3,723 research outputs found
Stable periodic waves in coupled Kuramoto-Sivashinsky - Korteweg-de Vries equations
Periodic waves are investigated in a system composed of a
Kuramoto-Sivashinsky - Korteweg-de Vries (KS-KdV) equation, which is linearly
coupled to an extra linear dissipative equation. The model describes, e.g., a
two-layer liquid film flowing down an inclined plane. It has been recently
shown that the system supports stable solitary pulses. We demonstrate that a
perturbation analysis, based on the balance equation for the field momentum,
predicts the existence of stable cnoidal waves (CnWs) in the same system. It is
found that the mean value U of the wave field u in the main subsystem, but not
the mean value of the extra field, affects the stability of the periodic waves.
Three different areas can be distinguished inside the stability region in the
parameter plane (L,U), where L is the wave's period. In these areas, stable
are, respectively, CnWs with positive velocity, constant solutions, and CnWs
with negative velocity. Multistability, i.e., the coexistence of several
attractors, including the waves with several maxima per period, appears at
large value of L. The analytical predictions are completely confirmed by direct
simulations. Stable waves are also found numerically in the limit of vanishing
dispersion, when the KS-KdV equation goes over into the KS one.Comment: a latex text file and 16 eps files with figures. Journal of the
Physical Society of Japan, in pres
Travelling-waves consistent with turbulence-driven secondary flow in a square duct
We present numerically determined travelling-wave solutions for
pressure-driven flow through a straight duct with a square cross-section. This
family of solutions represents typical coherent structures (a staggered array
of counter-rotating streamwise vortices and an associated low-speed streak) on
each wall. Their streamwise average flow in the cross-sectional plane
corresponds to an eight vortex pattern much alike the secondary flow found in
the turbulent regime
Exact fuzzy sphere thermodynamics in matrix quantum mechanics
We study thermodynamical properties of a fuzzy sphere in matrix quantum
mechanics of the BFSS type including the Chern-Simons term. Various quantities
are calculated to all orders in perturbation theory exploiting the one-loop
saturation of the effective action in the large-N limit. The fuzzy sphere
becomes unstable at sufficiently strong coupling, and the critical point is
obtained explicitly as a function of the temperature. The whole phase diagram
is investigated by Monte Carlo simulation. Above the critical point, we obtain
perfect agreement with the all order results. In the region below the critical
point, which is not accessible by perturbation theory, we observe the Hagedorn
transition. In the high temperature limit our model is equivalent to a totally
reduced model, and the relationship to previously known results is clarified.Comment: 22 pages, 14 figures, (v2) some typos correcte
Smearing Effect in Plane-Wave Matrix Model
Motivated by the usual D2-D0 system, we consider a configuration composed of
flat membrane and fuzzy sphere membrane in plane-wave matrix model, and
investigate the interaction between them. The configuration is shown to lead to
a non-trivial interaction potential, which indicates that the fuzzy sphere
membrane really behaves like a graviton, giant graviton. Interestingly, the
interaction is of r^{-3} type rather than r^{-5} type. We interpret it as the
interaction incorporating the smearing effect due to the fact that the
considered supersymmetric flat membrane should span and spin in four
dimensional subspace of plane-wave geometry.Comment: 26 pages; added referenc
Impact of Chandra calibration uncertainties on galaxy cluster temperatures: application to the Hubble Constant
We perform a uniform, systematic analysis of a sample of 38 X-ray galaxy
clusters with three different Chandra calibrations. The temperatures change
systematically between calibrations. Cluster temperatures change on average by
roughly ~6% for the smallest changes and roughly ~13% for the more extreme
changes between calibrations. We explore the effects of the changing cluster
spectral properties on Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (SZE) and X-ray determinations
of the Hubble constant. The Hubble parameter changes by +10% and -13% between
the current calibration and two previous Chandra calibrations, indicating that
changes in the cluster temperature basically explain the entire change in H_0.
Although this work focuses on the difference in spectral properties and
resultant Hubble parameters between the calibrations, it is intriguing to note
that the newer calibrations favor a lower value of the Hubble constant, H_0 ~
60 km s-1 Mpc-1, typical of results from SZE/X-ray distances. Both galaxy
clusters themselves and the details of the instruments must be known precisely
to enable reliable precision cosmology with clusters, which will be feasible
with combined efforts from ongoing observations and planned missions and
observatories covering a wide range of wavelengths.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures; updated to match published versio
X-ray study of the double radio relic galaxy cluster CIZA J2242.8+5301
Content: We present the results from observations of the merging
cluster of galaxies CIZA J2242.8+5301 at =0.192. Aims. To study the physics
of gas heating and particle acceleration in cluster mergers, we investigated
the X-ray emission from CIZA J2242.8+5301, which hosts two giant radio relics
in the northern/southern part of the cluster. Methods. We analyzed data from
three-pointed Suzaku observations of CIZA J2242.8+5301 to derive the
temperature distribution in four different directions. Results: The
Intra-Cluster Medium (ICM) temperature shows a remarkable drop from
8.5 keV to 2.7 keV across the northern radio
relic. The temperature drop is consistent with a Mach number and a shock velocity
. We also confirm the
temperature drop across the southern radio relic. However, the ICM temperature
beyond this relic is much higher than beyond the northern one, which gives a
Mach number and shock velocity
. These results agree with
other systems showing a relationship between the radio relics and shock fronts
which are induced by merging activity. We compare the X-ray derived Mach
numbers with the radio derived Mach numbers from the radio spectral index under
the assumption of diffusive shock acceleration in the linear test particle
regime. For the northern radio relic, the Mach numbers derived from X-ray and
radio observations agree with each other. Based on the shock velocities, we
estimate that CIZA J2242.8+5301 is observed approximately 0.6 Gyr after core
passage. The magnetic field pressure at the northern relic is estimated to be
9% of the thermal pressure.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, A&A accepte
Phylogeny of the Hawkmoth tribe Ambulycini: mitogenomes from museum specimens resolve major relationships
Ambulycini are a cosmopolitan tribe of the moth family Sphingidae, comprised of ten genera, three of which are found in tropical Asia, four in the Neotropics, one in Africa, one in the Middle East and one restricted to the islands of New Caledonia. Recent phylogenetic analyses of the tribe have yielded conflicting results, and some have suggested a close relationship of the monobasic New Caledonian genus Compsulyx Holloway, 1979 to the Neotropical ones, despite being found on opposite sides of the Pacific Ocean. Here we investigate relationships within the tribe using full mitochondrial genomes, mainly derived from dry-pinned museum collections material. Mitogenomic data were obtained for 19 species representing nine of the ten Ambulycini genera. Phylogenetic trees are in agreement with a tropical Asian origin for the tribe. Furthermore, results indicate that the Neotropical genus Adhemarius Oiticica Filho, 1939 is paraphyletic and support the notion that Orecta Rothschild & Jordan 1903 and Trogolegnum Rothschild & Jordan, 1903 may need to be synonymized. Finally, in our analysis the Neotropical genera do not collectively form a monophyletic group, due to a clade comprising the New Caledonian genus Compsulyx and the African genus Batocnema Rothschild & Jordan, 1903 being placed as sister to the Neotropical genus Protambulyx Rothschild & Jordan, 1903. This finding implies a complex biogeographic history and suggests the evolution of the tribe involved at least two long-distance dispersal events
Extracting Galaxy Cluster Gas Inhomogeneity from X-ray Surface Brightness: A Statistical Approach and Application to Abell 3667
Our previous analysis indicates that small-scale fluctuations in the
intracluster medium (ICM) from cosmological hydrodynamic simulations follow the
lognormal distribution. In order to test the lognormal nature of the ICM
directly against X-ray observations of galaxy clusters, we develop a method of
extracting statistical information about the three-dimensional properties of
the fluctuations from the two-dimensional X-ray surface brightness.
We first create a set of synthetic clusters with lognormal fluctuations.
Performing mock observations of these synthetic clusters, we find that the
resulting X-ray surface brightness fluctuations also follow the lognormal
distribution fairly well. Systematic analysis of the synthetic clusters
provides an empirical relation between the density fluctuations and the X-ray
surface brightness. We analyze \chandra observations of the galaxy cluster
Abell 3667, and find that its X-ray surface brightness fluctuations follow the
lognormal distribution. While the lognormal model was originally motivated by
cosmological hydrodynamic simulations, this is the first observational
confirmation of the lognormal signature in a real cluster. Finally we check the
synthetic cluster results against clusters from cosmological hydrodynamic
simulations. As a result of the complex structure exhibited by simulated
clusters, the empirical relation shows large scatter. Nevertheless we are able
to reproduce the true value of the fluctuation amplitude of simulated clusters
within a factor of two from their X-ray surface brightness alone.
Our current methodology combined with existing observational data is useful
in describing and inferring the statistical properties of the three dimensional
inhomogeneity in galaxy clusters.Comment: 34 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Sodium temperature lidar based on injection seeded Nd:YAG pulse lasers using a sum-frequency generation technique
We report on a sodium (Na) temperature lidar based on two injection seeded Nd:YAG pulse lasers using single-pass sum-frequency generation. The laser power at 589 nm is 400 mW (40 mJ per pulse at a repetition rate of 10 Hz) and the pulse width is 22 nsec FWHM. The narrowband laser tuned to the Doppler broadened Na D(2) spectrum enables us to measure the temperature of the mesopause region (80-115 km). This solid-state transportable system demonstrated high performance and capability at Syowa Station in Antarctica for 3 years and at Uji in Japan for an additional year without any major operational troubles. (C) 2011 Optical Society of AmericaArticleOPTICS EXPRESS. 19(4):3553-3561 (2011)journal articl
On the shape of a D-brane bound state and its topology change
As is well known, coordinates of D-branes are described by NxN matrices. From
generic non-commuting matrices, it is difficult to extract physics, for
example, the shape of the distribution of positions of D-branes. To overcome
this problem, we generalize and elaborate on a simple prescription, first
introduced by Hotta, Nishimura and Tsuchiya, which determines the most
appropriate gauge to make the separation between diagonal components (D-brane
positions) and off-diagonal components. This prescription makes it possible to
extract the distribution of D-branes directly from matrices. We verify the
power of it by applying it to Monte-Carlo simulations for various lower
dimensional Yang-Mills matrix models. In particular, we detect the topology
change of the D-brane bound state for a phase transition of a matrix model; the
existence of this phase transition is expected from the gauge/gravity duality,
and the pattern of the topology change is strikingly similar to the counterpart
in the gravity side, the black hole/black string transition. We also propose a
criterion, based on the behavior of the off-diagonal components, which
determines when our prescription gives a sensible definition of D-brane
positions. We provide numerical evidence that our criterion is satisfied for
the typical distance between D-branes. For a supersymmetric model, positions of
D-branes can be defined even at a shorter distance scale. The behavior of
off-diagonal elements found in this analysis gives some support for previous
studies of D-brane bound states.Comment: 29 pages, 16 figure
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