2,706 research outputs found
A First Experimental Limit on In-matter Torsion from Neutron Spin Rotation in Liquid He-4
We report the first experimental upper bound to our knowledge on possible
in-matter torsion interactions of the neutron from a recent search for parity
violation in neutron spin rotation in liquid He-4. Our experiment constrains a
coefficient consisting of a linear combination of parameters involving
the time components of the torsion fields and from the nucleons
and electrons in helium which violates parity. We report an upper bound of
GeV at 68% confidence level and indicate other physical
processes that could be analyzed to constrain in-matter torsion.Comment: 12 pages, typo correcte
Can galaxy growth be sustained through HI-rich minor mergers?
Local galaxies with specific star-formation rates (star-formation rate per
unit mass; sSFR~0.2-10/Gyr) as high as distant galaxies (z~1-3), are very rich
in HI. Those with low stellar masses, log M_star (M_sun)=8-9, for example, have
M_HI/M_star~5-30. Using continuity arguments of Peng et al. (2014), whereby the
specific merger rate is hypothesized to be proportional to the specific
star-formation rate, and HI gas mass measurements for local galaxies with high
sSFR, we estimate that moderate mass galaxies, log M_star (M_sun)=9-10.5, can
acquire sufficient gas through minor mergers (stellar mass ratios ~4-100) to
sustain their star formation rates at z~2. The relative fraction of the gas
accreted through minor mergers declines with increasing stellar mass and for
the most massive galaxies considered, log M_star (M_sun)=10.5-11, this
accretion rate is insufficient to sustain their star formation. We checked our
minor merger hypothesis at z=0 using the same methodology but now with
relations for local normal galaxies and find that minor mergers cannot account
for their specific growth rates, in agreement with observations of HI-rich
satellites around nearby spirals. We discuss a number of attractive features,
like a natural down-sizing effect, in using minor mergers with extended HI
disks to support star formation at high redshift. The answer to the question
posed by the title, "Can galaxy growth be sustained through \HI-rich minor
mergers?", is maybe, but only for relatively low mass galaxies and at high
redshift.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures; in final acceptance by A&
A superconducting microwave multivibrator produced by coherent feedback
We investigate a coherent nonlinear feedback circuit constructed from
pre-existing superconducting microwave devices. The network exhibits emergent
bistable and astable states, and we demonstrate its operation as a latch and
the frequency locking of its oscillations. While the network is tedious to
model by hand, our observations agree quite well with the semiclassical
dynamical model produced by a new software package [N. Tezak et al.,
arXiv:1111.3081v1] that systematically interpreted an idealized schematic of
the system as a quantum optic feedback network.Comment: 9 double-spaced pages, 5 figures and supplement. To appear in Phys.
Rev. Let
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