4,114 research outputs found
Wandering globular clusters: the first dwarf galaxies in the universe?
In the last decade we witness an advent of new types of dwarf stellar systems
in cluding ultra-compact dwarfs, ultra-faint dwarf spheroidals, and exotic
globular clusters, breaking the old simple paradigm for dwarf galaxies and
globular clusters. These objects become more intriguing, and understanding of
these new findings be comes more challenging. Recently we discovered a new type
of large scale structure in the Virgo cluster of galaxies: it is composed of
globular clusters. Globular clusters in Virgo are found wandering between
galaxies (intracluster globular clusters) as well as in galaxies. These
intracluster globular clusters fill a significant fraction in the area of the
Virgo cluster and they are dominated by blue globular clusters. These
intracluster globular clusters may be closely related with the first dwarf
galaxies in the universe.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, Conference Proceedings: "A Universe of Dwarf
Galaxies", 14-18 June 2010, Lyon, Franc
Illuminating interfaces between phases of a U(1) x U(1) gauge theory
We study reflection and transmission of light at the interface between
different phases of a U(1) x U(1) gauge theory. On each side of the interface,
one can choose a basis so that one generator is free (allowing propagation of
light), and the orthogonal one may be free, Higgsed, or confined. However, the
basis on one side will in general be rotated relative to the basis on the other
by some angle alpha. We calculate reflection and transmission coefficients for
both polarizations of light and all 8 types of boundary, for arbitrary alpha.
We find that an observer measuring the behavior of light beams at the boundary
would be able to distinguish 4 different types of boundary, and we show how the
remaining ambiguity arises from the principle of complementarity
(indistinguishability of confined and Higgs phases) which leaves observables
invariant under a global electric/magnetic duality transformation. We also
explain the seemingly paradoxical behavior of Higgs/Higgs and confined/confined
boundaries, and clarify some previous arguments that confinement must involve
magnetic monopole condensation.Comment: RevTeX, 12 page
Model System for the Production of Enzyme Modified Cheese (EMC) Flavours.
End of Project ReportNatural cheese flavour ingredients, in the form of enzyme modified
cheeses (EMCs), are widely used in the convenience food industry
and can provide high volume added opportunities for the cheese
industry.
Many EMCs are produced using commercial enzyme preparations
and previous studies have indicated that they contain side activities in
addition to their stated main activity (see DPRC Report No.10).
Therefore, it is critical that the exact enzyme complement of these
preparations are known before they can be used to produce EMC of
specific requirements on a consistent basis.
The scientific basis of rapid enzyme mediated flavour formation in the
production of EMCs is not fully understood. Consequently this
knowledge gap is a major obstacle in the development of high value
cheese flavour ingredients.
Hence, a major objective of this project was to deepen the scientific
understanding of flavour formation with a view to the production of
natural enzyme-mediated dairy flavour ingredients with commercial
potential.
The ultimate aim was to develop the technology to produce
customised high value dairy flavour ingredients in an optimised
process.Dairy LevyDepartment of Agriculture, Food and the Marin
A numerical method for rapid estimation of drawbead restraining force based on non-linear, anisotropic constitutive equations
AbstractNumerical procedures to predict drawbead restraining forces (DBRF) were developed based on the semi-analytical (non-finite-element) hybrid membrane/bending method. The section forces were derived by equating the work to pull sheet material through the drawbead to the work required to bend and unbend the sheet along with frictional forces on drawbead radii. As a semi-analytical method, the new approach was especially useful to analyze the effects of various constitutive parameters with less computational cost. The present model could accommodate general non-quadratic anisotropic yield function and non-linear anisotropic hardening under the plane strain condition. Several numerical sensitivity analyses for examining the effects of process parameters and material properties including the Bauschinger effect and the shape of yield surface on DBRF were presented. Finally, the DBRFs of SPCC steel sheet passing a single circular drawbead were predicted and compared with the measurements
Modular Invariance and Characteristic Numbers
We show that a general miraculous cancellation formula, the divisibility of
certain characteristic numbers and some other topologiclal results are con-
sequences of the modular invariance of elliptic operators on loop spaces.
Previously we have shown that modular invariance also implies the rigidity of
many elliptic operators on loop spaces.Comment: 14 page
Geometric approach to nonvariational singular elliptic equations
In this work we develop a systematic geometric approach to study fully
nonlinear elliptic equations with singular absorption terms as well as their
related free boundary problems. The magnitude of the singularity is measured by
a negative parameter , for , which reflects on
lack of smoothness for an existing solution along the singular interface
between its positive and zero phases. We establish existence as well sharp
regularity properties of solutions. We further prove that minimal solutions are
non-degenerate and obtain fine geometric-measure properties of the free
boundary . In particular we show sharp
Hausdorff estimates which imply local finiteness of the perimeter of the region
and a.e. weak differentiability property of
.Comment: Paper from D. Araujo's Ph.D. thesis, distinguished at the 2013 Carlos
Gutierrez prize for best thesis, Archive for Rational Mechanics and Analysis
201
Quasiclassical fluctuations of the superconductor proximity gap in a chaotic system
We calculate the sample-to-sample fluctuations in the excitation gap of a
chaotic dynamical system coupled by a narrow lead to a superconductor. Quantum
fluctuations on the order of magnitude of the level spacing, predicted by
random-matrix theory, apply if (with the
Ehrenfest time and the Thouless energy). For \tau_E\agt\hbar/ E_T the
fluctuations are much greater than the level spacing. We demonstrate the
quasiclassical nature of the gap fluctuations in the large- regime by
correlating them to an integral over the classical dwell-time distribution.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
CP Violating Bubble Wall Profiles
We solve the equations of motion for a CP violating phase between the two
Higgs doublets at the bubble wall of the MSSM electroweak phase transition.
Contrary to earlier suggestions, we do not find indications of spontaneous
``transitional'' CP violation in the MSSM. On the other hand, in case there is
explicit CP violation in the stop and chargino/neutralino sectors, the relative
phase between the Higgses does become space dependent, but only mildly even in
the maximal case. We also demonstrate that spontaneous CP violation within the
bubble wall could occur, e.g., if the Higgs sector of the MSSM were
supplemented by a singlet. Finally we point out some implications for
baryogenesis computations
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