19,061 research outputs found

    Dissociation dynamics of transient anion formed via electron attachment to sulfur dioxide

    Get PDF
    We report the molecular dynamics of dissociative electron attachment to sulfur dioxide (SO2) by measuring the momentum distribution of fragment anions using the velocity slice imaging technique in the electron energy range of 2–10 eV. The S- channel results from symmetric dissociation which exhibits competition between the stretch mode and bending mode of vibration in the excited parent anion. The asymmetric dissociation of parent anions leads to the production of O- and SO- channels where the corresponding neutral fragments are formed in their ground as well as excited electronic states. We also identify that internal excitation of SO- is responsible for its low yield at higher electron energies

    Scratching the Bose surface

    Full text link
    This is a `News and Views' article discussing recent proposals for ground states of many boson systems which are neither superfluids nor Mott insulators.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur

    “That's bang out of order, mate!”: Gendered and racialized micro‐practices of disadvantage and privilege in UK business schools

    Get PDF
    The existence of gendered and racialized inequalities in academia has been well documented. To date, research has primarily addressed the intersectional disadvantages faced by members of minority groups with much less attention paid to the privileges experienced by dominant group members. This paper draws on 21 interviews and 36 audio‐diary entries completed by a diverse group of senior higher education leaders who have successfully navigated the career ladder in UK business schools. By juxtaposing minority with dominant group members' narratives, the study advances intersectionality research, offering a contextualized analysis of the micro‐practices of both disadvantage and privilege in academia. Through a focus on how micro‐practices perform differently for members of different groups, it foregrounds “obvious” as well as nuanced differences that contribute to the accumulation of disadvantage and privilege throughout an individual's career and emphasizes simultaneity as crucial to understanding the workings of gendered and racialized disadvantage and privilege

    Generarized Cubic Model for BaTiO3_3-like Ferroelectric Substance

    Full text link
    We propose an order-disorder type microscopic model for BaTiO3_3-like Ferroelectric Substance. Our model has three phase transitions and four phases. The symmetry and directions of the polarizations of the ordered phases agree with the experimental results of BaTiO3_3. The intermediate phases in our model are known as an incompletely ordered phase, which appears in a generalized clock model.Comment: 6 pages, 4figure

    The discovery of 2.78 hour periodic modulation of the X-ray flux from globular cluster source Bo 158 in M31

    Get PDF
    We report the discovery of periodic intensity dips in the X-ray source XMMU J004314.1+410724, in the globular cluster Bo158 in M31. The X-ray flux was modulated by ~83% at a period of 2.78 hr (10017 s) in an XMM-Newton observation taken 2002 Jan 6-7. The X-ray intensity dips show no energy dependence. We detected weaker dips with the same period in observations taken 2000 June 25 (XMM-Newton) and 1991 June 26 (ROSAT/PSPC). The amplitude of the modulation has been found to be anticorrelated with source X-ray flux: it becomes lower when the source intensity rises. The energy spectrum of Bo158 was stable from observation to observation, with a characteristic cutoff at ~4-6 keV. The photo-electric absorption was consistent with the Galactic foreground value. No significant spectral changes were seen in the course of the dips. If the 2.78 hr cycle is the binary period of Bo158 the system is highly compact, with a binary separation of ~10e11 cm. The association of the source with a globular cluster, together with spectral parameters consistent with Galactic neutron star sources, suggests that X-rays are emitted by an accreting neutron star. The properties of Bo 158 are somewhat reminiscent of the Galactic X-ray sources exhibiting a dip-like modulations. We discuss two possible mechanisms explaining the energy-independent modulation observed in Bo 158: i) the obscuration of the central source by highly ionized material that scatters X-rays out of the line of sight; ii) partial covering of an extended source by an opaque absorber which occults varying fractions of the source.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, ApJ, submitted, uses emulateapj styl
    corecore