12,628 research outputs found
The classical double copy for Taub-NUT spacetime
The double copy is a much-studied relationship between gauge theory and
gravity amplitudes. Recently, this was generalised to an infinite family of
classical solutions to Einstein's equations, namely stationary Kerr-Schild
geometries. In this paper, we extend this to the Taub-NUT solution in gravity,
which has a double Kerr-Schild form. The single copy of this solution is a
dyon, whose electric and magnetic charges are related to the mass and NUT
charge in the gravity theory. Finally, we find hints that the classical double
copy extends to curved background geometries.Comment: 13 pages, no figures. Minor edits to match journal versio
Spherical orbit closures in simple projective spaces and their normalizations
Let G be a simply connected semisimple algebraic group over an algebraically
closed field k of characteristic 0 and let V be a rational simple G-module of
finite dimension. If G/H \subset P(V) is a spherical orbit and if X is its
closure, then we describe the orbits of X and those of its normalization. If
moreover the wonderful completion of G/H is strict, then we give necessary and
sufficient combinatorial conditions so that the normalization morphism is a
homeomorphism. Such conditions are trivially fulfilled if G is simply laced or
if H is a symmetric subgroup.Comment: 24 pages, LaTeX. v4: Final version, to appear in Transformation
Groups. Simplified some proofs and corrected minor mistakes, added
references. v3: major changes due to a mistake in previous version
Study of a colliding laser-produced plasma by analysis of time and space-resolved image spectra
The interaction of two counter-propagating laser-produced plasmas was studied using simultaneous
imaging and spectroscopic techniques. Spectrally-filtered time-gated ICCD imaging was used
to obtain information about the spatial dynamics and temporal evolution of the collision process.
While, time-resolved imaging spectroscopy was used to determine the spatial and temporal distributions
of electron temperature and density within the interaction region. We examine specifically
the interaction of plasmas whose parameters match those typically used in pulsed laser deposition
of thin films. These low temperature plasmas are highly collisional leading to the creation of a
pronounced stagnation layer in the interaction region
Massive young stellar object W42-MME: The discovery of an infrared jet using VLT/NACO near-infrared images
We report on the discovery of an infrared jet from a deeply embedded infrared
counterpart of 6.7 GHz methanol maser emission (MME) in W42 (i.e. W42-MME). We
also investigate that W42-MME drives a parsec-scale H2 outflow, with detection
of bow shock feature at ~0.52 pc to the north. The inner ~0.4 pc part of the H2
outflow has a position angle of ~18 deg and the position angle of ~40 deg is
found farther away on either side of outflow from W42-MME. W42-MME is detected
at wavelengths longer than 2.2 microns and is a massive young stellar object,
with the estimated stellar mass of 19+-4 Msun. We map the inner circumstellar
environment of W42-MME using VLT/NACO adaptive optics Ks and L' observations at
resolutions ~0.2 arcsec and ~0.1 arcsec, respectively. We discover a collimated
jet in the inner 4500 AU using the L' band, which contains prominent Br alpha
line emission. The jet is located inside an envelope/cavity (extent ~10640 AU)
that is tapered at both ends and is oriented along the north-south direction.
Such observed morphology of outflow cavity around massive star is scarcely
known and is very crucial for understanding the jet-outflow formation process
in massive star formation. Along the flow axis, which is parallel to the
previously known magnetic field, two blobs are found in both the NACO images at
distances of ~11800 AU, located symmetrically from W42-MME. The observed
W42-MME jet-outflow configuration can be used to constrain the jet launching
and jet collimation models in massive star formation.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
Effects of four Fusarium toxins (fumonisin B(1), alpha-zearalenol, nivalenol and deoxynivalenol) on porcine whole-blood cellular proliferation.
The in vitro effects of four Fusarium toxins, fumonisin B1 (FB1), a-zearalenol (a-ZEA), nivalenol
(NIV) and deoxynivalenol (DON), on mitogen-induced cell proliferation were determined
in swine whole-blood cultures. Considering the lack of sufficient toxicological
data both on single and in combination effects, in vitro studies may contribute to risk assessment
of these toxins. Incubation with increasing concentrations of FB1 did not produce
any consequence on proliferation; in contrast a-ZEA, NIV and DON showed an inhibitory
effect. Dose–response curves for each mycotoxin were generated. NIV was found to be
the most potent toxin followed by DON and a-ZEA. The effects of both FB1 þ a-ZEA and
NIVþ DON mixtures were also analysed to investigate possible interactions. The results indicated
that combination of FB1þ a-ZEA produces a synergistic inhibition of porcine cell
proliferation; whereas there is no interaction between DON and NIV on porcine wholeblood
proliferation, at tested concentrations
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