quasiparticle contribution.Comment: published in Physical Review Letter

    Can only flavor-nonsinglet H dibaryons be stable against strong decays?

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    Using the QCD sum rule approach, we show that the flavor-nonsinglet HH dibaryon states with Jπ=1+^{\pi} = 1^+, Jπ=0+^{\pi} = 0^+, I=1 (27plet) are nearly degenerate with the Jπ=0+^{\pi} = 0^+, I=0 singlet H0H_0 dibaryon, which has been predicted to be stable against strong decay, but has not been observed. Our calculation, which does not require an instanton correction, suggests that the H0H_0 is slightly heavier than these flavor-nonsinglet HHs over a wide range of the parameter space. If the singlet H0H_0 mass lies above the ΛΛ\Lambda \Lambda threshold (2231~MeV), then the strong interaction breakup to ΛΛ\Lambda \Lambda would produce a very broad resonance in the ΛΛ\Lambda \Lambda invariant mass spectrum which would be very difficult to observe. On the other hand, if these flavor-nonsinglet J=0 and 1 HH dibaryons are also above the ΛΛ\Lambda \Lambda threshold, but below the Ξ0n\Xi^0n breakup threshold (2254 MeV), then because the direct, strong interaction decay to the ΛΛ\Lambda \Lambda channel is forbidden, these flavor-nonsinglet states might be more amenable to experimental observation. The present results allow a possible reconciliation between the reported observation of ΛΛ\Lambda \Lambda hypernuclei, which argue against a stable H0H_0, and the possible existence of HH dibaryons in general.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure

    Treatment of mitral stenosis

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    In patients with mitral stenosis the need for therapeutic intervention can be assessed by clinical and non-invasive data. Mitral valve replacement is indicated when marked dyspnoea on mild exertion, dyspnoea at rest or pulmonray oedema, haemoptpis, atrial fibrillation, recurrent systemic emboli or right ventricular failure occur in a patient with a mitral valve area of <1·5cm2, as memured by Doppler echocardiography. This treatment will entail life-long anticoagulation in the majoriv of patients. Closed commissurotomy is no longer considered a valid therapeutic alternative due to its limited success rate but open cormmissurotomy and balloon valvotomy may be performed in patients with no significant calcification of valve cusps and no major concomitant mitral regurgitation. Preservation of the subvalvular apparatus and left ventricular geometry can be comidered the most important advantages of these techniques. More severe chronic symptom are generally required m indication for mitral valve replacement because of the additional long-term imponderabilities imposed by an implanted artrficial device. Therefore, in patienb with mitral stenosis different symptom and clinical findings will eventually lead to different intervention

    Hybrid phase-space simulation method for interacting Bose fields

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    We introduce an approximate phase-space technique to simulate the quantum dynamics of interacting bosons. With the future goal of treating Bose-Einstein condensate systems, the method is designed for systems with a natural separation into highly occupied (condensed) modes and lightly occupied modes. The method self-consistently uses the Wigner representation to treat highly occupied modes and the positive-P representation for lightly occupied modes. In this method, truncation of higher-derivative terms from the Fokker-Planck equation is usually necessary. However, at least in the cases investigated here, the resulting systematic error, over a finite time, vanishes in the limit of large Wigner occupation numbers. We tested the method on a system of two interacting anharmonic oscillators, with high and low occupations, respectively. The Hybrid method successfully predicted atomic quadratures to a useful simulation time 60 times longer than that of the positive-P method. The truncated Wigner method also performed well in this test. For the prediction of the correlation in a quantum nondemolition measurement scheme, for this same system, the Hybrid method gave excellent agreement with the exact result, while the truncated Wigner method showed a large systematic error.Comment: 13 pages; 6 figures; references added; figures correcte

    First Lattice Study of the NN-P11(1440)P_{11}(1440) Transition Form Factors

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    Experiments at Jefferson Laboratory, MIT-Bates, LEGS, Mainz, Bonn, GRAAL, and Spring-8 offer new opportunities to understand in detail how nucleon resonance (N∗N^*) properties emerge from the nonperturbative aspects of QCD. Preliminary data from CLAS collaboration, which cover a large range of photon virtuality Q2Q^2 show interesting behavior with respect to Q2Q^2 dependence: in the region Q2≤1.5GeV2Q^2 \le 1.5 {GeV}^2, both the transverse amplitude, A1/2(Q2)A_{1/2}(Q^2), and the longitudinal amplitude, S1/2(Q2)S_{1/2}(Q^2), decrease rapidly. In this work, we attempt to use first-principles lattice QCD (for the first time) to provide a model-independent study of the Roper-nucleon transition form factor.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, double colum

    CENP-A Is Dispensable for Mitotic Centromere Function after Initial Centromere/Kinetochore Assembly

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    Human centromeres are defined by chromatin containing the histone H3 variant CENP-A assembled onto repetitive alphoid DNA sequences. By inducing rapid, complete degradation of endogenous CENP-A, we now demonstrate that once the first steps of centromere assembly have been completed in G1/S, continued CENP-A binding is not required for maintaining kinetochore attachment to centromeres or for centromere function in the next mitosis. Degradation of CENP-A prior to kinetochore assembly is found to block deposition of CENP-C and CENP-N, but not CENP-T, thereby producing defective kinetochores and failure of chromosome segregation. Without the continuing presence of CENP-A, CENP-B binding to alphoid DNA sequences becomes essential to preserve anchoring of CENP-C and the kinetochore to each centromere. Thus, there is a reciprocal interdependency of CENP-A chromatin and the underlying&nbsp;repetitive centromere DNA sequences bound by CENP-B in the maintenance of human chromosome segregation

    Equilibrium onions?

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    We demonstrate the possibility of a stable equilibrium multi-lamellar ("onion") phase in pure lamellar systems (no excess solvent) due to a sufficiently negative Gaussian curvature modulus. The onion phase is stabilized by non-linear elastic moduli coupled to a polydisperse size distribution (Apollonian packing) to allow space-filling without appreciable elastic distortion. This model is compared to experiments on copolymer-decorated lamellar surfactant systems, with reasonable qualitative agreement
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