3,699 research outputs found
Counting lifts of Brauer characters
In this paper we examine the behavior of lifts of Brauer characters in
p-solvable groups where p is an odd prime. In the main result, we show that if
\phi \in IBrp(G) is a Brauer character of a solvable group such that \phi has
an abelian vertex subgroup Q, then the number of lifts of \phi in Irr(G) is at
most |Q|. In order to accomplish this, we develop several results about lifts
of Brauer characters in p-solvable groups that were previously only known to be
true in the case of groups of odd order.Comment: A different proof of Theorem 1 is in the paper "The number of lifts
of Brauer characters with a normal vertex" by J.P. Cossey, M.L.Lewis, and G.
Navarro. Hence, we do not expect to try to publish this note. We feel that
the proof in this paper is of independent interes
Lifts and vertex pairs in solvable groups
Suppose is a -solvable group, where is odd. We explore the
connection between lifts of Brauer characters of and certain local objects
in , called vertex pairs. We show that if is a lift, then the vertex
pairs of form a single conjugacy class. We use this to prove a
sufficient condition for a given pair to be a vertex pair of a lift and to
study the behavior of lifts with respect to normal subgroups
Environmental Studies at Newton Lake, Illinois: Tasks 4, 5, and 7
ID: 8658; issued March 1, 1991INHS Technical Report prepared for Marathon Oil Compan
Growth and form of the mound in Gale Crater, Mars: Slope wind enhanced erosion and transport
Ancient sediments provide archives of climate and habitability on Mars. Gale Crater, the landing site for the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL), hosts a 5-km-high sedimentary mound (Mount Sharp/Aeolis Mons). Hypotheses for mound formation include evaporitic, lacustrine, fluviodeltaic, and aeolian processes, but the origin and original extent of Gale’s mound is unknown. Here we show new measurements of sedimentary strata within the mound that indicate ∼3° outward dips oriented radially away from the mound center, inconsistent with the first three hypotheses. Moreover, although mounds are widely considered to be erosional remnants of a once crater-filling unit, we find that the Gale mound’s current form is close to its maximal extent. Instead we propose that the mound’s structure, stratigraphy, and current shape can be explained by growth in place near the center of the crater mediated by wind-topography feedbacks. Our model shows how sediment can initially accrete near the crater center far from crater-wall katabatic winds, until the increasing relief of the resulting mound generates mound-flank slope winds strong enough to erode the mound. The slope wind enhanced erosion and transport (SWEET) hypothesis indicates mound formation dominantly by aeolian deposition with limited organic carbon preservation potential, and a relatively limited role for lacustrine and fluvial activity. Morphodynamic feedbacks between wind and topography are widely applicable to a range of sedimentary and ice mounds across the Martian surface, and possibly other planets
Group elements whose character values are roots of unity
We classify all finite groups which possesses an element such
that every irreducible character of takes a root of unity value at
Vertical Atmospheric Structure in a Variable Brown Dwarf: Pressure-dependent Phase Shifts in Simultaneous Hubble Space Telescope-Spitzer Light Curves
Heterogeneous clouds or temperature perturbations in rotating brown dwarfs
produce variability in the observed flux. We report time-resolved simultaneous
observations of the variable T6.5 brown dwarf 2MASSJ22282889-431026 over the
wavelength ranges 1.1-1.7 microns and broadband 4.5 microns. Spectroscopic
observations were taken with Wide Field Camera 3 on board the Hubble Space
Telescope and photometry with the Spitzer Space Telescope. The object shows
sinusoidal infrared variability with a period of 1.4 hr at most wavelengths
with peak-to-peak amplitudes between 1.45% and 5.3% of the mean flux. While the
light curve shapes are similar at all wavelengths, their phases differ from
wavelength to wavelength with a maximum difference of more than half of a
rotational period. We compare the spectra with atmospheric models of different
cloud prescriptions, from which we determine the pressure levels probed at
different wavelengths. We find that the phase lag increases with decreasing
pressure level, or higher altitude. We discuss a number of plausible scenarios
that could cause this trend of light curve phase with probed pressure level.
These observations are the first to probe heterogeneity in an ultracool
atmosphere in both horizontal and vertical directions, and thus are an ideal
test case for realistic three dimensional simulations of the atmospheric
structure with clouds in brown dwarfs and extrasolar planets.Comment: Accepted to ApJL, 6 pages, 3 figures. Minor language updates from v1
to match published versio
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