21,088 research outputs found
Tables for correcting airfoil data obtained in the Langley 0.3-meter transonic cryogenic tunnel for sidewall boundary-layer effects
Tables for correcting airfoil data taken in the Langley 0.3-meter Transonic Cryogenic Tunnel for the presence of sidewall boundary layer are presented. The corrected Mach number and the correction factor are minutely altered by a 20 percent change in the boundary layer virtual origin distance. The sidewall boundary layer displacement thicknesses measured for perforated sidewall inserts and without boundary layer removal agree with the values calculated for solid sidewalls
A Near-Solar Metallicity, Nitrogen-Deficient Lyman Limit Absorber Associated with two S0 Galaxies
From UV spectra of the bright quasar PHL 1811 recorded by FUSE and the E140M
configuration on STIS, we have determined the abundances of various atomic
species in a Lyman limit system at z = 0.0809 with log N(H I) = 17.98.
Considerably more hydrogen may be in ionized form, since the abundances of C
II, Si II, S II and Fe II are very large compared to that of O I, when compared
to their respective solar abundance ratios. Our determination [O/H] = -0.19 in
the H I-bearing gas indicates that the chemical enrichment of the gas is
unusually high for an extragalactic QSO absorption system. However, this same
material has an unusually low abundance of nitrogen, [N/O] < -0.59, indicating
that there may not have been enough time during this enrichment for secondary
nitrogen to arise from low and intermediate mass stars. In an earlier
investigation we found two galaxies at nearly the same redshift as this
absorption system and displaced by 34 and 87 kpc from the line of sight. An
r-band image recorded by the ACS on HST indicates these are S0 galaxies. One or
both of these galaxies may be the source of the gas, which might have been
expelled in a fast wind, by tidal stripping, or by ram-pressure stripping.
Subtraction of the ACS point-spread function from the image of the QSO reveals
the presence of a face-on spiral galaxy under the glare of the quasar; although
it is possible that this galaxy may be responsible for the Lyman limit
absorption, the exact alignment of the QSO with the center of the galaxy
suggests that the spiral is the quasar host.Comment: 74 pages, 14 figures; to be published in the Astrophysical Journal
(Part 1) May 1, 2005 issue. A version of the paper with figures of better
quality may be found at http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~ebj/PHL1811_paper.ps
(postscript) or http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~ebj/PHL1811_paper.pdf (pdf
BARYON-BARYON INTERACTIONS IN LARGE N_C CHIRAL PERTURBATION THEORY
Interactions of two baryons are considered in large chiral perturbation
theory and compared to the interactions derived from the Skyrme model. Special
attention is given to a torus-like configuration known to be present in the
Skyrme model.Comment: 18 pages, REVTEX, 8 uuencoded PS figures appende
Supporting Pluralism by Artificial Intelligence: Conceptualizing Epistemic Disagreements as Digital Artifacts
A crucial concept in philosophy and social sciences, epistemic disagreement, has not yet been adequately reflected in the Web. In this paper, we call for development of intelligent tools dealing with epistemic disagreements on the Web to support pluralism. As a first step, we present Polyphony, an ontology for representing and annotating epistemic disagreements
Pion-Nucleon Phase Shifts in Heavy Baryon Chiral Perturbation Theory
We calculate the phase shifts in the pion-nucleon scattering using the heavy
baryon formalism. We consider phase shifts for the pion energy range of 140 to
MeV. We employ two different methods for calculating the phase shifts -
the first using the full third order calculation of the pion-nucleon scattering
amplitude and the second by including the resonances and as
explicit degrees of freedom in the Lagrangian. We compare the results of the
two methods with phase shifts extracted from fits to the pion-nucleon
scattering data. We find good to fair agreement between the calculations and
the phase shifts from scattering data.Comment: 14 pages, Latex, 6figures. Revised version to appear in Phys.Rev.
Hyperon Nonleptonic Decays in Chiral Perturbation Theory Reexamined
We recalculate the leading nonanalytic contributions to the amplitudes for
hyperon nonleptonic decays in chiral perturbation theory. Our results partially
disagree with those calculated before, and include new terms previously omitted
in the P-wave amplitudes. Although these modifications are numerically
significant, they do not change the well-known fact that good agreement with
experiment cannot be simultaneously achieved using one-loop S- and P-wave
amplitudes.Comment: 14 pages, latex, 3 figures, uses axodraw.sty, minor additions, to
appear in Phys. Rev.
1/N_c Expansion of the Heavy Baryon Isgur-Wise Functions
The 1/N_c expansion of the heavy baryon Isgur-Wise functions is discussed.
Because of the contracted SU(2N_f) light quark spin-flavor symmetry, the
universality relations among the Isgur-Wise functions of \Lambda_b to \Lambda_c
and \Sigma_b^{(*)} to \Sigma_c^{(*)} are valid up to the order of 1/N_c^2.Comment: 7 pages, latex, no figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
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