387 research outputs found
The Properties and Gaseous Environments of Powerful Classical Double Radio Galaxies
The properties of a sample of 31 very powerful classical double radio
galaxies with redshifts between zero and 1.8 are studied. The source
velocities, beam powers, ambient gas densities, total lifetimes, and total
outflow energies are presented and discussed. The rate of growth of each side
of each source were obtained using a spectral aging analysis. The beam power
and ambient gas density were obtained by applying the strong shock jump
conditions to the ends of each side of the source. The total outflow lifetime
was obtained by applying the power-law relationship between the beam power and
the total source lifetime derived elsewhere for sources of this type, and the
total outflow energy was obtained by combining the beam power and the total
source lifetime. Composite profiles were constructed by combining results
obtained from each side of each source. The composite profiles indicate that
the ambient gas density falls with distance from the central engine. The source
velocities, beam powers, total lifetimes, and total energies seem to be
independent of radio source size. This is consistent with the standard model in
which each source grows at a roughly constant rate during which time the
central engine puts out a roughly constant beam power. The fact that the total
source lifetimes and energies are independent of radio source size indicates
that the sources are being sampled at random times during their lifetimes.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, to appear in "Extragalactic Jets: Theory and
Observation from Radio to Gamma Ray", eds. T. A. Rector and D. S. De Young,
ASP conference series, Replaced version has minor textual correction
NONLINEAR POLARIZATION SPECTROSCOPY (FREQUENCY DOMAIN) STUDIES OF EXCITED STATE PROCESSES: THE B800–850ANTENNA OF RHODOBACTER SPHAEROIDES
Nonlinear polarization spectroscopy in the frequency domain allows rate constant determinations of fast electronic energy and phase relaxations together with characterization of the type of line broadening. Application of this method to the B850 component of the isolated B800–850antenna ofRhodobacter sphaeroides at room temperature shows that B850 is inhomogeneously broadened, with homogeneous widths between 30 and 200 cm−1, depending on the spectral position of the subforms. The corresponding phase relaxation times are clearly in the subpicosecond range. There is also indication of an up-to-now unspecified1–5 ps energy relaxation channel per subunit
Improved Constraints on the Acceleration History of the Universe and the Properties of the Dark Energy
We extend and apply a model-independent analysis method developed earlier by
Daly & Djorgovski to new samples of supernova standard candles, radio galaxy
and cluster standard rulers, and use it to constrain physical properties of the
dark energy as functions of redshift. Similar results are obtained for the
radio galaxy and supernova data sets. The first and second derivatives of the
distance are compared directly with predictions in a standard model based on
General Relativity. The good agreement indicates that General Relativity
provides an accurate description of the data on look-back time scales of about
ten billion years. The first and second derivatives are combined to obtain the
acceleration parameter, assuming only the validity of the Robertson-Walker
metric, independent of a theory of gravity and of the physical nature of the
dark energy. The acceleration of the universe at the current epoch is indicated
by the analysis. The effect of non-zero space curvature on q(z) is explored. We
solve for the pressure, energy density, equation of state, and potential and
kinetic energy of the dark energy as functions of redshift assuming that
General Relativity is the correct theory of gravity, and the results indicate
that a cosmological constant in a spatially flat universe provides a good
description of each of these quantities over the redshift range from zero to
about one. We define a new function, the dark energy indicator, in terms of the
first and second derivatives of the coordinate distance and show how this can
be used to measure deviations of w from -1 and to obtain a new and independent
measure of Omega.Comment: 46 pages, submitted for publicatio
Early Permian Zircon Ages from the \u3cem\u3eP. confluens\u3c/em\u3e and \u3cem\u3eP. pseudoreticulata\u3c/em\u3e Spore-Pollen Zones in the Southern Bonaparte and Canning Basins, Northwestern Australia
The Pseudoreticulatispora confluens–P. pseudoreticulata spore-pollen zonal datum typically coincides with the end of widespread Permian glacial deposits in Western Australia. Although previously attributed to the mid-Sakmarian, chemical abrasion isotope dilution thermal ionisation mass spectrometry (TIMS) dating of zircons from volcanic tuffs in the Ditji Formation of the Bonaparte Basin and the Grant Group in the Canning Basin point to an Asselian age of about 295.25 Ma for this datum. All dated zircons from the Ditji Formation came from petroleum well cuttings but the accompanying palynology was mostly from sidewall cores; however, all Grant Group samples were from conventional core. TIMS dates from the Ditji Formation range in age from 295.2 to 292.7 Ma whereas the only productive tuff from the Grant Group yielded a 296.26 Ma date. By comparison, there are no zircon dates to constrain the onset of glacial deposition in Australia. The Bonaparte Basin ages overlap with those for the Edie Tuff (296.1–294.5 Ma) in Queensland’s Galilee Basin, approximately 2000 km to the southeast, which also lies close to the base of the P. pseudoreticulata Zone. To date the only fossil group within the P. confluens Zone in Western Australia to provide independent age control, albeit loosely, are goniatites from the northern Perth Basin (Uraloceras irwinense and Juresanites jacksoni) that have consistently been attributed to the Sakmarian; these require a reassessment of their affinity with Russian faunas and therefore to global stratotypes. The position of the Carboniferous–Permian boundary is elusive in Australia and will remain so until additional volcanic tuffs containing young datable zircons are found; however, spore-pollen and zircon dates from Namibia place this boundary within the P. confluens Zone
3-D Perturbations in Conformal Turbulence
The effects of three-dimensional perturbations in two-dimensional turbulence
are investigated, through a conformal field theory approach. We compute scaling
exponents for the energy spectra of enstrophy and energy cascades, in a strong
coupling limit, and compare them to the values found in recent experiments. The
extension of unperturbed conformal turbulence to the present situation is
performed by means of a simple physical picture in which the existence of small
scale random forces is closely related to deviations of the exact
two-dimensional fluid motion.Comment: Discussion of intermittency improved. Figure include
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