4,280 research outputs found
Measurement and analysis of a small nozzle plume in vacuum
Pitot pressures and flow angles are measured in the plume of a nozzle flowing nitrogen and exhausting to a vacuum. Total pressures are measured with Pitot tubes sized for specific regions of the plume and flow angles measured with a conical probe. The measurement area for total pressure extends 480 mm (16 exit diameters) downstream of the nozzle exit plane and radially to 60 mm (1.9 exit diameters) off the plume axis. The measurement area for flow angle extends to 160 mm (5 exit diameters) downstream and radially to 60 mm. The measurements are compared to results from a numerical simulation of the flow that is based on kinetic theory and uses the direct-simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) method. Comparisons of computed results from the DSMC method with measurements of flow angle display good agreement in the far-field of the plume and improve with increasing distance from the exit plane. Pitot pressures computed from the DSMC method are in reasonably good agreement with experimental results over the entire measurement area
O(d,d) invariance at two and three loops
We show that in a two-dimensional sigma-model whose fields only depend on one
target space co-ordinate, the O(d,d) invariance of the conformal invariance
conditions observed at one loop is preserved at two loops (in the general case
with torsion) and at three loops (in the case without torsion).Comment: 21 pages. Plain Tex. Uses Harvmac ("b" option). Revised Version with
references added and minor errors correcte
Multi-Magnon Scattering in the Ferromagnetic XXX-Model with Inhomogeneities
We determine the transition amplitude for multi-magnon scattering induced
through an inhomogeneous distribution of the coupling constant in the
ferromagnetic XXX-model. The two and three particle amplitudes are explicitely
calculated at small momenta. This suggests a rather plausible conjecture also
for a formula of the general n-particle amplitude.Comment: 21 pages, latex, no figure
Chiral condensate thermal evolution at finite baryon chemical potential within Chiral Perturbation Theory
We present a model independent study of the chiral condensate evolution in a
hadronic gas, in terms of temperature and baryon chemical potential. The
meson-meson interactions are described within Chiral Perturbation Theory and
the pion-nucleon interaction by means of Heavy Baryon Chiral Perturbation
Theory, both at one loop, and nucleon-nucleon interactions can be safely
neglected within our hadronic gas domain of validity. Together with the virial
expansion, this provides a systematic expansion at low temperatures and
chemical potentials, which includes the physical quark masses. This can serve
as a guideline for further studies on the lattice. We also obtain estimates of
the critical line of temperature and chemical potential where the chiral
condensate melts, which systematically lie somewhat higher than recent lattice
calculations but are consistent with several hadronic models. We have also
estimated uncertainties due to chiral parameters, heavier hadrons and higher
orders through unitarized Chiral Perturbation Theory.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures, 3 tables, ReVTeX. Version to appear in Phys.
Rev. D. References added. More conservative estimate of applicability domain,
with new figure. More detailed explanation of final results with two more
figures. Results unchange
Ablation of Adipose-HO-1 Expression Increases White Fat over Beige Fat Through Inhibition of Mitochondrial Fusion and of PGC1alpha in Female Mice
Background Hmox1 plays an important role in the regulation of mitochondrial bioenergetics and function by regulating cellular heme-derived CO and bilirubin. Previous studies have demonstrated that global disruption of HO-1 in humans and mice resulted in severe organ dysfunction. Methods We investigated the potential role of adipose-specific-HO-1 genetic ablation on adipose tissue function, mitochondrial quality control and energy expenditure by generating an adipo-HO-1 knockout mouse model (Adipo-HO-1-/-) and, in vitro, adipocyte cells in which HO activity was inhibited. Adiposity, signaling proteins, fasting glucose and oxygen consumption were determined and compared to adipocyte cultures with depressed levels of both HO-1/HO-2. Results Adipo-HO-1-/- female mice exhibited increased adipocyte size, and decreases in the mitochondrial fusion to fission ratio, PGC1, and SIRT3. Importantly, ablation of HO-1 in adipose tissue resulted in fat acquiring many properties of visceral fat such as decreases in thermogenic genes including pAMPK and PRDM16. Deletion of HO-1 in mouse adipose tissue led to complete metabolic dysfunction, an increase in white adipose tissue, a reduction of beige fat and associated increases in FAS, aP2 and hyperglycemia. Mechanistically, genetic deletion of HO-1 in adipose tissues decreased the mitochondrial fusion to fission ratio; disrupted the activity of the PGC1 transcriptional axis and thermogenic genes both in vitro and in vivo. Conclusion Ablation of adipose tissue-HO-1 abridged PGC1 expression promoted mitochondrial dysfunction and contributed to an increase of pro-inflammatory visceral fat and abrogated beige-cell like phenotype
Domain walls without cosmological constant in higher order gravity
We consider a class of higher order corrections with arbitrary power of
the curvature tensor to the standard gravity action in arbitrary space-time
dimension . The corrections are in the form of Euler densities and are
unique at each and . We present a generating functional and an explicit
form of the corresponding conserved energy-momentum tensors. The case of
conformally flat metrics is discussed in detail. We show that this class of
corrections allows for domain wall solutions since, despite the presence of
higher powers of the curvature tensor, the singularity structure at the wall is
of the same type as in the standard gravity. However, models with higher order
corrections have larger set of domain wall solutions and the existence of these
solutions no longer depends on the presence of cosmological constants. We find
for example that the Randall-Sundrum scenario can be realized without any need
for bulk and/or brane cosmological constant.Comment: latex, 10 pages, introduction extended, references added, typos
correcte
Cryogenic and non-cryogenic pool calcites indicating permafrost and non-permafrost periods: a case study from the Herbstlabyrinth-Advent Cave system (Germany)
Weichselian cryogenic calcites collected in what is referred to as the Rätselhalle of the Herbstlabyrinth-Advent Cave system are structurally classified as rhombohedral crystals and spherulitic aggregates. The carbon and oxygen isotopic composition of these precipitates (<i>&delta;</i><sup>13</sup>C = +0.6 to −7.3&permil; <i>&delta;</i><sup>18</sup>O = −6.9 to −18.0&permil;) corresponds to those of known slowly precipitated cryogenic cave calcites under conditions of isotopic equilibrium between water and ice of Central European caves. The carbon and oxygen isotopic composition varies between different caves which is attributed to the effects of cave air ventilation before the freezing started. <br><br> By petrographic and geochemical comparisons of Weichselian cryogenic calcite with recent to sub-recent precipitates as well as Weichselian non-cryogenic calcites of the same locality, a model for the precipitation of these calcites is proposed. While the recent and sub-recent pool-calcites isotopically match the composition of interglacial speleothems (stalagmites, etc.), isotope ratios of Weichselian non-cryogenic pool-calcites reflect cooler conditions. Weichselian cryogenic calcites show a trend towards low <i>&delta;</i><sup>18</sup>O values with higher carbon isotope ratios reflecting slow freezing of the precipitating solution. In essence, the isotope geochemistry of the Weichselian calcites reflects the climate history changing from overall initial permafrost conditions to permafrost-free and subsequently to renewed permafrost conditions. Judging from the data compiled here, the last permafrost stage in the Rätselhalle is followed by a warm period (interstadial and/or Holocene). During this warmer period, the cave ice melted and cryogenic and non-cryogenic Weichselian calcite precipitates were deposited on the cave ground or on fallen blocks, respectively
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