38,108 research outputs found
Measurement of the mass of the Ï lepton
A data-driven energy scan in the immediate vicinity of the Ï pair production threshold has been performed using the Beijing Spectrometer at the Beijing Electron-Positron Collider. Approximately 5 pb^(-1) of data, distributed over 12 scan points, have been collected. A previous mass value for the Ï lepton, obtained using only the eÎŒ final state, has been published. In this paper, the final BES result on the mass measurement is presented. The analysis is based on the combined data from the ee, eÎŒ, eh, ΌΌ, ÎŒh, and hh final states, where h denotes a charged Ï or K. A maximum likelihood fit to the Ï pair production cross section data yields the value m_Ï=1776.96_(-0.21)-0.17^(+0.18+0.25) MeV
Analysis of model rotor blade pressures during parallel interaction with twin vortices
This paper presents and provides analysis of unsteady surface pressures measured on a model rotor blade as the blade experienced near parallel blade vortex interaction with a twin vortex system. To provide a basis for analysis, the vortex system was characterized by hot-wire measurements made in the interaction plane but in the absence of the rotor. The unsteady pressure response resulting from a single vortex interaction is then presented to provide a frame of reference for the twin vortex results. A series of twin vortex interaction cases are then presented and analyzed. It is shown that the unsteady blade pressures and forces are very sensitive to the inclination angle and separation distance of the vortex pair. When the vortex cores lie almost parallel to the blade chord, the interaction is characterized by a two-stage response associated with the sequential passage of the two cores. Conversely, when the cores lie on a plane that is almost perpendicular to the blade chord, the response is similar to that of a single vortex interaction. In all cases, the normal force response is consistent with the distribution of vertical velocity in the flow field of the vortex system. The pitching moment response, on the other hand, depends on the localized suction associated with the vortex cores as they traverse the blade chord
Phase sensitive amplification in a highly nonlinear lead-silicate fibre
We experimentally demonstrate phase-sensitive amplification in a highly nonlinear lead-silicate W-type fibre. A phase-sensitive gain swing of 6dB was observed in a 1.56m sample of the fibre for a total launched power of 33dBm
The braking indices in pulsar emission models
Using the method proposed in a previous paper, we calculate pulsar braking
indices in the models with torque contributions from both inner and outer
accelerating regions, assuming that the interaction between them is negligible.
We suggest that it is likely that the inverse Compton scattering induced polar
vacuum gap and the outer gap coexist in the pulsar magnetosphere. We include
the new near threshold vacuum gap models with curvature-radiation and inverse
Compton scattering induced cascades, respectively; and find that these models
can well reproduce the measured values of the braking indices.Comment: A&Ap accepted, or at
http://vega.bac.pku.edu.cn/~rxxu/publications/index_P.ht
A major star formation region in the receding tip of the stellar Galactic bar. II. Supplementary information and evidence that the bar is not the same structure as the triaxial bulge previouly reported
This paper is the second part of Garzon et al. (1997: ApJ 491, L31) in which
we presented an outline of the analysis of 60 spectra from a follow-up program
to the Two Micron Galactic Survey (TMGS) project in the l=27 deg., b=0 deg.
area. In this second part, we present a more detailed explanation of the
analysis as well a library of the spectra for more complete information for
each of the 60 stars, and further discussions on the implications for the
structure of the Galaxy.
This region contains a prominent excess in the flux distribution and star
counts previously observed in several spectral ranges, notably in the TMGS.
More than 50% of the spectra of the stars detected with m_K<5.0 mag, within a
very high confidence level, correspond to stars of luminosity class I, and a
significant proportion of the remainder are very late giants which must also be
rapidly evolving. We make the case, using all the available evidence, that we
are observing a region at the nearer end of the Galactic bar, where the Scutum
spiral arm breaks away, and that this is powerful evidence for the presence of
the bar. Alternative explanations do not give nearly such a satisfactory
account of the observations.
The space localization of one and, a fortiori, of both ends of the bar allows
us to infer a position angle for the bar of around 75 deg. with respect to the
Sun-Galactic centre line. The angle is different from that given by other
authors for the bar and this, we think, is because they refer to the triaxial
bulge and not to the bar as detected here.Comment: 21 pages, 1 table, 9 figures, accepted in A
Infrared Emission from Interstellar Dust. II. The Diffuse Interstellar Medium
We present a quantitative model for the infrared emission from dust in the
diffuse interstellar medium. The model consists of a mixture of amorphous
silicate grains and carbonaceous grains, each with a wide size distribution
ranging from molecules containing tens of atoms to large grains > 1 um in
diameter. We assume that the carbonaceous grains have polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbon (PAH)-like properties at very small sizes, and graphitic properties
for radii a > 50 A. On the basis of recent laboratory studies and guided by
astronomical observations, we propose "astronomical" absorption cross sections
for use in modeling neutral and ionized PAHs from the far ultraviolet to the
far infrared. We also propose modifications to the far-infrared emissivity of
"astronomical silicate". We calculate energy distribution functions for small
grains undergoing "temperature spikes" due to stochastic absorption of
starlight photons, using realistic heat capacities and optical properties.
Using a grain size distribution consistent with the observed interstellar
extinction, we are able to reproduce the near-IR to submillimeter emission
spectrum of the diffuse interstellar medium, including the PAH emission
features at 3.3, 6.2, 7.7, 8.6, and 11.3um. The model is compared with the
observed emission at high Galactic latitudes as well as in the Galactic plane,
as measured by COBE and IRTS. We calculate infrared emission spectra for our
dust model heated by a range of starlight intensities, and we provide tabulated
dust opacities (extended tables available at
http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~draine/dust/dustmix.html)Comment: Final version published in ApJ, 554, 778 but with factor 1.086 error
in Table 6 and Fig. 16 corrected. Main change from astro-ph version 1 is
correction of typographical errors in Table 1, and correction of typo in eq.
(A2). 51 pages, 16 figures, Late
Spitzer IRAC Observations of Star Formation in N159 in the LMC
We present observations of the giant HII region complex N159 in the LMC using
IRAC on the {\it Spitzer Space Telescope}. One of the two objects previously
identified as protostars in N159 has an SED consistent with classification as a
Class I young stellar object (YSO) and the other is probably a Class I YSO as
well, making these two stars the youngest stars known outside the Milky Way. We
identify two other sources that may also be Class I YSOs. One component,
N159AN, is completely hidden at optical wavelengths, but is very prominent in
the infrared. The integrated luminosity of the entire complex is L L, consistent with the observed radio emission assuming a
normal Galactic initial mass function (IMF). There is no evidence for a red
supergiant population indicative of an older burst of star formation. The N159
complex is 50 pc in diameter, larger in physical size than typical HII regions
in the Milky Way with comparable luminosity. We argue that all of the
individual components are related in their star formation history. The
morphology of the region is consistent with a wind blown bubble $\approx
1-2Myr-old that has initiated star formation now taking place at the rim. Other
than its large physical size, star formation in N159 appears to be
indistinguishable from star formation in the Milky Way.Comment: 14 figure
Gaia Data Processing Architecture
Gaia is ESA's ambitious space astrometry mission the main objective of which
is to astrometrically and spectro-photometrically map 1000 Million celestial
objects (mostly in our galaxy) with unprecedented accuracy. The announcement of
opportunity for the data processing will be issued by ESA late in 2006. The
Gaia Data Processing and Analysis Consortium (DPAC) has been formed recently
and is preparing an answer. The satellite will downlink close to 100 TB of raw
telemetry data over 5 years. To achieve its required accuracy of a few 10s of
Microarcsecond astrometry, a highly involved processing of this data is
required.
In addition to the main astrometric instrument Gaia will host a Radial
Velocity instrument, two low-resolution dispersers for multi-color photometry
and two Star Mappers. Gaia is a flying Giga Pixel camera. The various
instruments each require relatively complex processing while at the same time
being interdependent. We describe the overall composition of the DPAC and the
envisaged overall architecture of the Gaia data processing system. We shall
delve further into the core processing - one of the nine, so-called,
coordination units comprising the Gaia processing system.Comment: 10 Pages, 2 figures. To appear in ADASS XVI Proceeding
Reactive Hall constant of Strongly Correlated Electrons
The zero-temperature Hall response within tight-binding models of correlated
electrons is studied. Using the linear response theory and a linearization in
the magnetic field B, a general relation for the reactive (zero frequency) Hall
constant in the fast (transport) limit is derived, involving only matrix
elements between the lowest excited states at B=0; for noninteracting fermions,
the Boltzmann expression is reproduced. For a Fermi liquid with a well defined
Fermi surface and linear gapless excitations an analogous expression is found
more generally. In the specific case of quasi-one-dimensional correlated
systems a relation of to the charge stiffness D is recovered. Similar
analysis is performed and discussed for D and the compressibility.Comment: 8 pages, submitted to Phys.Rev.
The influence of fractional diffusion in Fisher-KPP equations
We study the Fisher-KPP equation where the Laplacian is replaced by the
generator of a Feller semigroup with power decaying kernel, an important
example being the fractional Laplacian. In contrast with the case of the stan-
dard Laplacian where the stable state invades the unstable one at constant
speed, we prove that with fractional diffusion, generated for instance by a
stable L\'evy process, the front position is exponential in time. Our results
provide a mathe- matically rigorous justification of numerous heuristics about
this model
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