1,526 research outputs found

    Massless Particles in Arbitrary Dimensions

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    Various properties of two kinds of massless representations of the n-conformal (or (n+1)-De Sitter) group G~n=SO~0(2,n)\tilde{G}_n=\widetilde{SO}_0(2,n) are investigated for n2n\ge2. It is found that, for space-time dimensions n3n\ge3, the situation is quite similar to the one of the n=4 case for SnS_n-massless representations of the n-De Sitter group SO~0(2,n1)\widetilde{SO}_0(2,n-1). These representations are the restrictions of the singletons of G~n\tilde{G}_n. The main difference is that they are not contained in the tensor product of two UIRs with the same sign of energy when n>4, whereas it is the case for another kind of massless representation. Finally some examples of Gupta-Bleuler triplets are given for arbitrary spin and n3n\ge3.Comment: 33 pages, LaTeX2e. To be published in Reviews in Math. Phy

    Masslessness in nn-dimensions

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    We determine the representations of the ``conformal'' group SOˉ0(2,n){\bar{SO}}_0(2, n), the restriction of which on the ``Poincar\'e'' subgroup SOˉ0(1,n1).Tn{\bar{SO}}_0(1, n-1).T_n are unitary irreducible. We study their restrictions to the ``De Sitter'' subgroups SOˉ0(1,n){\bar{SO}}_0(1, n) and SOˉ0(2,n1){\bar{SO}}_0(2, n-1) (they remain irreducible or decompose into a sum of two) and the contraction of the latter to ``Poincar\'e''. Then we discuss the notion of masslessness in nn dimensions and compare the situation for general nn with the well-known case of 4-dimensional space-time, showing the specificity of the latter.Comment: 34 pages, LaTeX2e, 1 figure. To be published in Reviews in Math. Phy

    Ion Larmor radius effects near a reconnection X line at the magnetopause: THEMIS observations and simulation comparison

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    We report a Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions during Substorms (THEMIS-D) spacecraft crossing of a magnetopause reconnection exhaust ~9 ion skin depths (di) downstream of an X line. The crossing was characterized by ion jetting at speeds substantially below the predicted reconnection outflow speed. In the magnetospheric inflow region THEMIS detected (a) penetration of magnetosheath ions and the resulting flows perpendicular to the reconnection plane, (b) ion outflow extending into the magnetosphere, and (c) enhanced electron parallel temperature. Comparison with a simulation suggests that these signatures are associated with the gyration of magnetosheath ions onto magnetospheric field lines due to the shift of the flow stagnation point toward the low-density magnetosphere. Our observations indicate that these effects, ~2–3 di in width, extend at least 9 di downstream of the X line. The detection of these signatures could indicate large-scale proximity of the X line but do not imply that the spacecraft was upstream of the electron diffusion region

    Considerations on Super Poincare Algebras and their Extensions to Simple Superalgebras

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    We consider simple superalgebras which are a supersymmetric extension of \fspin(s,t) in the cases where the number of odd generators does not exceed 64. All of them contain a super Poincar\'e algebra as a contraction and another as a subalgebra. Because of the contraction property, some of these algebras can be interpreted as de Sitter or anti de Sitter superalgebras. However, the number of odd generators present in the contraction is not always minimal due to the different splitting properties of the spinor representations under a subalgebra. We consider the general case, with arbitrary dimension and signature, and examine in detail particular examples with physical implications in dimensions d=10d=10 and d=4d=4.Comment: 16 pages, AMS-LaTeX. Version to appear in the Reviews in Mathematical Physic

    The space physics environment data analysis system (SPEDAS)

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    With the advent of the Heliophysics/Geospace System Observatory (H/GSO), a complement of multi-spacecraft missions and ground-based observatories to study the space environment, data retrieval, analysis, and visualization of space physics data can be daunting. The Space Physics Environment Data Analysis System (SPEDAS), a grass-roots software development platform (www.spedas.org), is now officially supported by NASA Heliophysics as part of its data environment infrastructure. It serves more than a dozen space missions and ground observatories and can integrate the full complement of past and upcoming space physics missions with minimal resources, following clear, simple, and well-proven guidelines. Free, modular and configurable to the needs of individual missions, it works in both command-line (ideal for experienced users) and Graphical User Interface (GUI) mode (reducing the learning curve for first-time users). Both options have “crib-sheets,” user-command sequences in ASCII format that can facilitate record-and-repeat actions, especially for complex operations and plotting. Crib-sheets enhance scientific interactions, as users can move rapidly and accurately from exchanges of technical information on data processing to efficient discussions regarding data interpretation and science. SPEDAS can readily query and ingest all International Solar Terrestrial Physics (ISTP)-compatible products from the Space Physics Data Facility (SPDF), enabling access to a vast collection of historic and current mission data. The planned incorporation of Heliophysics Application Programmer’s Interface (HAPI) standards will facilitate data ingestion from distributed datasets that adhere to these standards. Although SPEDAS is currently Interactive Data Language (IDL)-based (and interfaces to Java-based tools such as Autoplot), efforts are under-way to expand it further to work with python (first as an interface tool and potentially even receiving an under-the-hood replacement). We review the SPEDAS development history, goals, and current implementation. We explain its “modes of use” with examples geared for users and outline its technical implementation and requirements with software developers in mind. We also describe SPEDAS personnel and software management, interfaces with other organizations, resources and support structure available to the community, and future development plans.Published versio

    Survey of the ULF wave Poynting vector near the Earth's magnetic equatorial plane

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/101878/1/pdfexplain.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/101878/2/jgra50591.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/101878/3/pdfexplain.tx

    Evolution of kinklike fluctuations associated with ion pickup within reconnection outflows in the Earth's magnetotail

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    Magnetic reconnection (MR) in Earth's magnetotail is usually followed by a systemwide redistribution of explosively released kinetic and thermal energy. Recently, multispacecraft observations from the THEMIS mission were used to study localized explosions associated with MR in the magnetotail so as to understand subsequent Earthward propagation of MR outbursts during substorms. Here we investigate plasma and magnetic field fluctuations/structures associated with MR exhaust and ion-ion kink mode instability during a well documented MR event. Generation, evolution and fading of kinklike oscillations are followed over a distance of 70 000 km from the reconnection site in the midmagnetotail to the more dipolar region near the Earth. We have found that the kink oscillations driven by different ion populations within the outflow region can be at least 25 000 km from the reconnection site.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure

    Ultrafast charge generation in a semiconducting polymer studied with THz emission spectroscopy

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    Euan Hendry, Mattijs Koeberg, Juleon M. Schins, L. D. A. Siebbeles, and Mischa Bonn, Physical Review B, Vol. 70, article 033202 (2004). "Copyright © 2004 by the American Physical Society."We study the ultrafast charge generation in a semiconducting polymer (MEH-PPV) by measuring the radiated THz field after photoexciting the biased polymer with a femtosecond visible pulse. The subpicosecond temporal characteristics of the emitted wave reflects the ultrafast photoconductivity dynamics and sets an upper limit for charge generation of 200 fs following photoexcitation, and reveals the dispersive nature of charge transport in MEH-PPV. A comparison of the fields radiated from MEH-PPV and the well-characterized model semiconductor system (GaAs) allows for an accurate estimate of the quantum efficiency for charge generation in the polymer, found to be less than 1% . Both observations are consistent with ultrafast charge generation in semiconducting polymers through hot exciton dissociation
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