36,030 research outputs found
O2 signature in thin and thick O2-H2O ices
Aims. In this paper we investigate the detectability of the molecular oxygen
in icy dust grain mantles towards astronomical objects. Methods. We present a
systematic set of experiments with O2-H2O ice mixtures designed to disentangle
how the molecular ratio affects the O2 signature in the mid- and near-infrared
spectral regions. All the experiments were conducted in a closed-cycle helium
cryostat coupled to a Fourier transform infrared spectrometer. The ice mixtures
comprise varying thicknesses from 8 10 to 3 m. The
absorption spectra of the O2-H2O mixtures are also compared to the one of pure
water. In addition, the possibility to detect the O2 in icy bodies and in the
interstellar medium is discussed. Results. We are able to see the O2 feature at
1551 cm even for the most diluted mixture of H2O : O2 = 9 : 1,
comparable to a ratio of O2/H2O = 10 % which has already been detected in situ
in the coma of the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. We provide an estimate for
the detection of O2 with the future mission of the James Webb Space Telescope
(JWST).Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, article in press, to appear in A&A 201
The subgroup growth spectrum of virtually free groups
For a finitely generated group denote by the growth
coefficient of , that is, the infimum over all real numbers such
that . We show that the growth coefficient of a virtually
free group is always rational, and that every rational number occurs as growth
coefficient of some virtually free group. Moreover, we describe an algorithm to
compute
Thermal Infrared Observations of Asteroid (99942) Apophis with Herschel
The near-Earth asteroid (99942) Apophis is a potentially hazardous asteroid.
We obtained far-infrared observations of this asteroid with the Herschel Space
Observatory's PACS instrument at 70, 100, and 160 micron. These were taken at
two epochs in January and March 2013 during a close Earth encounter. These
first thermal measurements of Apophis were taken at similar phase angles before
and after opposition. We performed a detailed thermophysical model analysis by
using the spin and shape model recently derived from applying a 2-period
Fourier series method to a large sample of well-calibrated photometric
observations. We find that the tumbling asteroid Apophis has an elongated shape
with a mean diameter of 375 m (of an equal volume sphere) and a
geometric V-band albedo of 0.30. We find a thermal inertia in
the range 250-800 JmsK (best solution at 600
JmsK), which can be explained by a mixture of low
conductivity fine regolith with larger rocks and boulders of high thermal
inertia on the surface. The thermal inertia, and other similarities with
(25143) Itokawa indicate that Apophis might also have a rubble-pile structure.
If we combine the new size value with the assumption of an Itokawa-like density
and porosity we estimate a mass between 4.4 and 6.2 10 kg which is more
than 2-3 times larger than previous estimates. We expect that the newly derived
properties will influence impact scenario studies and influence the long-term
orbit predictions of Apophis.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics, 21 pages, 8
figures, 2 table
Comparison of Dissipative Particle Dynamics and Langevin thermostats for out-of-equilibrium simulations of polymeric systems
In this work we compare and characterize the behavior of Langevin and
Dissipative Particle Dynamics (DPD) thermostats in a broad range of
non-equilibrium simulations of polymeric systems. Polymer brushes in relative
sliding motion, polymeric liquids in Poiseuille and Couette flows, and
brush-melt interfaces are used as model systems to analyze the efficiency and
limitations of different Langevin and DPD thermostat implementations. Widely
used coarse-grained bead-spring models under good and poor solvent conditions
are employed to assess the effects of the thermostats. We considered
equilibrium, transient, and steady state examples for testing the ability of
the thermostats to maintain constant temperature and to reproduce the
underlying physical phenomena in non-equilibrium situations. The common
practice of switching-off the Langevin thermostat in the flow direction is also
critically revisited. The efficiency of different weight functions for the DPD
thermostat is quantitatively analyzed as a function of the solvent quality and
the non-equilibrium situation.Comment: 12 pages, introduction improved, references added, to appear in Phys.
Rev.
Equation of state for distributed mass quark matter
We investigate how the QCD equation of state can be reconstructed by a
continous mass distribution of non-interacting ideal components. We find that
adjusting the mass scale as a function of the temperature leads to results
which are conform to the quasiparticle model, but a temperature independent
distribution also may fit lattice results. The fitted mass distribution tends
to show a mass gap, supporting the physical picture of the quark coalescence in
hadronization.Comment: talk given at SQM2006, 8 pages, submitted to J.Phys.
Spin Waves in Quantum Antiferromagnets
Using a self-consistent mean-field theory for the Heisenberg
antiferromagnet Kr\"uger and Schuck recently derived an analytic expression for
the dispersion. It is exact in one dimension () and agrees well with
numerical results in . With an expansion in powers of the inverse
coordination number () we investigate if this expression can be
{\em exact} for all . The projection method of Mori-Zwanzig is used for the
{\em dynamical} spin susceptibility. We find that the expression of Kr\"uger
and Schuck deviates in order from our rigorous result. Our method is
generalised to arbitrary spin and to models with easy-axis anisotropy \D.
It can be systematically improved to higher orders in . We clarify its
relation to the expansion.Comment: 8 pages, uuencoded compressed PS-file, accepted as Euro. Phys. Lette
A New Phase of Matter: Quark-Gluon Plasma Beyond the Hagedorn Critical Temperature
I retrace the developments from Hagedorn's concept of a limiting temperature
for hadronic matter to the discovery and characterization of the quark-gluon
plasma as a new state of matter. My recollections begin with the transformation
more than 30 years ago of Hagedorn's original concept into its modern
interpretation as the "critical" temperature separating the hadron gas and
quark-gluon plasma phases of strongly interacting matter. This was followed by
the realization that the QCD phase transformation could be studied
experimentally in high-energy nuclear collisions. I describe here my personal
effort to help develop the strangeness experimental signatures of quark and
gluon deconfinement and recall how the experimental program proceeded soon to
investigate this idea, at first at the SPS, then at RHIC, and finally at LHC.
As it is often the case, the experiment finds more than theory predicts, and I
highlight the discovery of the "perfectly" liquid quark-gluon plasma at RHIC. I
conclude with an outline of future opportunities, especially the search for a
critical point in the QCD phase diagram.Comment: To appear in {\em Melting Hadrons, Boiling Quarks} by Rolf Hagedorn
and Johan Rafelski (editor), Springer Publishers, 2015 (open access
Topology and confinement at T \neq 0 : calorons with non-trivial holonomy
In this talk, relying on experience with various lattice filter techniques,
we argue that the semiclassical structure of finite temperature gauge fields
for T < T_c is dominated by calorons with non-trivial holonomy. By simulating a
dilute gas of calorons with identical holonomy, superposed in the algebraic
gauge, we are able to reproduce the confining properties below T_c up to
distances r = O(4 fm} >> \rho (the caloron size). We compute Polyakov loop
correlators as well as space-like Wilson loops for the fundamental and adjoint
representation. The model parameters, including the holonomy, can be inferred
from lattice results as functions of the temperature.Comment: Talk by M. M\"uller-Preussker at "Quark Confinement and Hadron
Structure VII", Ponta Delgada, Azores, Portugal, September 2 - 7, 2006, 4
pages, 2 figures, to appear in the Proceeding
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