24,907 research outputs found
Fine-grain process modelling
In this paper, we propose the use of fine-grain process
modelling as an aid to software development. We suggest
the use of two levels of granularity, one at the level of the
individual developer and another at the level of the
representation scheme used by that developer. The
advantages of modelling the software development process
at these two levels, we argue, include respectively: (1) the
production of models that better reflect actual
development processes because they are oriented towards
the actors who enact them, and (2) models that are
vehicles for providing guidance because they may be
expressed in terms of the actual representation schemes
employed by those actors. We suggest that our previously
published approach of using multiple “ViewPoints” to
model software development participants, the perspectives
that they hold, the representation schemes that they
deploy and the process models that they maintain, is one
way of supporting the fine-grain modelling we advocate.
We point to some simple, tool-based experiments we have
performed that support our proposition
Axial symmetry and conformal Killing vectors
Axisymmetric spacetimes with a conformal symmetry are studied and it is shown
that, if there is no further conformal symmetry, the axial Killing vector and
the conformal Killing vector must commute. As a direct consequence, in
conformally stationary and axisymmetric spacetimes, no restriction is made by
assuming that the axial symmetry and the conformal timelike symmetry commute.
Furthermore, we prove that in axisymmetric spacetimes with another symmetry
(such as stationary and axisymmetric or cylindrically symmetric spacetimes) and
a conformal symmetry, the commutator of the axial Killing vector with the two
others mush vanish or else the symmetry is larger than that originally
considered. The results are completely general and do not depend on Einstein's
equations or any particular matter content.Comment: 15 pages, Latex, no figure
On three topical aspects of the N=28 isotonic chain
The evolution of single-particle orbits along the N=28 isotonic chain is
studied within the framework of a relativistic mean-field approximation. We
focus on three topical aspects of the N=28 chain: (a) the emergence of a new
magic number at Z=14; (b) the possible erosion of the N=28 shell; and (c) the
weakening of the spin-orbit splitting among low-j neutron orbits. The present
model supports the emergence of a robust Z=14 subshell gap in 48Ca, that
persists as one reaches the neutron-rich isotone 42Si. Yet the proton removal
from 48Ca results in a significant erosion of the N=28 shell in 42Si. Finally,
the removal of s1/2 protons from 48Ca causes a ~50% reduction of the spin-orbit
splitting among neutron p-orbitals in 42Si.Comment: 12 pages with 5 color figure
Absence of localization in a disordered one-dimensional ring threaded by an Aharonov-Bohm flux
Absence of localization is demonstrated analytically to leading order in weak
disorder in a one-dimensional Anderson model of a ring threaded by an
Aharonov-Bohm (A-B) flux. The result follows from adapting an earlier
perturbation treatment of disorder in a superconducting ring subjected to an
imaginary vector potential proportional to a depinning field for flux lines
bound to random columnar defects parallel to the axis of the ring. The absence
of localization in the ring threaded by an A-B flux for sufficiently weak
disorder is compatible with large free electron type persistent current
obtained in recent studies of the above model
Low-Frequency Spectral Turn-Overs in Millisecond Pulsars Studied from Imaging Observations
Measurements of pulsar flux densities are of great importance for
understanding the pulsar emission mechanism and for predictions of pulsar
survey yields and the pulsar population at large. Typically these flux
densities are determined from phase-averaged "pulse profiles", but this method
has limited applicability at low frequencies because the observed pulses can
easily be spread out by interstellar effects like scattering or dispersion,
leading to a non-pulsed continuum component that is necessarily ignored in this
type of analysis. In particular for the class of the millisecond pulsars (MSPs)
at frequencies below 200MHz, such interstellar effects can seriously compromise
de- tectability and measured flux densities. In this paper we investigate MSP
spectra based on a complementary approach, namely through investigation of
archival con- tinuum imaging data. Even though these images lose sensitivity to
pulsars since the on-pulse emission is averaged with off-pulse noise, they are
insensitive to effects from scattering and provide a reliable way to determine
the flux density and spectral indices of MSPs based on both pulsed and unpulsed
components. Using the 74MHz VLSSr as well as the 325MHz WENSS and 1.4GHz NVSS
catalogues, we investigate the imaging flux densities of MSPs and evaluate the
likelihood of spectral turn-overs in this population. We determine three new
MSP spectral indices and identify six new MSPs with likely spectral turn-overs.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
Negative differential conductance induced by spin-charge separation
Spin-charge states of correlated electrons in a one-dimensional quantum dot
attached to interacting leads are studied in the non-linear transport regime.
With non-symmetric tunnel barriers, regions of negative differential
conductance induced by spin-charge separation are found. They are due to a
correlation-induced trapping of higher-spin states without magnetic field, and
associated with a strong increase in the fluctuations of the electron spin.Comment: REVTEX, 4 pages including 3 figures; Accepted for publication on
Physical Review Letter
Spark Model for Pulsar Radiation Modulation Patterns
A non-stationary polar gap model first proposed by Ruderman & Sutherland
(1975) is modified and applied to spark-associated pulsar emission at radio
wave-lengths. It is argued that under physical and geometrical conditions
prevailing above pulsar polar cap, highly non-stationary spark discharges do
not occur at random positions. Instead, sparks should tend to operate in well
determined preferred regions. At any instant the polar cap is populated as
densely as possible with a number of two-dimensional sparks with a
characteristic dimension as well as a typical distance between adjacent sparks
being about the polar gap height. Our model differs, however, markedly from its
original 'hollow cone' version. The key feature is the quasi-central spark
driven by pair production process and anchored to the local pole of a
sunspot-like surface magnetic field. This fixed spark prevents the motion of
other sparks towards the pole, restricting it to slow circumferential drift
across the planes of field lines converging at the local pole. We argue that
the polar spark constitutes the core pulsar emission, and that the annular
rings of drifting sparks contribute to conal components of the pulsar beam. We
found that the number of nested cones in the beam of typical pulsar should not
excced three; a number also found by Mitra & Deshpande (1999) using a
completely different analysis.Comment: 31 pages, 8 figures, accepted by Ap
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