107 research outputs found
Laser Pulse Heating of Spherical Metal Particles
We consider a general problem of laser pulse heating of spherical metal
particles with the sizes ranging from nanometers to millimeters. We employ the
exact Mie solutions of the diffraction problem and solve heat-transfer
equations to determine the maximum temperature at the particle surface as a
function of optical and thermometric parameters of the problem. The main
attention is paid to the case when the thermometric conductivity of the
particle is much larger than that of the environment, as it is in the case of
metal particles in fluids. We show that in this case at any given finite
duration of the laser pulse the maximum temperature rise as a function of the
particle size reaches an absolute maximum at a certain finite size of the
particle, and we suggest simple approximate analytical expressions for this
dependence which covers the entire range of variations of the problem
parameters and agree well with direct numerical simulations.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Maximum Brightness and Post-Maximum Decline of Light Curves of SN~Ia: A Comparison of Theory and Observations
We compare the observed correlations between the maximum brightness,
postmaximum decline rate and color at maximum light of Type Ia supernovae (SN
Ia) with model predictions.
The observations are based on a total of 40 SN Ia with 29 SN of the Calan
Tololo Supernova Search and 11 local SN which cover a range of 2 mag in the
absolute visual brightness.
The observed correlations are not tight, one dimensional relations.
Supernovae with the same postmaximum decline or the same color have a spread in
visual magnitude of about 0.7 mag. The dispersion in the color-magnitude
relation may result from uncertainties in the distance determinations or the
interstellar reddening within the host galaxy. The dispersion in the decline
rate-magnitude relation suggests that an intrinsic spread in the supernova
properties exists that cannot be accounted for by any single relation between
visual brightness and postmaximum decline.
Theoretical correlations are derived from a grid of models which encompasses
delayed detonations, pulsating delayed detonations, the merging scenario and
helium detonations.
We find that the observed correlations can be understood in terms of
explosions of Chandrasekhar mass white dwarfs.
Our models show an intrinsic spread in the relations of about 0.5 mag in the
maximum brightness and about 0.1 mag in the B-V color.
Our study provides strong evidence against the mechanism of helium detonation
for subluminous, red SN Ia.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, macros ''aaspp.sty'. LaTeX Style. Astrophysical
Journal Letters, submitted Jul. 1995, revised Aug. 1995, resubmitted Sep.
199
Properties of four numerical schemes applied to a scalar nonlinear scalar wave equation with a GR-type nonlinearity
We study stability, dispersion and dissipation properties of four numerical
schemes (Iterative Crank-Nicolson, 3'rd and 4'th order Runge-Kutta and
Courant-Fredrichs-Levy Non-linear). By use of a Von Neumann analysis we study
the schemes applied to a scalar linear wave equation as well as a scalar
non-linear wave equation with a type of non-linearity present in GR-equations.
Numerical testing is done to verify analytic results. We find that the method
of lines (MOL) schemes are the most dispersive and dissipative schemes. The
Courant-Fredrichs-Levy Non-linear (CFLN) scheme is most accurate and least
dispersive and dissipative, but the absence of dissipation at Nyquist
frequency, if fact, puts it at a disadvantage in numerical simulation. Overall,
the 4'th order Runge-Kutta scheme, which has the least amount of dissipation
among the MOL schemes, seems to be the most suitable compromise between the
overall accuracy and damping at short wavelengths.Comment: 9 pages, 8 Postscript figure
Primary Sequences of Protein-Like Copolymers: Levy Flight Type Long Range Correlations
We consider the statistical properties of primary sequences of two-letter HP
copolymers (H for hydrophobic and P for polar) designed to have water soluble
globular conformations with H monomers shielded from water inside the shell of
P monomers. We show, both by computer simulations and by exact analytical
calculation, that for large globules and flexible polymers such sequences
exhibit long-range correlations which can be described by Levy-flight
statistics.Comment: 4 pages, including 2 figures; several references added, some
formulations improve
Pre-Maximum Spectropolarimetry of the Type Ia SN 2004dt
We report observations of SN 2004dt obtained with the Very Large Telescope of
the European Southern Observatory on August 13.30, 2004 when the supernova was
more than a week before optical maximum. SN 2004dt showed strong lines of
\ion{O}{1}, \ion{Mg}{2}, \ion{Si}{2}, and \ion{Ca}{2} with typical velocities
of absorption minimum around 17,000 \kms. The line profiles show material
moving at velocities as high as 25,000 \kms in these lines. The observations
also reveal absorption lines from \ion{S}{2} and \ion{Si}{3} with a velocity of
only 11,000 \kms. The highest velocity in the \ion{S}{2} features can be traced
no higher than 15,000 \kms, much lower than those of O, Mg, Si, and Ca. SN
2004dt has a polarization spectrum unlike any previously observed. The
variation of the polarization across some \ion{Si}{2} lines approaches 2%,
making SN 2004dt the most highly polarized SN Ia ever observed. In contrast,
the strong line of O I at 777.4 nm shows little or no polarization signature.
The degree of polarization points to a richly-structured partially burned
silicon layer with substantial departure from spherical symmetry. A geometry
that would account for the observations is one in which the distribution of
oxygen is essentially spherically symmetric, but with bubbles of
intermediate-mass elements with significant opacity within the oxygen
substrate.Comment: Submitted to Ap
Numerical performance of the parabolized ADM (PADM) formulation of General Relativity
In a recent paper the first coauthor presented a new parabolic extension
(PADM) of the standard 3+1 Arnowitt, Deser, Misner formulation of the equations
of general relativity. By parabolizing first-order ADM in a certain way, the
PADM formulation turns it into a mixed hyperbolic - second-order parabolic,
well-posed system. The surface of constraints of PADM becomes a local attractor
for all solutions and all possible well-posed gauge conditions. This paper
describes a numerical implementation of PADM and studies its accuracy and
stability in a series of standard numerical tests. Numerical properties of PADM
are compared with those of standard ADM and its hyperbolic Kidder, Scheel,
Teukolsky (KST) extension. The PADM scheme is numerically stable, convergent
and second-order accurate. The new formulation has better control of the
constraint-violating modes than ADM and KST.Comment: 20 two column pages, 20 figures, submitted to PRD, two typos
correcte
Nematic Ordering of Rigid Rods in a Gravitational Field
The isotropic-to-nematic transition in an athermal solution of long rigid
rods subject to a gravitational (or centrifugal) field is theoretically
considered in the Onsager approximation. The new feature emerging in the
presence of gravity is a concentration gradient which coupled with the nematic
ordering. For rodlike molecules this effect becomes noticeable at centrifugal
acceleration g ~ 10^3--10^4 m/s^2, while for biological rodlike objects, such
as tobacco mosaic virus, TMV, the effect is important even for normal
gravitational acceleration conditions. Rods are concentrated near the bottom of
the vessel which sometimes leads to gravity induced nematic ordering. The
concentration range corresponding to phase separation increases with increasing
g. In the region of phase separation the local rod concentration, as well as
the order parameter, follow a step function with height.Comment: Full article http://prola.aps.org/abstract/PRE/v60/i3/p2973_
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