4,596 research outputs found
Electrical charging of ash in Icelandic volcanic plumes
The existence of volcanic lightning and alteration of the atmospheric
potential gradient in the vicinity of near-vent volcanic plumes provides strong
evidence for the charging of volcanic ash. More subtle electrical effects are
also visible in balloon soundings of distal volcanic plumes. Near the vent,
some proposed charging mechanisms are fractoemission, triboelectrification, and
the so-called "dirty thunderstorm" mechanism, which is where ash and convective
clouds interact electrically to enhance charging. Distant from the vent, a
self-charging mechanism, probably triboelectrification, has been suggested to
explain the sustained low levels of charge observed on a distal plume. Recent
research by Houghton et al. (2013) linked the self-charging of volcanic ash to
the properties of the particle size distribution, observing that a highly
polydisperse ash distribution would charge more effectively than a monodisperse
one. Natural radioactivity in some volcanic ash could also contribute to
self-charging of volcanic plumes. Here we present laboratory measurements of
particle size distributions, triboelectrification and radioactivity in ash
samples from the Gr\'{i}msv\"{o}tn and Eyjafjallaj\"{o}kull volcanic eruptions
in 2011 and 2010 respectively, and discuss the implications of our findings.Comment: XV Conference on Atmospheric Electricity, 15-20 June 2014, Norman,
Oklahoma, US
Why the Universe Started from a Low Entropy State
We show that the inclusion of backreaction of massive long wavelengths
imposes dynamical constraints on the allowed phase space of initial conditions
for inflation, which results in a superselection rule for the initial
conditions. Only high energy inflation is stable against collapse due to the
gravitational instability of massive perturbations. We present arguments to the
effect that the initial conditions problem {\it cannot} be meaningfully
addressed by thermostatistics as far as the gravitational degrees of freedom
are concerned. Rather, the choice of the initial conditions for the universe in
the phase space and the emergence of an arrow of time have to be treated as a
dynamic selection.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figs. Final version; agrees with accepted version in
Phys. Rev.
The molecular cloning and characterisation of cDNA coding for the alpha subunit of the acetylcholine receptor
The published version of this article is available at Oxford Journals in Nucleic Acids Research at
http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/content/10/19/5809.full.pdf+htmlA rare cDNA coding for most of the α subunit of the Torpedo nicotinic acetylcholine receptor has been cloned into bacteria. The use of a mismatched oligonucleotide primer of reverse transcriptase facilitated the design of an efficient, specific probe for recombinant bacteria. DNA sequence analysis has enabled the elucidation of a large part of the polypeptide primary sequence which is discussed in relation to its acetylcholine binding activity and the location of receptor within the plasma membrane.
When used as a radioactive probe, the cloned cDNA binds specifically to a single Torpedo mRNA species of about 2350 nucleotides in length but fails to show significant cross-hybridisation with a subunit mRNA extracted from cat muscle
The construction and evaluation of four series of lessons to stimulate the flow of ideas in the creative writing of fourth, fifth, and sixth grade pupils.
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit
Exact Nonperturbative Unitary Amplitudes for 1->N Transitions
I present an extension to arbitrary N of a previously proposed field
theoretic model, in which unitary amplitudes for processes were
obtained. The Born amplitude in this extension has the behavior
expected in a bosonic field theory. Unitarity
is violated when , or when Numerical
solutions of the coupled Schr\"odinger equations shows that for weak coupling
and a large range of N>\ncrit, the exact unitary amplitude is reasonably fit
by a factorized expression |A(1->N)| \sim (0.73 /N) \cdot \exp{(-0.025/\g2)}.
The very small size of the coefficient 1/\g2 , indicative of a very weak
exponential suppression, is not in accord with standard discussions based on
saddle point analysis, which give a coefficient The weak dependence
on could have experimental implications in theories where the exponential
suppression is weak (as in this model). Non-perturbative contributions to
few-point correlation functions in this theory would arise at order $K\ \simeq\
\left((0.05/\g2)+ 2\ ln{N}\right)/ \ ln{(1/\g2)}\g2.$Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures (not included
Large time dynamics and aging of a polymer chain in a random potential
We study the out-of-equilibrium large time dynamics of a gaussian polymer
chain in a quenched random potential. The dynamics studied is a simple Langevin
dynamics commonly referred to as the Rouse model. The equations for the
two-time correlation and response function are derived within the gaussian
variational approximation. In order to implement this approximation faithfully,
we employ the supersymmetric representation of the Martin-Siggia-Rose dynamical
action. For a short ranged correlated random potential the equations are solved
analytically in the limit of large times using certain assumptions concerning
the asymptotic behavior. Two possible dynamical behaviors are identified
depending upon the time separation- a stationary regime and an aging regime. In
the stationary regime time translation invariance holds and so is the
fluctuation dissipation theorem. The aging regime which occurs for large time
separations of the two-time correlation functions is characterized by history
dependence and the breakdown of certain equilibrium relations. The large time
limit of the equations yields equations among the order parameters that are
similar to the equations obtained in the statics using replicas. In particular
the aging solution corresponds to the broken replica solution. But there is a
difference in one equation that leads to important consequences for the
solution. The stationary regime corresponds to the motion of the polymer inside
a local minimum of the random potential, whereas in the aging regime the
polymer hops between different minima. As a byproduct we also solve exactly the
dynamics of a chain in a random potential with quadratic correlations.Comment: 21 pages, RevTeX
Theory of many-fermion systems II: The case of Coulomb interactions
In a recent paper (cond-mat/9703164) a general field-theoretical description
of many-fermion systems with short-ranged interactions has been developed. Here
we extend this theory to the case of disordered electrons interacting via a
Coulomb potential. A detailed discussion is given of the Ward identity that
controls the soft modes in the system, and the generalized nonlinear sigma
model for the Coulombic case is derived and discussed.Comment: 12 pp., REVTeX, no figs, final version as publishe
Symmetric Skyrmions
We present candidates for the global minimum energy solitons of charge one to
nine in the Skyrme model, generated using sophisticated numerical algorithms.
Assuming the Skyrme model accurately represents the low energy limit of QCD,
these configurations correspond to the classical nuclear ground states of the
light elements. The solitons found are particularly symmetric, for example, the
charge seven skyrmion has icosahedral symmetry, and the shapes are shown to fit
a remarkable sequence defined by a geometric energy minimization (GEM) rule. We
also calculate the energies and sizes to within at least a few percent
accuracy. These calculations provide the basis for a future investigation of
the low energy vibrational modes of skyrmions and hence the possibility of
testing the Skyrme model against experiment.Comment: latex, 9 pages, 1 figure (fig1.gif
Fast and Slow Rotators in the Densest Environments: a SWIFT IFS study of the Coma Cluster
We present integral-field spectroscopy of 27 galaxies in the Coma cluster
observed with the Oxford SWIFT spectrograph, exploring the kinematic
morphology-density relationship in a cluster environment richer and denser than
any in the ATLAS3D survey. Our new data enables comparison of the kinematic
morphology relation in three very different clusters (Virgo, Coma and Abell
1689) as well as to the field/group environment. The Coma sample was selected
to match the parent luminosity and ellipticity distributions of the early-type
population within a radius 15' (0.43 Mpc) of the cluster centre, and is limited
to r' = 16 mag (equivalent to M_K = -21.5 mag), sampling one third of that
population. From analysis of the lambda-ellipticity diagram, we find 15+-6% of
early-type galaxies are slow rotators; this is identical to the fraction found
in the field and the average fraction in the Virgo cluster, based on the
ATLAS3D data. It is also identical to the average fraction found recently in
Abell 1689 by D'Eugenio et al.. Thus it appears that the average slow rotator
fraction of early type galaxies remains remarkably constant across many
different environments, spanning five orders of magnitude in galaxy number
density. However, within each cluster the slow rotators are generally found in
regions of higher projected density, possibly as a result of mass segregation
by dynamical friction. These results provide firm constraints on the mechanisms
that produce early-type galaxies: they must maintain a fixed ratio between the
number of fast rotators and slow rotators while also allowing the total
early-type fraction to increase in clusters relative to the field. A complete
survey of Coma, sampling hundreds rather than tens of galaxies, could probe a
more representative volume of Coma and provide significantly stronger
constraints, particularly on how the slow rotator fraction varies at larger
radii.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
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