1,491 research outputs found
Metal Abundance Calibration of the Ca II Triplet Lines in RR Lyrae Stars
The GAIA satellite is likely to observe thousands of RR Lyrae stars within a
small spectral window, between 8470A and 8750A, at a resolution of 11,500. In
order to derive the metallicity of RR Lyrae stars from Gaia, we have obtained
numerous spectra of RR Lyrae stars at a resolution of 35,000 with the Apache
Point Observatory 3.5 m echelle spectrograph. We have correlated the Ca II
triplet line strengths with metallicity as derived from Fe II abundances,
analogous to Preston's (1959) use of the Ca II K line to estimate the
metallicity of RR Lyrae stars. The Ca II line at 8498A is the least blended
with neighboring Paschen lines and thus provides the best correlation.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysics & Space Scienc
Dynamics of quantum quenching for BCS-BEC systems in the shallow BEC regime
The problem of coupled Fermi-Bose mixtures of an ultracold gas near a narrow
Feshbach resonance is approached through the time-dependent and complex
Ginzburg-Landau (TDGL) theory. The dynamical system is constructed using
Ginzburg-Landau-Abrikosov-Gor'kov (GLAG) path integral methods with the single
mode approximation for the composite Bosons, and the equilibrium states are
obtained in the BEC regime for adiabatic variations of the Feshbach detuning
along the stationary solutions of the dynamical system. Investigations into the
rich superfluid dynamics of this system in the shallow BEC regime yields the
onset of multiple interference patterns in the dynamics as the system is
quenched from the deep-BEC regime. This results in a partial collapse and
revival of the coherent matter wave field of the BEC, whose temporal profile is
reported.Comment: 24 pages, 7 figures. Submitted to European Journal of Physics Plu
Clusters in weighted macroeconomic networks : the EU case. Introducing the overlapping index of GDP/capita fluctuation correlations
GDP/capita correlations are investigated in various time windows (TW), for
the time interval 1990-2005. The target group of countries is the set of 25 EU
members, 15 till 2004 plus the 10 countries which joined EU later on. The
TW-means of the statistical correlation coefficients are taken as the weights
(links) of a fully connected network having the countries as nodes. Thereafter
we define and introduce the overlapping index of weighted network nodes. A
cluster structure of EU countries is derived from the statistically relevant
eigenvalues and eigenvectors of the adjacency matrix. This may be considered to
yield some information about the structure, stability and evolution of the EU
country clusters in a macroeconomic sense.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, 1 table, 17 references, submitted to Physica A;
proceedings of APFA
Homogeneous Fermion Superfluid with Unequal Spin Populations
For decades, the conventional view is that an s-wave BCS superfluid can not
support uniform spin polarization due to a gap in the quasiparticle
excitation spectrum. We show that this is an artifact of the dismissal of
quasiparticle interactions in the conventional approach at the
outset. Such interactions can cause triplet fluctuations in the ground state
and hence non-zero spin polarization at "magnetic field" . The
resulting ground state is a pairing state of quasiparticles on the ``BCS
vacuum". For sufficiently large , the spin polarization of at unitarity
has the simple form . Our study is motivated by the recent
experiments at Rice which found evidence of a homogenous superfluid state with
uniform spin polarization.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Transport in -Sexithiophene Films
The field-effect mobility of hole polarons in -sexithiophene,
measured in thin film transistors, was shown to be well fitted by Holstein's
small polaron theory. Unfortunately, Holstein's formulation is based on an
integral that does not converge. We show that the data are well fitted by a
theory of polaron transport that was successful in accounting for mobility in
molecular crystals of naphthalene.Comment: 10 pages, RevTex, one PostScript file aviable upon reques
Welfare Participation and Depression Symptoms Among Youth in China
Background: Although welfare programs in China provide a safety net for low-income people by directly lifting their incomes, receiving benefits has the potential to affect recipients’ mental health because of the demanding and demeaning means-testing application process required by Chinese policymakers. However, little research has examined the relationship between welfare participation and mental health symptoms—particularly those of depression—among Chinese youth. This study aims to examine the relationship between family participation in the Dibao income-assistance program in China and symptoms of depression among youth. Methods: This study used a youth sample (n = 4192) of nationally representative data from the China Family Panel Studies (CFPS) survey. Multiple imputation was used to deal with missing data. The imputed data were analyzed using aggregated robust multiple regression. The Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression (CES-D-20) scale was used to measure depression symptoms. In addition, a variety of subgroup analyses were conducted to explore whether the relationship between Dibao participation and symptoms of depression differs significantly by the sociodemographic characteristics. Results: Youth whose families received Dibao assistance had significantly greater risk for symptoms of depression when compared with peers who did not receive assistance. Results also showed that young women—and especially young mothers—whose families participated in the Dibao program in rural areas were at significantly higher risk compared with others. Conclusion and Discussion: The relationship between welfare participation and symptoms of depression varies significantly by the characteristics of youths and their families. As a marker for collective disadvantage and adversity, welfare participation warrants research to study program processes and to distinguish pathways—possibly differentiated by gender—that may elevate risk for depression among Dibao program recipients
A strong steric hindrance effect on ground state, excited state, and charge separated state properties of a CuI-diimine complex captured by X-ray transient absorption spectroscopy
Steady-state and transient structures of a copper diimine dye sensitizer on TiO2 nanoparticles undergoing photoinduced interfacial electron transfer are determined.</p
Expression of mercuric reductase from Bacillus megaterium MB1 in eukaryotic microalga Chlorella sp DT: an approach for mercury phytoremediation
A eukaryotic microalga, Chlorella sp. DT, was transformed with the Bacillus megaterium strain MB1 merA gene, encoding mercuric reductase (MerA), which mediates the reduction of Hg2+ to volatile elemental Hg-0. The transformed Chlorella cells were selected first by hygromycin B and then by HgCl2. The existence of merA gene in the genomic DNA of transgenic strains was shown by polymerase chain reaction amplification, while the stable integration of merA into genomic DNA of transgenic strains was confirmed by Southern blot analysis. The ability to remove Hg2+ in merA transgenic strains was higher than that in the wild type. The merA transgenic strains showed higher growth rate and photosynthetic activity than the wild type did in the presence of a toxic concentration of Hg2+. Cultured with Hg2+, the expression level of superoxide dismutase in transgenic strains was lower than that in the wild type, suggesting that the transgenic strains faced a lower level of oxidative stress. All the results indicated that merA gene was successfully integrated into the genome of transgenic strains and functionally expressed to promote the removal of Hg2+
The Basics of Water Waves Theory for Analogue Gravity
This chapter gives an introduction to the connection between the physics of
water waves and analogue gravity. Only a basic knowledge of fluid mechanics is
assumed as a prerequisite.Comment: 36 pages. Lecture Notes for the IX SIGRAV School on "Analogue
Gravity", Como (Italy), May 201
Influence of confinement on the orientational phase transitions in the lamellar phase of a block copolymer melt under shear flow
In this work we incorporate some real-system effects into the theory of
orientational phase transitions under shear flow (M. E. Cates and S. T. Milner,
Phys. Rev. Lett. v.62, p.1856 (1989) and G. H. Fredrickson, J. Rheol. v.38,
p.1045 (1994)). In particular, we study the influence of the shear-cell
boundaries on the orientation of the lamellar phase. We predict that at low
shear rates the parallel orientation appears to be stable. We show that there
is a critical value of the shear rate at which the parallel orientation loses
its stability and the perpendicular one appears immediately below the spinodal.
We associate this transition with a crossover from the fluctuation to the
mean-field behaviour. At lower temperatures the stability of the parallel
orientation is restored. We find that the region of stability of the
perpendicular orientation rapidly decreases as shear rate increases. This
behaviour might be misinterpreted as an additional perpendicular to parallel
transition recently discussed in literature.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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