4,043 research outputs found
Fractal Strings and Multifractal Zeta Functions
For a Borel measure on the unit interval and a sequence of scales that tend
to zero, we define a one-parameter family of zeta functions called multifractal
zeta functions. These functions are a first attempt to associate a zeta
function to certain multifractal measures. However, we primarily show that they
associate a new zeta function, the topological zeta function, to a fractal
string in order to take into account the topology of its fractal boundary. This
expands upon the geometric information garnered by the traditional geometric
zeta function of a fractal string in the theory of complex dimensions. In
particular, one can distinguish between a fractal string whose boundary is the
classical Cantor set, and one whose boundary has a single limit point but has
the same sequence of lengths as the complement of the Cantor set. Later work
will address related, but somewhat different, approaches to multifractals
themselves, via zeta functions, partly motivated by the present paper.Comment: 32 pages, 9 figures. This revised version contains new sections and
figures illustrating the main results of this paper and recent results from
others. Sections 0, 2, and 6 have been significantly rewritte
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From Waste-Heat Recovery to Refrigeration: Compositional Tuning of Magnetocaloric Mn 1+ x Sb
Avaliação da severidade da murcha de fusário em tomateiro em diferentes níveis de água no solo por meio do teor de clorollila das folhas.
O objetivo deste experimento foi avaliar a severidade da murcha de fusário em 4 diferentes niveis de água no solo por meio do teor de clorofila das folhas.Resumo 820-1
Avaliação da severidade da murcha de fusário em tomateiro em diferentes níveis de água no solo por meio da temperatura na superficie foliar.
O objetivo do trabalho foi avaliar o efeito do manejo de água de irrigação por meio de diferentes níveis de água no solo sobre o desenvolvimento temporal da murcha de fusário em tomateiro.Resumo 849-1
The Long Term Stability of Oscillations During Thermonuclear X-ray Bursts: Constraining the Binary X-ray Mass Function
We report on the long term stability of the millisecond oscillations observed
with the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) during thermonuclear X-ray bursts
from the low mass X-ray binaries (LMXB) 4U 1728-34 and 4U 1636-53. We show that
bursts from 4U 1728-34 spanning more than 1.5 years have observed asymptotic
oscillation periods which are within 0.2 microsec. of each other, well within
the magnitude which could be produced by the orbital motion of the neutron star
in a typical LMXB. This stability implies a timescale to change the oscillation
period of > 23,000 years, suggesting a highly stable process such as stellar
rotation as the oscillation mechanism. We show that period offsets in three
distinct bursts from 4U 1636-53 can be plausibly interpreted as due to orbital
motion of the neutron star in this 3.8 hour binary system. We discuss the
constraints on the mass function which can in principle be derived using this
technique.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures. AASTeX, to be published in the Astrophysical
Journal Letter
Survey of charge symmetry breaking operators for dd -> alpha pi0
The charge-symmetry-breaking amplitudes for the recently observed d d ->
alpha pi0 reaction are investigated. Chiral perturbation theory is used to
classify and identify the leading-order terms. Specific forms of the related
one- and two-body tree level diagrams are derived. As a first step toward a
full calculation, a few tree-level two-body diagrams are evaluated at each
considered order, using a simplified set of d and alpha wave functions and a
plane-wave approximation for the initial dd state. The leading-order
pion-exchange term is shown to be suppressed in this model because of poor
overlap of the initial and final states. The higher-order one-body and
short-range (heavy-meson-exchange) amplitudes provide better matching between
the initial and final states and therefore contribute significantly and
coherently to the cross section. The consequences this might have for a full
calculation, with realistic wave functions and a more complete set of
amplitudes, are discussed.Comment: REVTeX 4, 35 pages, 8 eps figures, submitted to PR
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