14,084 research outputs found
Vigorous atmospheric motion in the red supergiant star Antares
Red supergiant stars represent a late stage of the evolution of stars more
massive than about nine solar masses, in which they develop complex,
multi-component atmospheres. Bright spots have been detected in the atmosphere
of red supergiants using interferometric imaging. Above the photosphere of a
red supergiant, the molecular outer atmosphere extends up to about two stellar
radii. Furthermore, the hot chromosphere (5,000 to 8,000 kelvin) and cool gas
(less than 3,500 kelvin) of a red supergiant coexist at about three stellar
radii. The dynamics of such complex atmospheres has been probed by ultraviolet
and optical spectroscopy. The most direct approach, however, is to measure the
velocity of gas at each position over the image of stars as in observations of
the Sun. Here we report the mapping of the velocity field over the surface and
atmosphere of the nearby red supergiant Antares. The two-dimensional velocity
field map obtained from our near-infrared spectro-interferometric imaging
reveals vigorous upwelling and downdrafting motions of several huge gas clumps
at velocities ranging from about -20 to +20 kilometres per second in the
atmosphere, which extends out to about 1.7 stellar radii. Convection alone
cannot explain the observed turbulent motions and atmospheric extension,
suggesting that an unidentified process is operating in the extended
atmosphere.Comment: 27 pages, 8 figures, published in Natur
Mean first passage time for nuclear fission and the emission of light particles
The concept of a mean first passage time is used to study the time lapse over
which a fissioning system may emit light particles. The influence of the
"transient" and "saddle to scission times" on this emission are critically
examined. It is argued that within the limits of Kramers' picture of fission no
enhancement over that given by his rate formula need to be considered.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex, 4 postscript figures; with correction of misprints;
appeared in Phys. Rev. Lett.90.13270
Statistical fluctuations for the fission process on its decent from saddle to scission
We reconsider the importance of statistical fluctuations for fission dynamics
beyond the saddle in the light of recent evaluations of transport coefficients
for average motion. The size of these fluctuations are estimated by means of
the Kramers-Ingold solution for the inverted oscillator, which allows for an
inclusion of quantum effects.Comment: 12 pages, Latex, 5 Postscript figures; submitted to PRC e-mail:
[email protected] www home page:
http://www.physik.tu-muenchen.de/tumphy/e/T36/hofmann.htm
Complex joint probabilities as expressions of determinism in quantum mechanics
The density operator of a quantum state can be represented as a complex joint
probability of any two observables whose eigenstates have non-zero mutual
overlap. Transformations to a new basis set are then expressed in terms of
complex conditional probabilities that describe the fundamental relation
between precise statements about the three different observables. Since such
transformations merely change the representation of the quantum state, these
conditional probabilities provide a state-independent definition of the
deterministic relation between the outcomes of different quantum measurements.
In this paper, it is shown how classical reality emerges as an approximation to
the fundamental laws of quantum determinism expressed by complex conditional
probabilities. The quantum mechanical origin of phase spaces and trajectories
is identified and implications for the interpretation of quantum measurements
are considered. It is argued that the transformation laws of quantum
determinism provide a fundamental description of the measurement dependence of
empirical reality.Comment: 12 pages, including 1 figure, updated introduction includes
references to the historical background of complex joint probabilities and to
related work by Lars M. Johanse
Evidence for bipolar jets in late stages of AGB winds
Bipolar expansion at various stages of evolution has been recently observed
in a number of AGB stars. The expansion is driven by bipolar jets that emerge
late in the evolution of AGB winds. The wind traps the jets, resulting in an
expanding, elongated cocoon. Eventually the jets break-out from the confining
spherical wind, as recently observed in W43A. This source displays the most
advanced evolutionary stage of jets in AGB winds. The earliest example is
IRC+10011, where the asymmetry is revealed in high-resolution near-IR imaging.
In this source the jets turned on only ~200 years ago, while the spherical wind
is ~4000 years old.Comment: 6 pages, to appear in "Asymmetrical Planetary Nebulae III" editors M.
Meixner, J. Kastner, N. Soker, & B. Balick (ASP Conf. Series
Optimized phase switching using a single atom nonlinearity
We show that a nonlinear phase shift of pi can be obtained by using a single
two level atom in a one sided cavity with negligible losses. This result
implies that the use of a one sided cavity can significantly improve the pi/18
phase shift previously observed by Turchette et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 75, 4710
(1995)].Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, added comments on derivation and assumption
Nonlinear soil-structure interaction calculations simulating the SIMQUAKE experiment using STEALTH 2D
Transient, nonlinear soil-structure interaction simulations of an Electric Power Research Institute, SIMQUAKE experiment were performed using the large strain, time domain STEALTH 2D code and a cyclic, kinematically hardening cap soil model. Results from the STEALTH simulations were compared to identical simulations performed with the TRANAL code and indicate relatively good agreement between all the STEALTH and TRANAL calculations. The differences that are seen can probably be attributed to: (1) large (STEALTH) vs. small (TRANAL) strain formulation and/or (2) grid discretization differences
- …