1,975 research outputs found
Vacuum friction in rotating particles
We study the frictional torque acting on particles rotating in empty space.
At zero temperature, vacuum friction transforms mechanical energy into light
emission and produces particle heating. However, particle cooling relative to
the environment occurs at finite temperatures and low rotation velocities.
Radiation emission is boosted and its spectrum significantly departed from a
hot-body emission profile as the velocity increases. Stopping times ranging
from hours to billions of years are predicted for materials, particle sizes,
and temperatures accessible to experiment. Implications for the behavior of
cosmic dust are discussed.Comment: 4 figures, 10 pages, includes paper and supplementary information in
the appendi
The Triple-Alpha Process and the Anthropically Allowed Values of the Weak Scale
In multiple-universe models, the constants of nature may have different
values in different universes. Agrawal, Barr, Donoghue and Seckel have pointed
out that the Higgs mass parameter, as the only dimensionful parameter of the
standard model, is of particular interest. By considering a range of values of
this parameter, they showed that the Higgs vacuum expectation value must have a
magnitude less than 5.0 times its observed value, in order for complex
elements, and thus life, to form. In this report, we look at the effects of the
Higgs mass parameter on the triple-alpha process in stars. This process, which
is greatly enhanced by a resonance in Carbon-12, is responsible for virtually
all of the carbon production in the universe. We find that the Higgs vacuum
expectation value must have a magnitude greater than 0.90 times its observed
value in order for an appreciable amount of carbon to form, thus significantly
narrowing the allowed region of Agrawal et al.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Source Matching in the SDSS and RASS: Which Galaxies are Really X-ray Sources?
The current view of galaxy formation holds that all massive galaxies harbor a
massive black hole at their center, but that these black holes are not always
in an actively accreting phase. X-ray emission is often used to identify
accreting sources, but for galaxies that are not harboring quasars
(low-luminosity active galaxies), the X-ray flux may be weak, or obscured by
dust. To aid in the understanding of weakly accreting black holes in the local
universe, a large sample of galaxies with X-ray detections is needed. We
cross-match the ROSAT All Sky Survey (RASS) with galaxies from the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey Data Release 4 (SDSS DR4) to create such a sample. Because
of the high SDSS source density and large RASS positional errors, the
cross-matched catalog is highly contaminated by random associations. We
investigate the overlap of these surveys and provide a statistical test of the
validity of RASS-SDSS galaxy cross-matches. SDSS quasars provide a test of our
cross-match validation scheme, as they have a very high fraction of true RASS
matches. We find that the number of true matches between the SDSS main galaxy
sample and the RASS is highly dependent on the optical spectral classification
of the galaxy; essentially no star-forming galaxies are detected, while more
than 0.6% of narrow-line Seyferts are detected in the RASS. Also, galaxies with
ambiguous optical classification have a surprisingly high RASS detection
fraction. This allows us to further constrain the SEDs of low-luminosity active
galaxies. Our technique is quite general, and can be applied to any
cross-matching between surveys with well-understood positional errors.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, submitted to The Astronomical Journal on 19
June 200
Let's talk about varying G
It is possible that fundamental constants may not be constant at all. There
is a generally accepted view that one can only talk about variations of
dimensionless quantities, such as the fine structure constant . However, constraints on the strength of
gravity tend to focus on G itself, which is problematic. We stress that G needs
to be multiplied by the square of a mass, and hence, for example, one should be
constraining , where is
the proton mass. Failure to focus on such dimensionless quantities makes it
difficult to interpret the physical dependence of constraints on the variation
of G in many published studies. A thought experiment involving talking to
observers in another universe about the values of physical constants may be
useful for distinguishing what is genuinely measurable from what is merely part
of our particular system of units.Comment: 6 pages, Gravity Research Foundation essa
An absolute calibration system for millimeter-accuracy APOLLO measurements
Lunar laser ranging provides a number of leading experimental tests of
gravitation -- important in our quest to unify General Relativity and the
Standard Model of physics. The Apache Point Observatory Lunar Laser-ranging
Operation (APOLLO) has for years achieved median range precision at the ~2 mm
level. Yet residuals in model-measurement comparisons are an order-of-magnitude
larger, raising the question of whether the ranging data are not nearly as
accurate as they are precise, or if the models are incomplete or
ill-conditioned. This paper describes a new absolute calibration system (ACS)
intended both as a tool for exposing and eliminating sources of systematic
error, and also as a means to directly calibrate ranging data in-situ. The
system consists of a high-repetition-rate (80 MHz) laser emitting short (< 10
ps) pulses that are locked to a cesium clock. In essence, the ACS delivers
photons to the APOLLO detector at exquisitely well-defined time intervals as a
"truth" input against which APOLLO's timing performance may be judged and
corrected. Preliminary analysis indicates no inaccuracies in APOLLO data beyond
the ~3 mm level, suggesting that historical APOLLO data are of high quality and
motivating continued work on model capabilities. The ACS provides the means to
deliver APOLLO data both accurate and precise below the 2 mm level.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures, submitted to Classical and Quantum Gravit
APOLLO: the Apache Point Observatory Lunar Laser-ranging Operation: Instrument Description and First Detections
A next-generation lunar laser ranging apparatus using the 3.5 m telescope at
the Apache Point Observatory in southern New Mexico has begun science
operation. APOLLO (the Apache Point Observatory Lunar Laser-ranging Operation)
has achieved one-millimeter range precision to the moon which should lead to
approximately one-order-of-magnitude improvements in the precision of several
tests of fundamental properties of gravity. We briefly motivate the scientific
goals, and then give a detailed discussion of the APOLLO instrumentation.Comment: 37 pages; 10 figures; 1 table: accepted for publication in PAS
Observations of fluorescent aerosol-cloud interactions in the free troposphere at the High-Altitude Research Station Jungfraujoch
Ā© 2016 The Authors. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and re production in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/. Published by Copernicus Publications.The fluorescent nature of aerosol at a high-altitude Alpine site was studied using a wide-band integrated bioaerosol (WIBS-4) single particle multi-channel ultraviolet - light-induced fluorescence (UV-LIF) spectrometer. This was supported by comprehensive cloud microphysics and meteorological measurements with the aims of cataloguing concentrations of bio-fluorescent aerosols at this high-altitude site and also investigating possible influences of UV-fluorescent particle types on cloud-aerosol processes. Analysis of background free tropospheric air masses, using a total aerosol inlet, showed there to be a minor increase in the fluorescent aerosol fraction during in-cloud cases compared to out-of-cloud cases. The size dependence of the fluorescent aerosol fraction showed the larger aerosol to be more likely to be fluorescent with 80% of 10 Ī¼m particles being fluorescent. Whilst the fluorescent particles were in the minority (NFl/NAll = 0.27 Ā± 0.19), a new hierarchical agglomerative cluster analysis approach, Crawford et al. (2015) revealed the majority of the fluorescent aerosols were likely to be representative of fluorescent mineral dust. A minor episodic contribution from a cluster likely to be representative of primary biological aerosol particles (PBAP) was also observed with a wintertime baseline concentration of 0.1 Ā± 0.4 L-1. Given the low concentration of this cluster and the typically low ice-active fraction of studied PBAP (e.g. pseudomonas syringae), we suggest that the contribution to the observed ice crystal concentration at this location is not significant during the wintertime. Ā© Author(s) 2016.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
Finite to infinite steady state solutions, bifurcations of an integro-differential equation
We consider a bistable integral equation which governs the stationary
solutions of a convolution model of solid--solid phase transitions on a circle.
We study the bifurcations of the set of the stationary solutions as the
diffusion coefficient is varied to examine the transition from an infinite
number of steady states to three for the continuum limit of the
semi--discretised system. We show how the symmetry of the problem is
responsible for the generation and stabilisation of equilibria and comment on
the puzzling connection between continuity and stability that exists in this
problem
A two-species continuum model for aeolian sand ripples
We formulate a continuum model for aeolian sand ripples consisting of two
species of grains: a lower layer of relatively immobile clusters, with an upper
layer of highly mobile grains moving on top. We predict analytically the ripple
wavelength, initial ripple growth rate and threshold saltation flux for ripple
formation. Numerical simulations show the evolution of realistic ripple
profiles from initial surface roughness via ripple growth and merger.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Origin of Life
The evolution of life has been a big enigma despite rapid advancements in the
fields of biochemistry, astrobiology, and astrophysics in recent years. The
answer to this puzzle has been as mind-boggling as the riddle relating to
evolution of Universe itself. Despite the fact that panspermia has gained
considerable support as a viable explanation for origin of life on the Earth
and elsewhere in the Universe, the issue remains far from a tangible solution.
This paper examines the various prevailing hypotheses regarding origin of life
like abiogenesis, RNA World, Iron-sulphur World, and panspermia; and concludes
that delivery of life-bearing organic molecules by the comets in the early
epoch of the Earth alone possibly was not responsible for kick-starting the
process of evolution of life on our planet.Comment: 32 pages, 8 figures,invited review article, minor additio
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