135,176 research outputs found
Vacuum polarization for neutral particles in 2+1 dimensions
In 2+1 dimensions there exists a duality between a charged Dirac particle
coupled minimally to a background vector potential and a neutral one coupled
nonminimally to a background electromagnetic field strength. A constant uniform
background electric current induces in the vacuum of the neutral particle a
fermion current which is proportional to the background one. A background
electromagnetic plane wave induces no current in the vacuum. For constant but
nonuniform background electric charge, known results for charged particles can
be translated to give the induced fermion number. Some new examples with
infinite background electric charge are presented. The induced spin and total
angular momentum are also discussed.Comment: REVTeX, 7 pages, no figur
Tracking intracavernously injected adipose-derived stem cells to bone marrow.
The intracavernous (i.c.) injection of stem cells (SCs) has been shown to improve erectile function in various erectile dysfunction (ED) animal models. However, the tissue distribution of the injected cells remains unknown. In this study we tracked i.c.-injected adipose-derived stem cells (ADSCs) in various tissues. Rat paratesticular fat was processed for ADSC isolation and culture. The animals were then subject to cavernous nerve (CN) crush injury or sham operation, followed by i.c. injection of 1 million autologous or allogeneic ADSCs that were labeled with 5-ethynyl-2-deoxyuridine (EdU). Another group of rats received i.c. injection of EdU-labeled allogeneic penile smooth muscle cells (PSMCs). At 2 and 7 days post injection, penises and femoral bone marrow were processed for histological analyses. Whole femoral bone marrows were also analyzed for EdU-positive cells by flow cytometry. The results show that ADSCs exited the penis within days of i.c. injection and migrated preferentially to bone marrow. Allogenicity did not affect the bone marrow appearance of ADSCs at either 2 or 7 days, whereas CN injury reduced the number of ADSCs in bone marrow significantly at 7 but not 2 days. The significance of these results in relation to SC therapy for ED is discussed
Interaction of Close-in Planets with the Magnetosphere of their Host Stars I: Diffusion, Ohmic Dissipation of Time Dependent Field, Planetary Inflation, and Mass Loss
The unanticipated discovery of the first close-in planet around 51 Peg has
rekindled the notion that shortly after their formation outside the snow line,
some planets may have migrated to the proximity of their host stars because of
their tidal interaction with their nascent disks. If these planets indeed
migrated to their present-day location, their survival would require a halting
mechanism in the proximity of their host stars. Most T Tauri stars have strong
magnetic fields which can clear out a cavity in the innermost regions of their
circumstellar disks and impose magnetic induction on the nearby young planets.
Here we consider the possibility that a magnetic coupling between young stars
and planets could quench the planet's orbital evolution. After a brief
discussion of the complexity of the full problem, we focus our discussion on
evaluating the permeation and ohmic dissipation of the time dependent component
of the stellar magnetic field in the planet's interior. Adopting a model first
introduced by C. G. Campbell for interacting binary stars, we determine the
modulation of the planetary response to the tilted magnetic field of a
non-synchronously spinning star. We first compute the conductivity in the young
planets, which indicates that the stellar field can penetrate well into the
planet's envelope in a synodic period. For various orbital configurations, we
show that the energy dissipation rate inside the planet is sufficient to induce
short-period planets to inflate. This process results in mass loss via Roche
lobe overflow and in the halting of the planet's orbital migration.Comment: 47 pages, 12 figure
Crumpling wires in two dimensions
An energy-minimal simulation is proposed to study the patterns and mechanical
properties of elastically crumpled wires in two dimensions. We varied the
bending rigidity and stretching modulus to measure the energy allocation,
size-mass exponent, and the stiffness exponent. The mass exponent is shown to
be universal at value . We also found that the stiffness exponent
is universal, but varies with the plasticity parameters and
. These numerical findings agree excellently with the experimental
results
Finite-Volume Two-Pion Amplitudes in the I=0 Channel
We perform a calculation in one-loop chiral perturbation theory of the
two-pion matrix elements and correlation functions of an I=0 scalar operator,
in finite and infinite volumes for both full and quenched QCD. We show that
major difficulties arise in the quenched theory due to the lack of unitarity.
Similar problems are expected for quenched lattice calculations of amplitudes with . Our results raise the important question
of whether it is consistent to study amplitudes beyond leading
order in chiral perturbation theory in quenched or partially quenched QCD.Comment: Version to appear on Phys. Lett. B, with only very minor and
stylistic change
Direction discriminating hearing aid system
A visual display was developed for people with substantial hearing loss in either one or both ears. The system consists of three discreet units; an eyeglass assembly for the visual display of the origin or direction of sounds; a stationary general purpose noise alarm; and a noise seeker wand
Formation time distribution of dark matter haloes: theories versus N-body simulations
This paper uses numerical simulations to test the formation time distribution
of dark matter haloes predicted by the analytic excursion set approaches. The
formation time distribution is closely linked to the conditional mass function
and this test is therefore an indirect probe of this distribution. The
excursion set models tested are the extended Press-Schechter (EPS) model, the
ellipsoidal collapse (EC) model, and the non-spherical collapse boundary (NCB)
model. Three sets of simulations (6 realizations) have been used to investigate
the halo formation time distribution for halo masses ranging from dwarf-galaxy
like haloes (, where is the characteristic non-linear mass
scale) to massive haloes of . None of the models can match the
simulation results at both high and low redshift. In particular, dark matter
haloes formed generally earlier in our simulations than predicted by the EPS
model. This discrepancy might help explain why semi-analytic models of galaxy
formation, based on EPS merger trees, under-predict the number of high redshift
galaxies compared with recent observations.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Eccentricity Evolution of Extrasolar Multiple Planetary Systems due to the Depletion of Nascent Protostellar Disks
Most extrasolar planets are observed to have eccentricities much larger than
those in the solar system. Some of these planets have sibling planets, with
comparable masses, orbiting around the same host stars. In these multiple
planetary systems, eccentricity is modulated by the planets' mutual secular
interaction as a consequence of angular momentum exchange between them. For
mature planets, the eigenfrequencies of this modulation are determined by their
mass and semi-major axis ratios. But, prior to the disk depletion, self gravity
of the planets' nascent disks dominates the precession eigenfrequencies. We
examine here the initial evolution of young planets' eccentricity due to the
apsidal libration or circulation induced by both the secular interaction
between them and the self gravity of their nascent disks. We show that as the
latter effect declines adiabatically with disk depletion, the modulation
amplitude of the planets' relative phase of periapse is approximately invariant
despite the time-asymmetrical exchange of angular momentum between planets.
However, as the young planets' orbits pass through a state of secular
resonance, their mean eccentricities undergo systematic quantitative changes.
For applications, we analyze the eccentricity evolution of planets around
Upsilon Andromedae and HD168443 during the epoch of protostellar disk
depletion. We find that the disk depletion can change the planets' eccentricity
ratio. However, the relatively large amplitude of the planets' eccentricity
cannot be excited if all the planets had small initial eccentricities.Comment: 50 pages including 11 figures, submitted to Ap
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