2,052 research outputs found
Measuring hadron properties at finite temperature
We estimate the numbers and mass spectra of observed lepton and kaon pairs
produced from meson decays in the central rapidity region of an Au+Au
collision at lab energy 11.6 GeV/nucleon. The following effects are considered:
possible mass shifts, thermal broadening due to collisions with hadronic
resonances, and superheating of the resonance gas. Changes in the dilepton mass
spectrum may be seen, but changes in the dikaon spectrum are too small to be
detectable.Comment: 9 pages (revtex), 3 figures (uuencoded postscript
Secondary phi meson peak as an indicator of QCD phase transition in ultrarelativistic heavy ion collisions
In a previous paper, we have shown that a double phi peak structure appears
in the dilepton invariant mass spectrum if a first order QCD phase transition
occurs in ultrarelativistic heavy ion collisions. Furthermore, the transition
temperature can be determined from the transverse momentum distribution of the
low mass phi peak. In this work, we extend the study to the case that a smooth
crossover occurs in the quark-gluon plasma to the hadronic matter transition.
We find that the double phi peak structure still exists in the dilepton
spectrum and thus remains a viable signal for the formation of the quark-gluon
plasma in ultrarelativistic heavy ion collisions.Comment: 8 pages, 9 uuencoded postscript figures included, Latex, LBL-3572
Morphology of ledge patterns during step flow growth of metal surfaces vicinal to fcc(001)
The morphological development of step edge patterns in the presence of
meandering instability during step flow growth is studied by simulations and
numerical integration of a continuum model. It is demonstrated that the kink
Ehrlich-Schwoebel barrier responsible for the instability leads to an invariant
shape of the step profiles. The step morphologies change with increasing
coverage from a somewhat triangular shape to a more flat, invariant steady
state form. The average pattern shape extracted from the simulations is shown
to be in good agreement with that obtained from numerical integration of the
continuum theory.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, RevTeX 3, submitted to Phys. Rev.
It's a wonderful tail: the mass loss history of Mira
Recent observations of the Mira AB binary system have revealed a surrounding
arc-like structure and a stream of material stretching 2 degrees away in
opposition to the arc. The alignment of the proper motion vector and the
arc-like structure shows the structures to be a bow shock and accompanying
tail. We have successfully hydrodynamically modelled the bow shock and tail as
the interaction between the asymptotic giant branch (AGB) wind launched from
Mira A and the surrounding interstellar medium. Our simulations show that the
wake behind the bow shock is turbulent: this forms periodic density variations
in the tail similar to those observed. We investigate the possiblity of
mass-loss variations, but find that these have limited effect on the tail
structure. The tail is estimated to be approximately 450,000 years old, and is
moving with a velocity close to that of Mira itself. We suggest that the
duration of the high mass-loss phase on the AGB may have been underestimated.
Finally, both the tail curvature and the rebrightening at large distance can be
qualitatively understood if Mira recently entered the Local Bubble. This is
estimated to have occured 17 pc downstream from its current location.Comment: 12 pages, 3 colour figures, accepted by ApJ Part II (Letters
Competing mechanisms for step meandering in unstable growth
The meander instability of a vicinal surface growing under step flow
conditions is studied within a solid-on-solid model. In the absence of edge
diffusion the selected meander wavelength agrees quantitatively with the
continuum linear stability analysis of Bales and Zangwill [Phys. Rev. B {\bf
41}, 4400 (1990)]. In the presence of edge diffusion a local instability
mechanism related to kink rounding barriers dominates, and the meander
wavelength is set by one-dimensional nucleation. The long-time behavior of the
meander amplitude differs in the two cases, and disagrees with the predictions
of a nonlinear step evolution equation [O. Pierre-Louis et al., Phys. Rev.
Lett. {\bf 80}, 4221 (1998)]. The variation of the meander wavelength with the
deposition flux and with the activation barriers for step adatom detachment and
step crossing (the Ehrlich-Schwoebel barrier) is studied in detail. The
interpretation of recent experiments on surfaces vicinal to Cu(100) [T.
Maroutian et al., Phys. Rev. B {\bf 64}, 165401 (2001)] in the light of our
results yields an estimate for the kink barrier at the close packed steps.Comment: 8 pages, 7 .eps figures. Final version. Some errors in chapter V
correcte
The Local Universe as Seen in Far-Infrared and in Far-Ultraviolet: A Global Point of View on the Local Recent Star Formation
We select far-infrared (FIR-60 microns) and far-ultraviolet (FUV-1530 A)
samples of nearby galaxies in order to discuss the biases encountered by
monochromatic surveys (FIR or FUV). Very different volumes are sampled by each
selection and much care is taken to apply volume corrections to all the
analyses. The distributions of the bolometric luminosity of young stars are
compared for both samples: they are found to be consistent with each other for
galaxies of intermediate luminosities but some differences are found for high
(>5 10^{10} L_sun) luminosities. The shallowness of the IRAS survey prevents us
from securing comparison at low luminosities (<2 10^9 L_sun). The ratio of the
total infrared (TIR) luminosity to the FUV luminosity is found to increase with
the bolometric luminosity in a similar way for both samples up to 5 10^{10}
L_sun. Brighter galaxies are found to have a different behavior according to
their selection: the L_TIR/L_FUV ratio of the FUV-selected galaxies brighter
than 5 10^{10} L_sun reaches a plateau whereas L_TIR/L_FUV continues to
increase with the luminosity of bright galaxies selected in FIR. The
volume-averaged specific star formation rate (SFR per unit galaxy stellar mass,
SSFR) is found to decrease toward massive galaxies within each selection. The
SSFR is found to be larger than that measured for optical and NIR-selected
sample over the whole mass range for the FIR selection, and for masses larger
than 10^{10} M_sun for the FUV selection. Luminous and massive galaxies
selected in FIR appear as active as galaxies with similar characteristics
detected at z ~ 0.7.Comment: 32 pages, 9 figures, to be published in the Astrophysical Journal
Supplement series dedicated to GALEX result
Cryptotomography: reconstructing 3D Fourier intensities from randomly oriented single-shot diffraction patterns
We reconstructed the 3D Fourier intensity distribution of mono-disperse
prolate nano-particles using single-shot 2D coherent diffraction patterns
collected at DESY's FLASH facility when a bright, coherent, ultrafast X-ray
pulse intercepted individual particles of random, unmeasured orientations. This
first experimental demonstration of cryptotomography extended the
Expansion-Maximization-Compression (EMC) framework to accommodate unmeasured
fluctuations in photon fluence and loss of data due to saturation or background
scatter. This work is an important step towards realizing single-shot
diffraction imaging of single biomolecules.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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