29,772 research outputs found
Observables in the Decays of B to Two Vector Mesons
In general there are nine observables in the decay of a B meson to two vector
mesons defined in terms of polarization correlations of these mesons. Only six
of these can be detected via the subsequent decay angular distributions because
of parity conservation in those decays. The remaining three require the
measurement of the spin polarization of one of the decay products.Comment: 12 pages, no figur
Spherical Orbifolds for Cosmic Topology
Harmonic analysis is a tool to infer cosmic topology from the measured
astrophysical cosmic microwave background CMB radiation. For overall positive
curvature, Platonic spherical manifolds are candidates for this analysis. We
combine the specific point symmetry of the Platonic manifolds with their deck
transformations. This analysis in topology leads from manifolds to orbifolds.
We discuss the deck transformations of the orbifolds and give eigenmodes for
the harmonic analysis as linear combinations of Wigner polynomials on the
3-sphere. These provide new tools for detecting cosmic topology from the CMB
radiation.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1011.427
Microwave emission from spinning dust in circumstellar disks
In the high density environments of circumstellar disks dust grains are
expected to grow to large sizes by coagulation. Somewhat unexpectedly, recent
near-IR observations of PAH features from disks around Herbig Ae/Be stars
demonstrate that substantial amount of dust mass in these disks (up to several
tens of per cent of the total carbon content) can be locked up in particles
with sizes ranging from several to tens of nanometers. We investigate the
possibility of detecting the electric dipole emission produced by these
nanoparticles as they spin at thermal rates (tens of GHz) in cold gas. We show
that such emission peaks in the microwave range and dominates over the thermal
disk emission at \nu 5 % of the
total carbon abundance is locked up in nanoparticles. We test the sensitivity
of this prediction to various stellar and disk parameters and show that if the
potential contamination of the spinning dust component by the free-free and/or
synchrotron emission can be removed, then the best chances of detecting this
emission would be in disks with small opacity, having SEDs with steep sub-mm
slopes (which minimizes thermal disk emission at GHz frequencies). Detection of
the spinning dust emission would provide important evidence for the existence,
properties, and origin of the population of small dust particles in
protoplanetary disks, with possible ramifications for planet formation.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Ap
Apparatus for determining thermophysical properties of test specimens
Apparatus is described for directly measuring the quantity square root of pck of a test specimen such as a wind tunnel model where p is density, c is the specific heat and k is the thermal conductivity of the specimen. The test specimen and a reference specimen are simultaneously subjected to the heat from a heat source. A thermocouple is attached to the reference specimen for producing a first electrical analog signal proportional to the heat rate Q that the test specimen is subjected to and an infrared radiometer that is aimed at the test specimen produces a second electrical analog signal proportional to the surface temperature T of the test specimen. An analog-to-digital converter converts the first and second electrical analog signals to digital signals. These digital signals are applied to a computer for determining the quantity
Automated electronic system for measuring thermophysical properties
Phase-charge coatings are used to measure surface temperature accurately under transient heating conditions. Coating melts when surface reaches calibrated phase-charge temperature. Temperature is monitored by infrared thermometer, and corresponding elapsed time is recorded by electronic data-handling system
Characterization of Active Main Belt Object P/2012 F5 (Gibbs): A Possible Impacted Asteroid
In this work we characterize the recently discovered active main belt object
P/2012 F5 (Gibbs), which was discovered with a dust trail > 7' in length in the
outer main belt, 7 months prior to aphelion. We use optical imaging obtained on
UT 2012 March 27 to analyze the central condensation and the long trail. We
find nuclear B-band and R-band apparent magnitudes of 20.96 and 19.93 mag,
respectively, which give an upper limit on the radius of the nucleus of 2.1 km.
The geometric cross-section of material in the trail was ~ 4 x 10^8 m^2,
corresponding to a dust mass of ~ 5 x 10^7 kg. Analysis of infrared images
taken by the Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer in September 2010 reveals that
the object was below the detection limit, suggesting that it was less active
than it was during 2012, or possibly inactive, just 6 months after it passed
through perihelion. We set a 1-sigma upper limit on its radius during this time
of 2.9 km. P/2012 F5 (Gibbs) is dynamically stable in the outer main belt on
timescales of ~ 1 Gyr, pointing towards an asteroidal origin. We find that the
morphology of the ejected dust is consistent with it being produced by a single
event that occurred on UT 2011 July 7 20 days, possibly as the result of
a collision with a small impactor.Comment: 29 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
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