25,315 research outputs found
Control of equilibrium pressure-temperature conditions in cryogenic storage
Metered vent controls the pressure within a liquid hydrogen tank. Vent size is chosen to permit a gas flow which corresponds to the boil-off rate necessary to maintain the desired bulk temperature of the cryogen
Note on the derivative of the hyperbolic cotangent
In a letter to Nature (Ford G W and O'Connell R F 1996 Nature 380 113) we
presented a formula for the derivative of the hyperbolic cotangent that differs
from the standard one in the literature by an additional term proportional to
the Dirac delta function. Since our letter was necessarily brief, shortly after
its appearance we prepared a more extensive unpublished note giving a detailed
explanation of our argument. Since this note has been referenced in a recent
article (Estrada R and Fulling S A 2002 J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 35 3079) we
think it appropriate that it now appear in print. We have made no alteration to
the original note
Work relations for a system governed by Tsallis statistics
We derive analogues of the Jarzynski equality and Crooks relation to
characterise the nonequilibrium work associated with changes in the spring
constant of an overdamped oscillator in a quadratically varying spatial
temperature profile. The stationary state of such an oscillator is described by
Tsallis statistics, and the work relations for certain processes may be
expressed in terms of q-exponentials. We suggest that these identities might be
a feature of nonequilibrium processes in circumstances where Tsallis
distributions are found
Semi-inclusive charged-current neutrino-nucleus reactions
The general, universal formalism for semi-inclusive charged-current
(anti)neutrino-nucleus reactions is given for studies of any hadronic system,
namely, either nuclei or the nucleon itself. The detailed developments are
presented with the former in mind and are further specialized to cases where
the final-state charged lepton and an ejected nucleon are presumed to be
detected. General kinematics for such processes are summarized and then
explicit expressions are developed for the leptonic and hadronic tensors
involved and for the corresponding responses according to the usual charge,
longitudinal and transverse projections, keeping finite the masses of all
particles involved. In the case of the hadronic responses, general symmetry
principles are invoked to determine which contributions can occur. Finally, the
general leptonic-hadronic tensor contraction is given as well as the cross
section for the process
Lightcone fluctuations in flat spacetimes with nontrivial topology
The quantum lightcone fluctuations in flat spacetimes with compactified
spatial dimensions or with boundaries are examined. The discussion is based
upon a model in which the source of the underlying metric fluctuations is taken
to be quantized linear perturbations of the gravitational field. General
expressions are derived, in the transverse trace-free gauge, for the summation
of graviton polarization tensors, and for vacuum graviton two-point functions.
Because of the fluctuating light cone, the flight time of photons between a
source and a detector may be either longer or shorter than the light
propagation time in the background classical spacetime. We calculate the mean
deviations from the classical propagation time of photons due to the changes in
the topology of the flat spacetime. These deviations are in general larger in
the directions in which topology changes occur and are typically of the order
of the Planck time, but they can get larger as the travel distance increases.Comment: 25 pages, 5 figures, some discussions added and a few typos
corrected, final version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Coincidence charged-current neutrino-induced deuteron disintegration
Deuteron disintegration by charged-current neutrino (CC) scattering
offers the possibility to determine the energy of the incident neutrino by
measuring in coincidence two of the three resulting particles: a charged lepton
(usually a muon) and two protons, where we show that this channel can be
isolated from all other, for instance, from those with a pion in the final
state. We discuss the kinematics of the process for several detection
scenarios, both in terms of kinematic variables that are natural from a
theoretical point of view and others that are better matched to experimental
situations. The deuteron structure is obtained from a relativistic model
(involving an approximation to the Bethe-Salpeter equation) as an extension of
a previous, well-tested model used in deuteron electrodisintegration. We
provide inclusive and coincidence (semi-inclusive) cross sections for a variety
of kinematic conditions, using the plane-wave impulse approximation,
introducing final-state hadronic exchange terms (plane-wave Born approximation)
and final-state hadronic interactions (distorted-wave Born approximation).Comment: 31 pages, 14 figure
The Formation of Ice Giants in a Packed Oligarchy: Instability and Aftermath
As many as 5 ice giants--Neptune-mass planets composed of 90% ice and rock
and 10% hydrogen--are thought to form at heliocentric distances of 10-25 AU on
closely packed orbits spaced ~5 Hill radii apart. Such oligarchies are
ultimately unstable. Once the parent disk of planetesimals is sufficiently
depleted, oligarchs perturb one another onto crossing orbits. We explore both
the onset and the outcome of the instability through numerical integrations,
including dynamical friction cooling of planets by a planetesimal disk whose
properties are held fixed. To trigger instability and the ejection of the first
ice giant in systems having an original surface density in oligarchs of Sigma ~
1 g/cm^2, the disk surface density s must fall below 0.1 g/cm^2. Ejections are
predominantly by Jupiter and occur within 10 Myr. To eject more than 1 oligarch
requires s < 0.03 g/cm^2. Systems starting with up to 4 oligarchs in addition
to Jupiter and Saturn can readily yield solar-system-like outcomes in which 2
surviving ice giants lie inside 30 AU and have their orbits circularized by
dynamical friction. Our numerical simulations support the idea that planetary
systems begin in more crowded and compact configurations, like those of
shear-dominated oligarchies. In contrast to previous studies, we identify s <
0.1 Sigma as the regime relevant for understanding the evolution of the outer
solar system, and we encourage future studies to concentrate on this regime
while relaxing our assumption of a fixed planetesimal disk.Comment: Accepted to ApJ Jan 27. Incorporates comments from the referee and
community at large. 15 pages, 14 figures, including 7 colo
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