26,031 research outputs found

    The Megamaser Cosmology Project. V. An Angular Diameter Distance to NGC 6264 at 140 Mpc

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    We present the direct measurement of the Hubble constant, yielding the direct measurement of the angular-diameter distance to NGC 6264 using the H2_{2}O megamaser technique. Our measurement is based on sensitive observations of the circumnuclear megamaser disk from four observations with the Very Long Baseline Array, the Green Bank Telescope and the Effelsberg Telescope. We also monitored the maser spectral profile for 2.3 years using the Green Bank Telescope to measure accelerations of maser lines by tracking their line-of-sight velocities as they change with time. The measured accelerations suggest that the systemic maser spots have a significantly wider radial distribution than in the archetypal megamaser in NGC 4258. We model the maser emission as arising from a circumnuclear disk with orbits dominated by the central black hole. The best fit of the data gives a Hubble constant of H0=H_{0} = 68±\pm9 km s1^{-1} Mpc1^{-1}, which corresponds to an angular-diameter distance of 144±\pm19 Mpc. In addition, the fit also gives a mass of the central black hole of (3.09±\pm0.42)×107\times10^{7} MM_{\odot}. The result demonstrates the feasibility of measuring distances to galaxies located well into the Hubble flow by using circumnuclear megamaser disks.Comment: 29 pages, 8 figures, Accepted by Ap

    Lorentz transformation and vector field flows

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    The parameter changes resulting from a combination of Lorentz transformation are shown to form vector field flows. The exact, finite Thomas rotation angle is determined and interpreted intuitively. Using phase portraits, the parameters evolution can be clearly visualized. In addition to identifying the fixed points, we obtain an analytic invariant, which correlates the evolution of parameters.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures. Section IV revised and title change

    Three-body monopole corrections to the realistic interactions

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    It is shown that a very simple three-body monopole term can solve practically all the spectroscopic problems--in the pp, sdsd and pfpf shells--that were hitherto assumed to need drastic revisions of the realistic potentials.Comment: 4 pages, 5figure

    Comment on 'Helmholtz theorem and the v-gauge in the problem of superluminal and instantaneous signals in classical electrodynamics,' by Chubykalo et al [Found. of Phys. Lett, 19, 37-46 (2006)]

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    Fundamental errors in the Chubykalo et al paper [Found. of Phys. Lett, 19, 37-46 (2006)] are highlighted. Contrary to their claim that "... the irrotational component of the electric field has a physical meaning and can propagate exclusively instantaneously," it is shown that this instantaneous component is physically irrelevant because it is always canceled by a term contained into the solenoidal component. This result follows directly from the solution of the wave equation that satisfies the solenoidal component. Therefore the subsequent inference of these authors that there are two mechanisms of transmission of energy and momentum in classical electrodynamics, one retarded and the other one instantaneous, has no basis. The example given by these authors in which the full electric field of an oscillating charge equals its instantaneous irrotational component on the axis of oscillations is proved to be false.Comment: An alternative discussion can be found in the paper: Jose A. Heras, "How potentials in different gauges yield the same retarded electric and magnetic fields," Am. J. Phys. 75, 176-183 (2007

    A finite element method for fully nonlinear elliptic problems

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    We present a continuous finite element method for some examples of fully nonlinear elliptic equation. A key tool is the discretisation proposed in Lakkis & Pryer (2011, SISC) allowing us to work directly on the strong form of a linear PDE. An added benefit to making use of this discretisation method is that a recovered (finite element) Hessian is a biproduct of the solution process. We build on the linear basis and ultimately construct two different methodologies for the solution of second order fully nonlinear PDEs. Benchmark numerical results illustrate the convergence properties of the scheme for some test problems including the Monge-Amp\`ere equation and Pucci's equation.Comment: 22 pages, 31 figure
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