4,869 research outputs found
Effect of Bohm potential on a charged gas
Bohm's interpretation of Quantum Mechanics leads to the derivation of a
Quantum Kinetic Equation (QKE): in the present work, propagation of waves in
charged quantum gases is investigated starting from this QKE. Dispersion
relations are derived for fully and weakly degenerate fermions and bosons
(these latter above critical temperature), and the differences underlined. Use
of a kinetic equation permits investigation of "Landau-type" damping: it is
found that the presence of damping in fermion gases is dependent upon the
degree of degeneracy, whereas it is always present in boson gases. In fully
degenerate fermions a phenomenon appears that is akin to the "zero sound"
propagation.Comment: 11 pages, no figures, pdf forma
Strong exciton binding in quantum structures through remote dielectric confinement
We propose a new type of hybrid systems formed by conventional semiconductor
nanostructures with the addition of remote insulating layers, where the
electron-hole interaction is enhanced by combining quantum and dielectric
confinement over different length scales. Due to the polarization charges
induced by the dielectric mismatch at the semiconductor/insulator interfaces,
we show that the exciton binding energy can be more than doubled. For
conventional III-V quantum wires such remote dielectric confinement allows
exciton binding at room temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 3 PostScript figures embedded, best printed in color. Uses
RevTex, multicol, and psfig styles. To appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Source extraction and photometry for the far-infrared and sub-millimeter continuum in the presence of complex backgrounds
(Abridged) We present a new method for detecting and measuring compact
sources in conditions of intense, and highly variable, fore/background. While
all most commonly used packages carry out the source detection over the signal
image, our proposed method builds from the measured image a "curvature" image
by double-differentiation in four different directions. In this way point-like
as well as resolved, yet relatively compact, objects are easily revealed while
the slower varying fore/background is greatly diminished. Candidate sources are
then identified by looking for pixels where the curvature exceeds, in absolute
terms, a given threshold; the methodology easily allows us to pinpoint
breakpoints in the source brightness profile and then derive reliable guesses
for the sources extent. Identified peaks are fit with 2D elliptical Gaussians
plus an underlying planar inclined plateau, with mild constraints on size and
orientation. Mutually contaminating sources are fit with multiple Gaussians
simultaneously using flexible constraints. We ran our method on simulated
large-scale fields with 1000 sources of different peak flux overlaid on a
realistic realization of diffuse background. We find detection rates in excess
of 90% for sources with peak fluxes above the 3-sigma signal noise limit; for
about 80% of the sources the recovered peak fluxes are within 30% of their
input values.Comment: Accepted on A&
The pre-ZAMS nature of Mol160/IRAS23385+6053 confirmed by Spitzer
Determining the timeline for the formation of massive YSOs requires the
identification and characterisation of all the phases that a massive forming
YSO undergoes. It is of particular interest to verify the observability of the
phase in which the object is rapidly accreting while not yet igniting the
fusion of hydrogen that marks the arrival on the ZAMS. One of the candidate
prototypical objects for this phase is Mol160/IRAS23385+6053, which previous
studies suggest it could be in a pre-Hot Core stage. We further investigate
this issue by means of Spitzer imaging and spectroscopy in the 5-70 micron
range. The dense core of Mol160/IRAS23385+6053, which up to now had only been
detected at submm and mm wavelenghts has been revealed for the first time at 24
and 70 micron by Spitzer. The complete 24 micron -3.4 mm continuum cannot be
fitted with a standard model of a Zero-Age Main-Sequence (ZAMS) star embedded
in an envelope. A simple greybody fit yields a mass of 220 solar masses. The
luminosity is slightly in excess of 3000 solar luminosities, which is a factor
of 5 less than previous estimates when only IRAS fluxes were available between
20 and 100 micron. The source is under-luminous by the same factor with respect
to UCHII regions or Hot-Cores of similar circumstellar mass, and simple models
show that this is compatible with an earlier evolutionary stage. Spectroscopy
between 5 and 40 microns revelas typical PDR/PIR conditions, where the required
UV illumination may be provided by other sources revealed at 24 microns in the
same region, and which can be plausibly modeled as moderately embedded
intermediate-mass ZAMS stars. Our results strengthen the suggestion that the
central core in Mol160/IRAS23385+6053 is a massive YSO actively accreting from
its circumstellar envelope and which did not yet begin hydrogen fusion.Comment: Accepted by A&
IRAS 23385+6053: a candidate protostellar massive object
We present the results of a multi-line and continuum study towards the source
IRAS 23385+6053,performed with the IRAM-30m telescope, the Plateau de Bure
Interferometer, the Very Large Array Interferometer and the James Clerk Maxwell
Telescope. The new results confirm our earlier findings, namely that IRAS
23385+6053 is a good candidate high-mass protostellar object, precursor of an
ultracompact H region. The source is roughly composed of two regions: a
molecular core pc in size, with a temperature of K
and an H volume density of the order of 10 cm, and an
extended halo of diameter 0.4 pc, with an average kinetic temperature of
K and H volume density of the order of 10 cm. The
core temperature is much smaller than what is typically found in molecular
cores of the same diameter surrounding massive ZAMS stars. We deduce that the
core luminosity is between 150 and , and we believe
that the upper limit is near the ``true'' source luminosity. Moreover, by
comparing the H volume density obtained at different radii from the IRAS
source, we find that the halo has a density profile of the type . This suggests that the source is gravitationally
unstable. Finally, we demonstrate that the temperature at the core surface is
consistent with a core luminosity of and conclude that we
might be observing a protostar still accreting material from its parental
cloud, whose mass at present is .Comment: 18 pages, 20 figure
FEATURE SELECTION APPLIED TO THE TIME-FREQUENCY REPRESENTATION OF MUSCLE NEAR-INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY (NIRS) SIGNALS: CHARACTERIZATION OF DIABETIC OXYGENATION PATTERNS
Diabetic patients might present peripheral microcirculation impairment and might benefit from physical training. Thirty-nine diabetic patients underwent the monitoring of the tibialis anterior muscle oxygenation during a series of voluntary ankle flexo-extensions by near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS). NIRS signals were acquired before and after training protocols. Sixteen control subjects were tested with the same protocol. Time-frequency distributions of the Cohen's class were used to process the NIRS signals relative to the concentration changes of oxygenated and reduced hemoglobin. A total of 24 variables were measured for each subject and the most discriminative were selected by using four feature selection algorithms: QuickReduct, Genetic Rough-Set Attribute Reduction, Ant Rough-Set Attribute Reduction, and traditional ANOVA. Artificial neural networks were used to validate the discriminative power of the selected features. Results showed that different algorithms extracted different sets of variables, but all the combinations were discriminative. The best classification accuracy was about 70%. The oxygenation variables were selected when comparing controls to diabetic patients or diabetic patients before and after training. This preliminary study showed the importance of feature selection techniques in NIRS assessment of diabetic peripheral vascular impairmen
Search for massive protostellar candidates in the southern hemisphere: I. Association with dense gas
(Abridged) We have observed CS and C17O lines, and 1.2 mm cont. emission
towards a sample of 130 high-mass protostellar candidates with DEC<-30 deg.
This is the first step of the southern extension of a project started more than
a decade ago aimed at the identification of massive protostellar candidates. We
selected from the IRAS PSC 429 sources which potentially are compact molecular
clouds. The sample is divided into two groups: the 298 sources with
[25-12]>0.57 and [60-12]>1.30 we call 'High' sources, the remaining 131 we call
'Low' sources. In this paper, we check the association with dense gas and dust
in 130 'Low' sources. We find a detection rate of ca. 85% in CS, demonstrating
a tight association with dense molecular clumps. Among the sources detected in
CS, ca. 76% have also been detected in C17O and ca. 93% in the 1.2 mm cont.
Mm-cont. maps show the presence of clumps with diameters 0.2-2 pc and masses
from a few Msun to 10^5 Msun; H2 volume densities lie between ca. 10^{4.5} and
10^{5.5} cm^{-3}. The L(bol) are 10^3-10^6 Lsun, consistent with embedded
high-mass objects. Based on our results and those found in the literature for
other samples, we conclude that our sources are massive objects probably in a
stage prior to the formation of an HII region. We propose a scenario in which
'High' and 'Low' sources are both made of a massive clump hosting a high-mass
protostellar candidate and a nearby stellar cluster. The difference might be
due to the fact that the IRAS 12mu flux, the best discriminant between the two
groups, is dominated by the emission from the cluster in 'Lows' and from the
massive protostellar object in 'Highs'.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astron. & Astroph.; 34 pages (incl. 14
figures and 8 tables
Class I and Class II methanol masers in high-mass star forming regions
Among the tracers of the earliest phases in the massive star formation
process, methanol masers have gained increasing importance. The
phenomenological distinction between Class I and II methanol masers is based on
their spatial association with objects such as jets, cores, and ultracompact
HII regions, but is also believed to correspond to different pumping
mechanisms: radiation for Class II masers, collisions for Class I masers. In
this work, we have surveyed a large sample of massive star forming regions -
296 objects divided into two groups named 'High' and 'Low' according to their
[25-12] and [60-12] IRAS colours - in Class I and II methanol masers. Previous
studies indicate that the High sources are likely more evolved. Therefore, the
sample can be used to assess the existence of a sequence for the occurrence of
Class I and II methanol masers during the evolution of a massive star forming
region. We observed the 6 GHz (Class II) CH3OH maser with the Effelsberg 100-m
telescope, and the 44 GHz and 95 GHz (Class I) CH3OH masers with the Nobeyama
45-m telescope. We have detected: 55 sources in the Class II line (12 new
detections); 27 sources in the 44 GHz Class I line (17 new detections); 11
sources in the 95 GHz Class I line (all except one are new detections). Our
statistical analysis shows that the ratio between the detection rates of Class
II and Class I methanol masers is basically the same in High and Low sources.
Therefore, both masers are equally associated with each evolutionary phase. In
contrast, all maser species have about 3 times higher detection rates in High
than in Low sources. This might indicate that the phenomena that originate all
masers become progressively more active with time, during the earliest
evolutionary phases of a high-mass star forming region.Comment: 30 pages including Appendices, 11 figures, accepted for publication
in Astronomy & Astrophysic
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