5,114 research outputs found
Diamond films from combustion of methyl acetylene and propadiene
To date diamond films grown with the combustion technique have used either acetylene or, rarely, ethylene as the fuel. However, there are barriers to large scale commercialization of the combustion technique using either fuel. For example, acetylene is relatively expensive and difficult to handle, while the use of ethylene gives relatively low growth rates. In this letter we propose replacing acetylene with MAPPTM gas, a commercial mixture of methyl acetylene and propadiene in liquefied petroleum gas (primarily propylene). MAPP gas is considerably cheaper, safer, and easier to handle than acetylene. Furthermore, the experiments described here suggest that MAPP gas flames are only slightly less efficient than acetylene flames at converting fuel carbon atoms into diamond
Oblique DLCQ M-theory and Multiple M2-branes
We propose an oblique DLCQ as a limit to realize a theory of multiple
M2-branes in M(atrix)-theory context. The limit is a combination of an infinite
boosting of a space-like circle and a tuned tilting of the circle direction. We
obtain a series of supergravity solutions describing various dual
configurations including multiple M2-branes. For an infinite boosting along a
circle wrapped obliquely around a rectangular torus, Seiberg's DLCQ limit
distorts the torus modulus. In the context of supergravity, we show explicitly
how this torus modulus of -theory is realized as the
vacuum modulus of dual IIB-theory.Comment: v3: 25pages, extended version, References adde
Low energy proton-proton scattering in effective field theory
Low energy proton-proton scattering is studied in pionless effective field
theory. Employing the dimensional regularization and MS-bar and power
divergence subtraction schemes for loop calculation, we calculate the
scattering amplitude in 1S0 channel up to next-to-next-to leading order and fix
low-energy constants that appear in the amplitude by effective range
parameters. We study regularization scheme and scale dependence in separation
of Coulomb interaction from the scattering length and effective range for the
S-wave proton-proton scattering.Comment: 23 pages, 6 eps figures, revised considerably, accepted for
publication in Phys. Rev.
MiR-199a-5p confers tumor-suppressive role in triple-negative breast cancer
published_or_final_versio
Exploring the Thermodynamics of a Universal Fermi Gas
From sand piles to electrons in metals, one of the greatest challenges in
modern physics is to understand the behavior of an ensemble of strongly
interacting particles. A class of quantum many-body systems such as neutron
matter and cold Fermi gases share the same universal thermodynamic properties
when interactions reach the maximum effective value allowed by quantum
mechanics, the so-called unitary limit [1,2]. It is then possible to simulate
some astrophysical phenomena inside the highly controlled environment of an
atomic physics laboratory. Previous work on the thermodynamics of a
two-component Fermi gas led to thermodynamic quantities averaged over the trap
[3-5], making it difficult to compare with many-body theories developed for
uniform gases. Here we develop a general method that provides for the first
time the equation of state of a uniform gas, as well as a detailed comparison
with existing theories [6,14]. The precision of our equation of state leads to
new physical insights on the unitary gas. For the unpolarized gas, we prove
that the low-temperature thermodynamics of the strongly interacting normal
phase is well described by Fermi liquid theory and we localize the superfluid
transition. For a spin-polarized system, our equation of state at zero
temperature has a 2% accuracy and it extends the work of [15] on the phase
diagram to a new regime of precision. We show in particular that, despite
strong correlations, the normal phase behaves as a mixture of two ideal gases:
a Fermi gas of bare majority atoms and a non-interacting gas of dressed
quasi-particles, the fermionic polarons [10,16-18].Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Cobalt catalysts decorated with platinum atoms supported on barium zirconate provide enhanced activity and selectivity for CO2 methanation
A perovskite-structured barium zirconate, BaZrO3 (BZ), support is demonstrated to enhance the activity, relative to γ-Al2O3, of Co nanoparticle catalysts decorated with Pt for CO2 methanation. The CO2 methanation reaction may play a central role in both CO2 utilization and energy storage strategies for renewable energy. These catalysts require cooperative hydrogen transport between the supported Pt and Co species to provide the desired functionality, as CO2 preferentially dissociates on Co with H2 dissociating primarily on Pt. In this work, this interaction is enhanced through an atomic decoration of Pt on the Co nanoparticle surface. This morphology is achieved through immobilization of colloidal Pt particles on the Co/BaZrO3 support followed by selected catalyst pretreatment conditions to atomically disperse the Pt. Furthermore, at the same loading of Co and Pt (1 and 0.2 wt %, respectively), the barium zirconate support provides a more than 6-fold increase in CH4 formation rate in comparison to previously studied γ-Al2O3 supports at 325 °C. This was accompanied by a CH4 selectivity of over 70%, which was maintained over the measured temperature range of 250–350 °C; in fact, the selectivity was 80% at 325 °C, in comparison to only 43% for γ-Al2O3 support. This enhancement is attributed to a strong interaction between the Co particles and the BaZrO3 support. Yttria doping at 5 and 30 atom % levels on the zirconia site led to a reduction of the catalytic performance relative to BaZrO3, although the activity displayed at low levels of substitution was still higher than that over the γ-Al2O3 support
Lineal Trails of D2-D2bar Superstrings
We study the superstrings suspended between a D2- and an anti-D2-brane. We
quantize the string in the presence of some general configuration of gauge
fields over the (anti-)D-brane world volumes. The interstring can move only in
a specific direction that is normal to the difference of the electric fields of
each (anti-)D-branes. Especially when the electric fields are the same, the
interstring cannot move. We obtain the condition for the tachyons to disappear
from the spectrum.Comment: 15 pages with 4 figures, referenced added, Sec. 5 on the spectrum
made cleare
String Pair Creations in D-brane Systems
We investigate the criterion, on the Born-Infeld background fields, for the
open string pair creation to occur in D-(anti-)D-brane systems. Although
the pair creation occurs generically in both D-D and D-anti-D
systems for the cases which meet the criterion, it is more drastic in
D-anti-D-brane systems by some exponential factor depending on the
background fields. Various configurations exhibiting pair creations are
obtained via duality transformations. These include the spacelike scissors and
two D-strings (slanted at different angles) passing through each other. We
raise the scissors paradox and suggest a resolution based on the triple
junction in IIB setup.Comment: V2. 1+28 pages, 5 figures in JHEP3, minor changes, added reference
Cohomology of quantum groups: An analog of Kostant's Theorem
We prove the analog of Kostant's Theorem on Lie algebra cohomology in the
context of quantum groups. We prove that Kostant's cohomology formula holds for
quantum groups at a generic parameter , recovering an earlier result of
Malikov in the case where the underlying semisimple Lie algebra . We also show that Kostant's formula holds when is
specialized to an -th root of unity for odd (where is
the Coxeter number of ) when the highest weight of the
coefficient module lies in the lowest alcove. This can be regarded as an
extension of results of Friedlander-Parshall and Polo-Tilouine on the
cohomology of Lie algebras of reductive algebraic groups in prime
characteristic.Comment: 12 page
- …