24,374 research outputs found
Three-dimensional macroporous silicon photonic crystal with large photonic band gap
Three-dimensional photonic crystals based on macroporous silicon are fabricated by photoelectrochemical etching and subsequent focused-ion-beam drilling. Reflection measurements show a high reflection in the range of the stopgap and indicate the spectral position of the complete photonic band gap. The onset of diffraction which might influence the measurement is discussed
Virtual knot groups and almost classical knots
We define a group-valued invariant of virtual knots and relate it to various
other group-valued invariants of virtual knots, including the extended group of
Silver-Williams and the quandle group of Manturov and Bardakov-Bellingeri. A
virtual knot is called almost classical if it admits a diagram with an
Alexander numbering, and in that case we show that the group factors as a free
product of the usual knot group and Z. We establish a similar formula for mod p
almost classical knots, and we use these results to derive obstructions to a
virtual knot K being mod p almost classical. Viewed as knots in thickened
surfaces, almost classical knots correspond to those that are homologically
trivial. We show they admit Seifert surfaces and relate their Alexander
invariants to the homology of the associated infinite cyclic cover. We prove
the first Alexander ideal is principal, recovering a result first proved by
Nakamura et al. using different methods. The resulting Alexander polynomial is
shown to satisfy a skein relation, and its degree gives a lower bound for the
Seifert genus. We tabulate almost classical knots up to 6 crossings and
determine their Alexander polynomials and virtual genus.Comment: 44 page
Measuring Molecular, Neutral Atomic, and Warm Ionized Galactic Gas Through X-Ray Absorption
We study the column densities of neutral atomic, molecular, and warm ionized
Galactic gas through their continuous absorption of extragalactic X-ray spectra
at |b| > 25 degrees. For N(H,21cm) < 5x10^20 cm^-2 there is an extremely tight
relationship between N(H,21cm) and the X-ray absorption column, N(xray), with a
mean ratio along 26 lines of sight of N(xray)/N(H,21cm) = 0.972 +- 0.022. This
is significantly less than the anticpated ratio of 1.23, which would occur if
He were half He I and half He II in the warm ionized component. We suggest that
the ionized component out of the plane is highly ionized, with He being mainly
He II and He III. In the limiting case that H is entirely HI, we place an upper
limit on the He abundance in the ISM of He/H <= 0.103.
At column densities N(xray) > 5x10^20 cm^-2, which occurs at our lower
latitudes, the X-ray absorption column N(xray) is nearly double N(H,21cm). This
excess column cannot be due to the warm ionized component, even if He were
entirely He I, so it must be due to a molecular component. This result implies
that for lines of sight out of the plane with |b| ~ 30 degrees, molecular gas
is common and with a column density comprable to N(H,21cm).
This work bears upon the far infrared background, since a warm ionized
component, anticorrelated with N(H,21cm), might produce such a background. Not
only is such an anticorrelation absent, but if the dust is destroyed in the
warm ionized gas, the far infrared background may be slightly larger than that
deduced by Puget et al. (1996).Comment: 1 AASTeX file, 14 PostScript figure files which are linked within the
TeX fil
Ultrafast electroabsorption dynamics in an InAs quantum dot saturable absorber at 1.3 mu m
The authors report a direct measurement of the absorption dynamics in an InAs p-i-n ridge waveguide quantum dot modulator. The carrier escape mechanisms are investigated via subpicosecond pump-probe measurements at room temperature, under reverse bias conditions. The optical pulses employed are degenerate in wavelength with the quantum dot ground state transition at 1.28 mu m. The absorption change recovers with characteristic times ranging from 62 ps (0 V) to similar to 700 fs (-10 V), showing a decrease of nearly two orders of magnitude. The authors show that at low applied fields, this recovery is attributed to thermionic emission while for higher applied fields, tunneling becomes the dominant mechanism. (c) 2006 American Institute of Physics.</p
Cosmic Complementarity: Joint Parameter Estimation from CMB Experiments and Redshift Surveys
We study the ability of future CMB anisotropy experiments and redshift
surveys to constrain a thirteen-dimensional parameterization of the adiabatic
cold dark matter model. Each alone is unable to determine all parameters to
high accuracy. However, considered together, one data set resolves the
difficulties of the other, allowing certain degenerate parameters to be
determined with far greater precision. We treat in detail the degeneracies
involving the classical cosmological parameters, massive neutrinos,
tensor-scalar ratio, bias, and reionization optical depth as well as how
redshift surveys can resolve them. We discuss the opportunities for internal
and external consistency checks on these measurements. Previous papers on
parameter estimation have generally treated smaller parameter spaces; in direct
comparisons to these works, we tend to find weaker constraints and suggest
numerical explanations for the discrepancies.Comment: Submitted to ApJ. LaTeX, 20 pages, emulateapj.sty and
onecolfloat.sty. Minor errors in Table 8 corrected; reference adde
Frustrated antiferromagnetic quantum spin chains for spin length S > 1
We investigate frustrated antiferromagnetic Heisenberg quantum spin chains at
T=0 for S=3/2 and S=2 using the DMRG method. We localize disorder and Lifshitz
points, confirming that quantum disorder points can be seen as quantum remnants
of classical phase transitions. Both in the S=3/2 and the S=2 chain, we observe
the disappearance of effectively free S=1/2 and S=1 end spins respectively. The
frustrated spin chain is therefore a suitable system for clearly showing the
existence of free end spins S'=[S/2] also in half-integer antiferromagnetic
spin chains with S>1/2. We suggest that the first order transition found for
S=1 in our previous work is present in all frustrated spin chains with S>1/2,
characterized by the disappearance of effectively free end spins with S'=[S/2].Comment: 6 pages, 8 ps figures, uses RevTeX, submitted to PR
Different Methods of Forming Cold Fronts in Non-Merging Clusters
Sharp edges in X-ray surface brightness with continuous gas pressure called
cold fronts have been often found in relaxed galaxy clusters such as Abell 496.
Models that explain cold fronts as surviving cores of head-on subcluster
mergers do not work well for these clusters and competing models involving gas
sloshing have been recently proposed. Here, we test some concrete predictions
of these models in a combined analysis of density, temperature, metal
abundances and abundance ratios in a deep Chandra exposure of Abell 496. We
confirm that the chemical discontinuities found in this cluster are not
consistent with a core merger remnant scenario. However, we find chemical
gradients across a spiral "arm" discovered at 73 kpc north of the cluster
center and coincident with the sharp edge of the main cold front in the
cluster. Despite the overall SN Ia iron mass fraction dominance found within
the cooling radius of this cluster, the metal enrichment along the arm,
determined from silicon and iron abundances, is consistent with a lower SN Ia
iron mass fraction (51% +- 14%) than that measured in the surrounding regions
(85% +- 14%). The "arm" is also significantly colder than the surroundings by
0.5-1.6 keV. The arm extends from a boxy colder region surrounding the center
of the cluster, where two other cold fronts are found. This cold arm is a
prediction of current high resolution numerical simulations as a result of an
off-center encounter with a less massive pure dark matter halo and we suggest
that the cold fronts in A496 provide the first clear corroboration of such
model, where the closest encounter happened ~ 0.5 Gyr ago. We also argue for a
possible candidate dark matter halo responsible for the cold fronts in the
outskirts of A496.Comment: 11 ApJ pages, 1 Table, 16 Figures, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journal. For full version with all hi-res figures click on
http://www.astro.lsa.umich.edu/~rdupke/a496sub.pd
Mature open cows are rarely persistently infected with bovine viral diarrhea virus
Bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDv) is an
immunosuppressive virus affecting cattle in a
multitude of ways. The varied presentation
makes this disease difficult to identify in cow herds and the signs of a BVD infection may be very subtle. The syndrome causes economic problems by reducing herd fertility and increasing disease rates. The persistently infected (PI) animal is a
unique reservoir for BVDv. These cattle are
the result of in utero exposure to the noncytopathic biotype of BVDv prior to the development of a competent fetal immune system at about 125 days of gestation. Persistently infected animals are the primary method for the disease to propagate over time. PI cattle consistently shed BVD virus in relatively high levels and this exposure to the breeding herd can result in new PI calves. PI animals propagate BVDv in the herd and decrease pregnancy percentages compared to herds without PI animals. Farms must assess risk and manage for biosecurity when purchasing adult animals with an unknown history of disease exposure. Breeding herds that introduce new animals to
the herd face the risk of importing a BVD PI
animal. To mitigate this risk, PI animals must be accurately identified prior to herd introduction, but visual appraisal is not an accurate method of discovering these animals. Multiple diagnostic tests are available to determine the BVD status of incoming animals and all have an associated cost. Economic feasibility of determining the
BVD PI status of animals depends to a large
degree on the frequency with which PI animals
occur in a population. Previous research has illustrated that PI calves entering the
feedyard phase of production are fairly rare
(about three per 1,000 calves); however, very
little work has been done in mature animals.
This project provides an estimate of BVD PI
frequency for a specific population. This assessment should allow the formulation of a
BVD-specific risk management plan which
addresses the economic efficiency of testing
mature females upon arrival. The primary objective of this research is to determine the prevalence of BVD PI animals in a population of young (3- to 6-year-old)
cows purchased as non-pregnant mature animals. The results can guide biosecurity decisions for producers when purchasing and introducing this class of animal to the herd
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