2,645 research outputs found
The spatial damping of magnetohydrodynamic waves in a flowing partially ionised prominence plasma
Solar prominences are partially ionised plasmas displaying flows and
oscillations. These oscillations show time and spatial damping and, commonly,
have been explained in terms of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) waves. We study the
spatial damping of linear non-adiabatic MHD waves in a flowing partially
ionised plasma, having prominence-like physical properties. We consider single
fluid equations for a partially ionised hydrogen plasma including in the energy
equation optically thin radiation, thermal conduction by electrons and
neutrals, and heating. Keeping the frequency real and fixed, we have solved the
obtained dispersion relations for the complex wavenumber, k, and have analysed
the behaviour of the damping length, wavelength and the ratio of the damping
length to the wavelength, versus period, for Alfven, fast, slow and thermal
waves.Comment: 28 pages, 9 figure
The statistical significance of the N-S asymmetry of solar activity revisited
The main aim of this study is to point out the difficulties found when trying
to assess the statistical significance of the North-South asymmetry (hereafter
SSNSA) of the most usually considered time series of solar activity. First of
all, we distinguish between solar activity time series composed by integer or
non-integer and dimensionless data, or composed by non-integer and dimensional
data. For each of these cases, we discuss the most suitable statistical tests
which can be applied and highlight the difficulties to obtain valid information
about the statistical significance of solar activity time series. Our results
suggest that, apart from the need to apply the suitable statistical tests,
other effects such as the data binning, the considered units and the need, in
some tests, to consider groups of data, affect substantially the determination
of the statistical significance of the asymmetry. Our main conclusion is that
the assessment of the statistical significance of the N-S asymmetry of solar
activity is a difficult matter and that an absolute answer cannot be given,
since many different effects influence the results given by the statistical
tests. In summary, the quantitative results about the statistical significance
of the N-S asymmetry of solar activity provided by different authors, as well
as the studies about its behaviour, must be considered with care because they
depend from the chosen values of different parameters or from the considered
units.Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics Latex, 9 pages, 4 figure
Aligator.jl - A Julia Package for Loop Invariant Generation
We describe the Aligator.jl software package for automatically generating all
polynomial invariants of the rich class of extended P-solvable loops with
nested conditionals. Aligator.jl is written in the programming language Julia
and is open-source. Aligator.jl transforms program loops into a system of
algebraic recurrences and implements techniques from symbolic computation to
solve recurrences, derive closed form solutions of loop variables and infer the
ideal of polynomial invariants by variable elimination based on Gr\"obner basis
computation
'Caring for Caregivers' Model Addresses Needs of Those Looking After Others
The journal of the Catholic Health Association of the United States (CHA), Health Progress, has published an article, "Aging - 'Caring for Caregivers' Model Addresses Needs of Those Looking After Others," as part of its spring 2023 issue.Family caregivers in the U.S. take on around 24 hours of complex care per week. Yet, nationally, caregiver needs are severely under addressed, leading to serious health consequences for millions of caregivers. This article explains the Caring for Caregivers Model at RUSH University Medical Center, which aims to address these needs by providing skilled and emotional support for caregivers through teams of physical therapists, occupational therapists, nurses, dieticians, pharmacists, and social workers.With support from RRF Foundation for Aging, The John A. Hartford Foundation, the model is expanding as part of the Age-Friendly Health Systems movement, of which the Catholic Health Association is a founding partner
Testing Non-local Nucleon-Nucleon Interactions in the Four-Nucleon Systems
The Faddeev-Yakubovski equations are solved in configuration space for the -particle and n-H continuum states. We test the ability of nonlocal
nucleon-nucleon interaction models to describe 3N and 4N systems.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure
Relativistic bound states in Yukawa model
The bound state solutions of two fermions interacting by a scalar exchange
are obtained in the framework of the explicitly covariant light-front dynamics.
The stability with respect to cutoff of the J= and J=
states is studied. The solutions for J= are found to be stable for
coupling constants below the critical value
and unstable above it. The asymptotic behavior of the
wave functions is found to follow a law. The coefficient
and the critical coupling constant are calculated from an
eigenvalue equation. The binding energies for the J= solutions
diverge logarithmically with the cutoff for any value of the coupling constant.
For a wide range of cutoff, the states with different angular momentum
projections are weakly split.Comment: 22 pages, 13 figures, .tar.gz fil
Description of He tetramer bound and scattering states
Faddeev-Yakubovski equations are solved numerically for 4He tetramer and
trimer states using realistic helium-helium interaction models. We describe the
properties of ground and excited states, and we discuss with a special emphasis
the 4He-4He3 low energy scattering
A new vibrational level of the H molecular ion
A new state of the H molecular ion with binding energy of
1.09 a.u. below the first dissociation limit is predicted, using
highly accurate numerical nonrelativistic quantum calculations. It is the first
L=0 excited state, antisymmetric with respect to the exchange of the two
protons. It manifests itself as a huge p-H scattering length of
Bohr radii.Comment: 6 pages + 3 figure
The effect of the solar corona on the attenuation of small-amplitude prominence oscillations. I. Longitudinal magnetic field
Context. One of the typical features shown by observations of solar
prominence oscillations is that they are damped in time and that the values of
the damping times are usually between one and three times the corresponding
oscillatory period. However, the mechanism responsible for the attenuation is
still not well-known. Aims. Thermal conduction, optically thin or thick
radiation and heating are taken into account in the energy equation, and their
role on the attenuation of prominence oscillations is evaluated. Methods. The
dispersion relation for linear non-adiabatic magnetoacoustic waves is derived
considering an equilibrium made of a prominence plasma slab embedded in an
unbounded corona. The magnetic field is orientated along the direction parallel
to the slab axis and has the same strength in all regions. By solving the
dispersion relation for a fixed wavenumber, a complex oscillatory frequency is
obtained, and the period and the damping time are computed. Results. The effect
of conduction and radiation losses is different for each magnetoacoustic mode
and depends on the wavenumber. In the observed range of wavelengths the
internal slow mode is attenuated by radiation from the prominence plasma, the
fast mode by the combination of prominence radiation and coronal conduction and
the external slow mode by coronal conduction. The consideration of the external
corona is of paramount importance in the case of the fast and external slow
modes, whereas it does not affect the internal slow modes at all. Conclusions.
Non-adiabatic effects are efficient damping mechanisms for magnetoacoustic
modes, and the values of the obtained damping times are compatible with those
observed.Comment: Accepted in A&
Long-term variation in the Sun's activity caused by magnetic Rossby waves in the tachocline
Long-term records of sunspot number and concentrations of cosmogenic
radionuclides (10Be and 14C) on the Earth reveal the variation of the Sun's
magnetic activity over hundreds and thousands of years. We identify several
clear periods in sunspot, 10Be, and 14C data as 1000, 500, 350, 200 and 100
years. We found that the periods of the first five spherical harmonics of the
slow magnetic Rossby mode in the presence of a steady toroidal magnetic field
of 1200-1300 G in the lower tachocline are in perfect agreement with the time
scales of observed variations. The steady toroidal magnetic field can be
generated in the lower tachocline either due to the steady dynamo magnetic
field for low magnetic diffusivity or due to the action of the latitudinal
differential rotation on the weak poloidal primordial magnetic field, which
penetrates from the radiative interior. The slow magnetic Rossby waves lead to
variations of the steady toroidal magnetic field in the lower tachocline, which
modulate the dynamo magnetic field and consequently the solar cycle strength.
This result constitutes a key point for long-term prediction of the cycle
strength. According to our model, the next deep minimum in solar activity is
expected during the first half of this century.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted in ApJ
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