262,412 research outputs found

    A New SX Phe Star in the Globular Cluster M15

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    A new SX Phe star (labelled SXP1) found from BVBV CCD photometry is the first to be discovered in the globular cluster M15. It is a blue straggler and is located 102\arcsec.8 north and 285\arcsec.6 west of the center of M15 \citep{har96}. Mean magnitudes of SXP1 are = 18$\fm$671 and = 18\fm445. The amplitude of variability of SXP1 is measured to be ΔV0.15\Delta V \approx 0.15. From multiple-frequency analysis based on the Fourier decomposition method, we detect two very closely separated pulsating frequencies: the primary frequency at f1=24.630f_1=24.630 c/d for both BB- and VV-bands, and the secondary frequency at f2=24.338f_2=24.338 c/d for the BB-band and 24.343 c/d for the VV-band. This star is the second among known SX Phe stars found to pulsate with very closely separated frequencies (f2/f10.95f_2/f_1\ge0.95). These frequencies may be explained by excitation of nonradial modes; however, we have an incomplete understanding of this phenomenon in the case of SX Phe stars with relatively high amplitudes. The metallicity-period and the variability amplitude-period relations for SXP1 in M15 are found to be consistent with those for SX Phe stars in other globular clusters.Comment: 15 pages with 6 figures, accepted by the Astronomical Journal (scheduled May 2001

    On the anomalous component

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    The so-called anomalous cosmic ray component, which occurs at energies of about 10 MeV/nucleon and consists only of He, N, O, and Ne, has been a subject of interest for more than a decade. The origin of this component is generally considered to be interstellar neutral gas that is ionized and accelerated in the solar wind. The mechanism and the location for the acceleration, however, remains an unsolved problem. A model is used which includes the effects of gradient and curvature drifts and considers the implications of observed spatial gradients of the anomalous component for the location of the acceleration region. It is concluded that if drifts are important the acceleration region cannot lie at the solar poles. It is also concluded that there is no single region for the acceleration which can account for both the observed intensities and gradients in models which include drift effects

    Cortical activity evoked by inoculation needle prick in infants up to one-year old

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    Inoculation is one of the first and most common experiences of procedural pain in infancy. However, little is known about how needle puncture pain is processed by the central nervous system in children. In this study, we describe for the first time the event-related activity in the infant brain during routine inoculation using electroencephalography. Fifteen healthy term-born infants aged 1 to 2 months (n = 12) or 12 months (n = 5) were studied in an outpatient clinic. Pain behavior was scored using the Modified Behavioral Pain Scale. A distinct inoculation event-related vertex potential, consisting of 2 late negative-positive complexes, was observable in single trials after needle contact with the skin. The amplitude of both negative-positive components was significantly greater in the 12-month group. Both inoculation event-related potential amplitude and behavioral pain scores increased with age but the 2 measures were not correlated with each other. These components are the first recordings of brain activity in response to real-life needle pain in infants up to a year old. They provide new evidence of postnatal nociceptive processing and, combined with more traditional behavioral pain scores, offer a potentially more sensitive measure for testing the efficacy of analgesic protocols in this age group

    Clearigate ® Treatments for Control of Giant Salvinia

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    Results of recent field trials using the chelated copper formulation Clearigate® 4 showed that applying a 20% solution by volume was effective for controlling populations of giant salvinia in irrigation canals. 5 Lower rates may be efficacious, thereby reducing chemical use and cost; however, little is known about the dose-response effects of Clearigate® against giant salvinia. The objective of this study was to determine the effective rate range of chelated copper applied as Clearigate® for control of giant salvinia

    Evidence for an incommensurate magnetic resonance in La(2-x)Sr(x)CuO(4)

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    We study the effect of a magnetic field (applied along the c-axis) on the low-energy, incommensurate magnetic fluctuations in superconducting La(1.82)Sr(0.18)CuO(4). The incommensurate peaks at 9 meV, which in zero-field were previously shown to sharpen in q on cooling below T_c [T. E. Mason et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 77, 1604 (1996)], are found to broaden in q when a field of 10 T is applied. The applied field also causes scattered intensity to shift into the spin gap. We point out that the response at 9 meV, though occurring at incommensurate wave vectors, is comparable to the commensurate magnetic resonance observed at higher energies in other cuprate superconductors.Comment: 8 pages, including 4 figure

    Observation of vortices and hidden pseudogap from scanning tunneling spectroscopic studies of electron-doped cuprate superconductor Sr0.9La0.1CuO2Sr_{0.9}La_{0.1}CuO_2

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    We present the first demonstration of vortices in an electron-type cuprate superconductor, the highest TcT_c (= 43 K) electron-type cuprate Sr0.9La0.1CuO2Sr_{0.9}La_{0.1}CuO_2. Our spatially resolved quasiparticle tunneling spectra reveal a hidden low-energy pseudogap inside the vortex core and unconventional spectral evolution with temperature and magnetic field. These results cannot be easily explained by the scenario of pure superconductivity in the ground state of high-TcT_c superconductivity.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Two new graphs have been added into Figure 2. Accepted for publication in Europhysics Letters. Corresponding author: Nai-Chang Yeh (E-mail: [email protected]

    Giant Shapiro Resonances in a Flux Driven Josephson Junction Necklace

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    We present a detailed study of the dynamic response of a ring of NN equally spaced Josephson junctions to a time-periodic external flux, including screening current effects. The dynamics are described by the resistively shunted Josephson junction model, appropriate for proximity effect junctions, and we include Faraday's law for the flux. We find that the time-averaged IVI-V characteristics show novel {\em subharmonic giant Shapiro voltage resonances}, which strongly depend on having phase slips or not, on NN, on the inductance and on the external drive frequency. We include an estimate of the possible experimental parameters needed to observe these quantized voltage spikes.Comment: 8 pages RevTeX, 3 figures available upon reques
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