75,588 research outputs found
Hand-held self-maneuvering unit Patent
Hand-held maneuvering unit for propulsion and attitude control of astronauts in zero or reduced gravity environmen
Escaping the crunch: gravitational effects in classical transitions
During eternal inflation, a landscape of vacua can be populated by the
nucleation of bubbles. These bubbles inevitably collide, and collisions
sometimes displace the field into a new minimum in a process known as a
classical transition. In this paper, we examine some new features of classical
transitions that arise when gravitational effects are included. Using the
junction condition formalism, we study the conditions for energy conservation
in detail, and solve explicitly for the types of allowed classical transition
geometries. We show that the repulsive nature of domain walls, and the de
Sitter expansion associated with a positive energy minimum, can allow for
classical transitions to vacua of higher energy than that of the colliding
bubbles. Transitions can be made out of negative or zero energy (terminal)
vacua to a de Sitter phase, re-starting eternal inflation, and populating new
vacua. However, the classical transition cannot produce vacua with energy
higher than the original parent vacuum, which agrees with previous results on
the construction of pockets of false vacuum. We briefly comment on the possible
implications of these results for various measure proposals in eternal
inflation.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figure
Electron beam compression with electric and magnetic fields
Electron beam compression with electrostatic and magnetostatic field
A new puzzle for random interaction
We continue a series of numerical experiments on many-body systems with
random two-body interactions, by examining correlations in ratios in excitation
energies of yrast = 0, 2, 4, 6, 8 states. Previous studies, limited only to
= 0,2,4 states, had shown strong correlations in boson systems but not
fermion systems. By including states and considering different
scatter plots, strong and realistic correlations appear in both boson and
fermion systems. Such correlations are a challenge to explanations of random
interactions.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
A comparative study of two 47 Tuc giant stars with different s-process enrichment
Here we aim to understand the origin of 47 Tuc's La-rich star Lee 4710. We
report abundances for O, Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Sc, Ti, V, Cr, Co, Ni, Zn, Y, Zr,
Ba, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, and Eu, and present a detailed abundance analysis of two 47
Tuc stars with similar stellar parameters but different slow neutron-capture
(s-)process enrichment. Star Lee 4710 has the highest known La abundance ratio
in this cluster ([La/Fe] = 1.14), and star Lee 4626 is known to have normal
s-process abundances (e.g., [Ba/Eu]). The nucleosynthetic pattern of
elements with Z56 for star Lee 4710 agrees with the predicted yields
of a asymptotic giant branch (AGB) star. Therefore, Lee 4710 may
have been enriched by mass transfer from a more massive AGB companion, which is
compatible with its location far away from the center of this relatively
metal-rich ([Fe/H]) globular cluster. A further analysis comparing
the abundance pattern of Lee 4710 with data available in the literature reveals
that nine out of the 47 Tuc stars previously studied show strong
s-process enhancements that point towards later enrichment by more massive AGB
stars.Comment: ApJL in press. 6 pages, 4 figure
Exact dynamical response of an N-electron quantum dot subject to a time-dependent potential
We calculate analytically the exact dynamical response of a droplet of N
interacting electrons in a quantum dot with an arbitrarily time-dependent
parabolic confinement potential \omega(t) and a perpendicular magnetic field.
We find that, for certain frequency ranges, a sinusoidal perturbation acts like
an attractive effective interaction between electrons. In the absence of a
time-averaged confinement potential, the N electrons can bind together to form
a stable, free-standing droplet.Comment: 10 pages, RevTex, 3 Postscript figures. This version to appear as a
Rapid Communication in PR
Imaging and quantum efficiency measurement of chromium emitters in diamond
We present direct imaging of the emission pattern of individual
chromium-based single photon emitters in diamond and measure their quantum
efficiency. By imaging the excited state transition dipole intensity
distribution in the back focal plane of high numerical aperture objective, we
determined that the emission dipole is oriented nearly orthogonal to the
diamond-air interface. Employing ion implantation techniques, the emitters were
engineered with various proximities from the diamond-air interface. By
comparing the decay rates from the single chromium emitters at different depths
in the diamond crystal, an average quantum efficiency of 28% was measured.Comment: 11 pages and 4 figure
Heat-transfer and pressure measurements on a simulated elevon deflected 30 deg near flight conditions at Mach 7
Heat transfer rates and pressures were obtained on an elevon plate (deflected 30 deg) and a flat plate upstream of the elevon in an 8 foot high-temperature structures tunnel. The flight Reynolds number and flight total enthalpy for altitudes of 26.8 km and 28.7 km at Mach seven were duplicated. The heat transfer and pressure data were used to establish heating and pressure loads. The measured heating was compared with several theoretical predictions, and the closest agreement obtained with a Schultz-Grunow reference enthalpy method of calculation
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