2,077 research outputs found
Chiral symmetry restoration of QCD and the Gross-Neveu model
Two flavour massless QCD has a second order chiral transition which has been
argued to belong to the universality class of the O(4) spin model. The
arguments have been questioned recently, and the transition was claimed to be
mean field behaved. We discuss this issue at the example of the
Gross-Neveu model. A solution is obtained by applying various well established
analytical methods.Comment: LATTICE98(hightemp
The High Chromospheres of the Late A Stars
We report the detection of N V 1239 A transition region emission in HST/GHRS
spectra of the A7 V stars, Alpha Aql and Alpha Cep. Our observations provide
the first direct evidence of 1-3 x 10^5 K material in the atmospheres of normal
A-type stars. For both stars, and for the mid-A--type star Tau3 Eri, we also
report the detection of chromospheric emission in the Si III 1206 A line. At a
B-V color of 0.16 and an effective temperature of 8200 K, Tau3 Eri becomes the
hottest main sequence star known to have a chromosphere and thus an outer
convection zone. We see no firm evidence that the Si III line surface fluxes of
the A stars are any lower than those of moderately active, solar-type, G and K
stars. This contrasts sharply with their coronal X-ray emission, which is >100
times weaker than that of the later-type stars. Given the strength of the N V
emission observed here, it now appears unlikely that the X-ray faintness of the
A stars is due to their forming very cool, <= 1 MK coronae. An alternative
explanation in terms of mass loss in coronal winds remains a possibility,
though we conclude from moderate resolution spectra of the Si III lines that
such winds, if they exist, do not penetrate into the chromospheric Si
III--forming layers of the star, since the profiles of these lines are *not*
blueshifted, and may well be redshifted with respect to the star.Comment: LaTex, 12 pages, 3 Postscript figures, uses aaspp4, accepted by Ap
An Updated Ultraviolet Calibration for the Swift/UVOT
We present an updated calibration of the Swift/UVOT broadband ultraviolet
(uvw1, uvm2, and uvw2) filters. The new calibration accounts for the ~1% per
year decline in the UVOT sensitivity observed in all filters, and makes use of
additional calibration sources with a wider range of colours and with HST
spectrophotometry. In this paper we present the new effective area curves and
instrumental photometric zeropoints and compare with the previous calibration.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables. Presented at GRB 2010 symposium,
Annapolis, November 2010 to be published in American Institute of Physics
Conference Serie
Carrier-wave Rabi flopping signatures in high-order harmonic generation for alkali atoms
We present the first theoretical investigation of carrier-wave Rabi flopping
in real atoms by employing numerical simulations of high-order harmonic
generation (HHG) in alkali species. Given the short HHG cutoff, related to the
low saturation intensity, we concentrate on the features of the third harmonic
of sodium (Na) and potassium (K) atoms. For pulse areas of 2 and Na atoms,
a characteristic unique peak appears, which, after analyzing the ground state
population, we correlate with the conventional Rabi flopping. On the other
hand, for larger pulse areas, carrier-wave Rabi flopping occurs, and is
associated with a more complex structure in the third harmonic. These new
characteristics observed in K atoms indicate the breakdown of the area theorem,
as was already demonstrated under similar circumstances in narrow band gap
semiconductors
Just how hot are the Centauri extreme horizontal branch pulsators?
Past studies based on optical spectroscopy suggest that the five Cen
pulsators form a rather homogeneous group of hydrogen-rich subdwarf O stars
with effective temperatures of around 50 000 K. This places the stars below the
red edge of the theoretical instability strip in the log Teff diagram,
where no pulsation modes are predicted to be excited. Our goal is to determine
whether this temperature discrepancy is real, or whether the stars' effective
temperatures were simply underestimated. We present a spectral analysis of two
rapidly pulsating extreme horizontal branch (EHB) stars found in Cen.
We obtained Hubble Space Telescope/COS UV spectra of two Cen
pulsators, V1 and V5, and used the ionisation equilibrium of UV metallic lines
to better constrain their effective temperatures. As a by-product we also
obtained FUV lightcurves of the two pulsators. Using the relative strength of
the N IV and N V lines as a temperature indicator yields Teff values close to
60 000 K, significantly hotter than the temperatures previously derived. From
the FUV light curves we were able to confirm the main pulsation periods known
from optical data. With the UV spectra indicating higher effective temperatures
than previously assumed, the sdO stars would now be found within the predicted
instability strip. Such higher temperatures also provide consistent
spectroscopic masses for both the cool and hot EHB stars of our previously
studied sample.Comment: 9 pages, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
A Bayesian approach to the estimation of maps between riemannian manifolds
Let \Theta be a smooth compact oriented manifold without boundary, embedded
in a euclidean space and let \gamma be a smooth map \Theta into a riemannian
manifold \Lambda. An unknown state \theta \in \Theta is observed via
X=\theta+\epsilon \xi where \epsilon>0 is a small parameter and \xi is a white
Gaussian noise. For a given smooth prior on \Theta and smooth estimator g of
the map \gamma we derive a second-order asymptotic expansion for the related
Bayesian risk. The calculation involves the geometry of the underlying spaces
\Theta and \Lambda, in particular, the integration-by-parts formula. Using this
result, a second-order minimax estimator of \gamma is found based on the modern
theory of harmonic maps and hypo-elliptic differential operators.Comment: 20 pages, no figures published version includes correction to eq.s
31, 41, 4
On The Age Estimation of LBDS 53W091
The recent spectral analysis of LBDS 53W091 by Spinrad and his collaborators
has suggested that this red galaxy at z=1.55 is at least 3.5 Gyr old. This
imposes an important constraint on cosmology, suggesting that this galaxy
formed at z > 6.5, assuming recent estimates of cosmological parameters. We
have performed chi^2 tests to the continuum of this galaxy using its UV
spectrum and photometric data (RJHK). We have used the updated Yi models that
are based on the Yale tracks. We find it extremely difficult to reproduce such
large age estimates, under the assumption of the most probable input
parameters. Using the same configuration as in Spinrad et al. (solar abundance
models), our analysis suggests an age of approximately 1.4 -- 1.8 Gyr. The
discrepancy between Spinrad et al.'s age estimate (based on the 1997 Jimenez
models) and ours originates from the large difference in the model integrated
spectrum: the Jimenez models are much bluer than the Yi models and the Bruzual
\& Charlot (BC) models. Preliminary tests favor the Yi and BC models. The
updated age estimate of LBDS 53W091 would suggest that this galaxy formed
approximately at z=2-3.Comment: LaTeX, 18 eps files Accepted for publication in ApJ (Feb 10, 2000,
vol 530), uses emulateapj.st
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