142,748 research outputs found
The heating of the thermal plasma with energetic electrons in small solar flares
The energetic electrons deduced from hard X-rays in the thick target model may be responsible for heating of soft X-ray plasma in solar flares. It is shown from OSO-7 studies that if a cutoff of 10 keV is assumed, the total electron is comparable to the thermal plasma energy. However, (1) the soft X-ray emission often appears to begin before the hard X-ray burst, (2) in about one-third of flares there is no detectable hard X-ray emission, and (3) for most events the energy content (assuming constant density) of soft X-ray plasma continues to rise after the end of the hard X-ray burst. To understand these problems we have analyzed the temporal relationship between soft X-rays and hard X-rays for 20 small events observed by ISEE-3 during 1980. One example is shown. The start of soft X-ray and hard X-ray bursts is defined as the time when the counting rates of the 4.8 to 5. keV and 25.8 to 43.2 keV channels, respectively, exceed the background by one standard deviation
Numerical analysis of turbulent coaxial flow with internal heat generation
A computational method with which to obtain a physical understanding of the turbulent field of two coaxial jets entering an axisymmetric chamber is developed. Even the laminar field of this flow is quite complicated. This is due to the many different domains which exist in the field especially in the entrance region. Physically, three regions may be identified: the wall region, the initial region near the axis of symmetry and the mixing region. Advancing downstream, these regions change relative size with the ratio of the two jets' mass fluxes as the main parameter. The turbulent field of these flows is much more complicated due to the difference in the effective transport coefficients and turbulence level from region to region. However, being aware beforehand of the complications and the different regions of this field, the appropriate turbulence model and numerical scheme can be adjusted to treat the problem
Green's function for the Relativistic Coulomb System via Sum Over Perturbation Series
We evaluate the Green's function of the D-dimensional relativistic Coulomb
system via sum over perturbation series which is obtained by expanding the
exponential containing the potential term in the path integral
into a power series. The energy spectra and wave functions are extracted from
the resulting amplitude.Comment: 13 pages, ReVTeX, no figure
Path integral for a relativistic Aharonov-Bohm-Coulomb system
The path integral for the relativistic spinless Aharonov-Bohm-Coulomb system
is solved, and the energy spectra are extracted from the resulting amplitude.Comment: 6 pages, Revte
System implications of large radiometric array antennas
Current radiometric earth and atmospheric sensing systems in the centimeter wavelength range generally employ a directive antenna connected through a single terminal pair to a Dicke receiver. It is shown that this approach does not lend itself to systems with greatly increased spatial resolution. Signal to noise considerations relating to antenna efficiency force the introduction of active elements at the subarray level; thus, if Dicke switching is to be used, it must be distributed throughout the system. Some possible approaches are suggested. The introduction of active elements at the subarray level is found to ease the design constraints on time delay elements, necessary for bandwidth, and on multiple beam generation, required in order to achieve sufficient integration time with high resolution
Block-block entanglement and quantum phase transitions in one-dimensional extended Hubbard model
In this paper, we study block-block entanglement in the ground state of
one-dimensional extended Hubbard model. Our results show that the phase diagram
derived from the block-block entanglement manifests richer structure than that
of the local (single site) entanglement because it comprises nonlocal
correlation. Besides phases characterized by the charge-density-wave, the
spin-density-wave, and phase-separation, which can be sketched out by the local
entanglement, singlet superconductivity phase could be identified on the
contour map of the block-block entanglement. Scaling analysis shows that behavior of the block-block entanglement may exist in both
non-critical and the critical regions, while some local extremum are induced by
the finite-size effect. We also study the block-block entanglement defined in
the momentum space and discuss its relation to the phase transition from
singlet superconducting state to the charge-density-wave state.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure
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