22,219 research outputs found

    Two Phase Collective Modes in Josephson Vortex Lattice in Intrinsic Josephson Junction Bi2_2Sr2_2CaCu2_2O8+δ_{8+\delta}

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    Josephson plasma excitations in the high TcT_c superconductor Bi2_2Sr2_2CaCu2_2O8+δ_{8+\delta} have been investigated in a wide microwave frequency region (9.8 -- 75 GHz), in particular, in magnetic field applied parallel to the abab plane of the single crystal. In sharp contrast to the case for magnetic fields parallel to the c axis or tilted from the abab plane, it was found that there are two kinds of resonance modes, which are split in energy and possess two distinctly different magnetic field dependences. One always lies higher in energy than the other and has a shallow minimum at about 0.8 kOe, then increases linearly with magnetic field. On the other hand, another mode begins to appear only in a magnetic field (from a few kOe and higher) and has a weakly decreasing tendency with increasing magnetic field. By comparing with a recent theoretical model the higher energy mode can naturally be attributed to the Josephson plasma resonance mode propagating along the primitive reciprocal lattice vector of the Josephson vortex lattice, whereas the lower frequency mode is assigned to the novel phase collective mode of the Josephson vortex lattice, which has never been observed before.Comment: 11 pages and 10 figure

    The DπD\pi form factors from analyticity and unitarity

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    We study the shape parameters of the DπD\pi scalar and vector form factors using as input dispersion relations and unitarity for the moments of suitable heavy-light correlators evaluated with Operator Product Expansions, including O(αs2)O(\alpha_s^2) terms in perturbative QCD. For the scalar form factor, a low energy theorem and phase information on the unitarity cut are implemented to further constrain the shape parameters. We finally determine points on the real axis and isolate regions in the complex energy plane where zeros of the form factors are excluded.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; Seminar given at DAE-BRNS Workshop on Hadron Physics Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Mumbai, India, October 31-November 4, 2011, submitted to Proceeding

    Turbulent boundary layer around a group of obstacles in the direction of flow

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    Results of an investigation of a boundary layer in a turbulent flow on the surface of a wall having a group of obstacles on the path of flow are presented with regard to the mean velocity field, velocity distribution of the two dimensional flow, wall surface shear stresses and Reynolds stresses measured in a downstream cross section where an interference of boundary layers takes place in a flow around adjacent obstacles arranged on the path of flow

    Subprime mortgages and the housing bubble

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    This paper explores the link between the house-price expectations of mortgage lenders and the extent of subprime lending. It argues that bubble conditions in the housing market are likely to spur subprime lending, with favorable price expectations easing the default concerns of lenders and thus increasing their willingness to extend loans to risky borrowers. Since the demand created by subprime lending feeds back onto house prices, such lending also helps to fuel an emerging housing bubble. The paper, however, focuses on the reverse causal linkage, where subprime lending is a consequence rather than a cause of bubble conditions. These ideas are illustrated in a theoretical model, and empirical work tests for a connection between price expectations and the extent of subprime lending.Subprime mortgage ; Global financial crisis

    On the Energetics of Advection-Dominated Accretion Flows

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    Using mean field MHD, we discuss the energetics of optically thin, two temperature, advection-dominated accretion flows (ADAFs). If the magnetic field is tangled and roughly isotropic, flux freezing is insufficient to maintain the field in equipartition with the gas. In this case, we expect a fraction of the energy generated by shear in the flow to be used to build up the magnetic field strength as the gas flows in; the remaining energy heats the particles. We argue that strictly equipartition magnetic fields are incompatible with a priori reasonable levels of particle heating; instead, the plasma β\beta in ADAFs (defined to be the gas pressure divided by magnetic/turbulent pressure) is likely to be \gsim 5; correspondingly, the viscosity parameter α\alpha is likely to be \lsim 0.2Comment: 24 pages, ApJ submitte

    M87 black hole mass and spin estimate through the position of the jet boundary shape break

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    We propose a new method of estimating a mass of a super massive black hole residing in the center of an active galaxy. The active galaxy M87 offers a convenient test case for the method due to the existence of a large amount of observational data on the jet and ambient environment properties in the central area of the object. We suggest that the observed transition of a jet boundary shape from a parabolic to a conical form is associated with the flow transiting from the magnetically dominated regime to the energy equipartition between plasma bulk motion and magnetic field. By coupling the unique set of observations available for the jet kinematics, environment and boundary profile with our MHD modelling under assumption on the presence of a dynamically important magnetic field in the M87 jet, we estimate the central black hole mass and spin. The method leads us to believe that the M87 super massive black hole has a mass somewhat larger than typically accepted so far.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, 3 tables, accepted for publication by MNRA

    Orbital-Order Driven Ferroelectricity and Dipolar Relaxation Dynamics in Multiferroic GaMo4_4S8_8

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    We present the results of broadband dielectric spectroscopy of GaMo4_4S8_8, a lacunar spinel system that recently was shown to exhibit non-canonical, orbitally-driven ferroelectricity. Our study reveals complex relaxation dynamics of this multiferroic material, both above and below its Jahn-Teller transition at TJT=47_{\textrm{JT}}=47 K. Above TJT_{\textrm{JT}}, two types of coupled dipolar-orbital dynamics seem to compete: relaxations within cluster-like regions with short-range polar order like in relaxor ferroelectrics and critical fluctuations of only weakly interacting dipoles, the latter resembling the typical dynamics of order-disorder type ferroelectrics. Below the Jahn-Teller transition, the onset of orbital order drives the system into long-range ferroelectric order and dipolar dynamics within the ferroelectric domains is observed. The coupled dipolar and orbital relaxation behavior of GaMo4_4S8_8 above the Jahn-Teller transition markedly differs from that of the skyrmion host GaV4_4S8_8, which seems to be linked to differences in the structural distortions of the two systems on the unit-cell level.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures + Supplemental Material (2 pages, 2 figures

    Effect of ischemia on the canine large bowel: A comparison with the small intestine

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    Mucosal injury caused by ischemia and reperfusion has been well documented with the small intestine, but little is known about the colon. In the present study, the effect of warm and cold ischemia on the canine colon was studied and compared to that on the small intestine. After in situ flushing, the small intestine and the colon from six beagle dogs were removed and stored for 0.5, 1.5, and 3 hr at 37°C (warm ischemia) or for 1, 6, 12, 24, 36, and 48 hr at 4°C (cold ischemia). Electrophysiology, permeability, biochemistry, and histopathology of the specimens at each ischemic period and after reperfusion in the Ussing chamber were determined. Warm and cold ischemia induced duration-dependent suppression of electrophysiology in both organs, but the colonic mucosa retained higher activity of absorptive enterocytes and cryptic cells than the small intestine. Only the colon showed increased permeability of FITC-conjugated Dextran from the mucosal surface to the submucosal layer after prolonged ischemia. Changes in adenine nucleotides and purine catabolites were not markedly different between the organs. Histopathologic abnormalities during ischemia and after reperfusion were more serious with the small intestine than with the colon. Compared to warm ischemia, hypothermia lessened or delayed these morphofunctional derangements in both organs, which became universally worsened after reperfusion. Colonic mucosa receives morphofunctional derangements from ischemia and reperfusion, but the severity of the damage was much less severe in the colon than in the small intestine
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