13,781 research outputs found
Rigidity and stability of cold dark solid universe model
Observational evidence suggests that the large scale dynamics of the universe
is presently dominated by dark energy, meaning a non-luminous cosmological
constituent with a negative value of the pressure to density ratio ,
which would be unstable if purely fluid, but could be stable if effectively
solid with sufficient rigidity. It was suggested by Bucher and Spergel that
such a solid constituent might be constituted by an effectively cold (meaning
approximately static) distribution of cosmic strings with , or
membranes with the observationally more favoured value , but it was not
established whether the rigidity in such models actually would be sufficient
for stabilisation. The present article provides an explicit evaluation of the
rigidity to density ratio, which is shown to be given in both string and
membrane cases by , and it is confirmed that this is indeed
sufficient for stabilisation.Comment: 6 pages latex, revised version extended to include 4 figure
Resistance and Propulsion Test Results on Two Cb=0.60 Merchant Hull Geosims
http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/96607/1/39015087358712.pd
Enhanced Pauli blocking of light scattering in a trapped Fermi gas
Pauli blocking of spontaneous emission by a single excited-state atom has
been predicted to be dramatic at low temperature when the Fermi energy
exceeds the recoil energy . The photon scattering
rate of a ground-state Fermi gas can also be suppressed by occupation of the
final states accessible to a recoiling atom, however suppression is diminished
by scattering events near the Fermi edge. We analyze two new approaches to
improve the visibility of Pauli blocking in a trapped Fermi gas. Focusing the
incident light to excite preferentially the high-density region of the cloud
can increase the blocking signature by 14%, and is most effective at
intermediate temperature. Spontaneous Raman scattering between imbalanced
internal states can be strongly suppressed at low temperature, and is
completely blocked for a final-state in the
high imbalance limit.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures. v4: to appear in Journal of Physics B: Atomic,
Molecular, and Optical Physic
The Sound of Sonoluminescence
We consider an air bubble in water under conditions of single bubble
sonoluminescence (SBSL) and evaluate the emitted sound field nonperturbatively
for subsonic gas-liquid interface motion. Sound emission being the dominant
damping mechanism, we also implement the nonperturbative sound damping in the
Rayleigh-Plesset equation for the interface motion. We evaluate numerically the
sound pulse emitted during bubble collapse and compare the nonperturbative and
perturbative results, showing that the usual perturbative description leads to
an overestimate of the maximal surface velocity and maximal sound pressure. The
radius vs. time relation for a full SBSL cycle remains deceptively unaffected.Comment: 25 pages; LaTex and 6 attached ps figure files. Accepted for
publication in Physical Review
High performance photonic microwave filters based on a 50GHz optical soliton crystal Kerr micro-comb
We demonstrate a photonic radio frequency (RF) transversal filter based on an
integrated optical micro-comb source featuring a record low free spectral range
of 49 GHz yielding 80 micro-comb lines across the C-band. This record-high
number of taps, or wavelengths for the transversal filter results in
significantly increased performance including a QRF factor more than four times
higher than previous results. Further, by employing both positive and negative
taps, an improved out-of-band rejection of up to 48.9 dB is demonstrated using
Gaussian apodization, together with a tunable centre frequency covering the RF
spectra range, with a widely tunable 3-dB bandwidth and versatile dynamically
adjustable filter shapes. Our experimental results match well with theory,
showing that our transversal filter is a competitive solution to implement
advanced adaptive RF filters with broad operational bandwidths, high frequency
selectivity, high reconfigurability, and potentially reduced cost and
footprint. This approach is promising for applications in modern radar and
communications systems.Comment: 19 pages, 12 figures, 107 reference
Free charges versus excitons: photoluminescence investigation of InGaN/GaN multiple quantum well nanorods and their planar counterparts
InGaN/GaN multiple quantum well (MQW) nanorods have demonstrated significantly improved optical and electronic properties compared to their planar counterparts. However, the exact nature of the processes whereby nanorod structures impact the optical properties of quantum wells is not well understood, even though a variety of mechanisms have been proposed. We performed nanoscale spatially resolved, steady-state, and time-resolved photoluminescence (PL) experiments confirming that photoexcited electrons and holes are strongly bound by Coulomb interactions (i.e., excitons) in planar MQWs due to the large exciton binding energy in InGaN quantum wells. In contrast, free electronâhole recombination becomes the dominant mechanism in nanorods, which is ascribed to efficient exciton dissociation. The nanorod sidewall provides an effective pathway for exciton dissociation that significantly improves the optical performance of InGaN/GaN MQWs. We also confirm that surface treatment of nanorod sidewalls has an impact on exciton dissociation. Our results provide new insights into excitonic and charge carrier dynamics of quantum confined materials as well as the influence of surface states
Cost driver analysis of statin expenditure on Australiaâs pharmaceutical benefits scheme
The Australian Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) provides universal access to subsidised medicines. In 2013, statins as a class had the highest expenditure on the PBS. To assess the influence of policies and drivers affecting PBS statin utilisation and expenditure between 1992 and 2013. Analyses conducted from 1992 to 2013 and over three distinct time periods, including monthly expenditure/prescription, annual utilisation (calculated as Defined Daily Doses/1000 inhabitants/day) and statin strengths dispensed. The major driver of increased PBS expenditure for statins was increased volumes. After adjusting for inflation, the average PBS expenditure on statin prescriptions was the major negative driver. Other influential drivers included the increased use of newer statins and increased strength of statins dispensed. Whilst the inflation-adjusted reimbursed price of statins decreased, increased utilisation, including increased use of patented statins, increased total statin expenditure. Successful measures adopted by other countries could be applied to Australia to decrease total medicines expenditure
Exact Solution of an Evolutionary Model without Ageing
We introduce an age-structured asexual population model containing all the
relevant features of evolutionary ageing theories. Beneficial as well as
deleterious mutations, heredity and arbitrary fecundity are present and managed
by natural selection. An exact solution without ageing is found. We show that
fertility is associated with generalized forms of the Fibonacci sequence, while
mutations and natural selection are merged into an integral equation which is
solved by Fourier series. Average survival probabilities and Malthusian growth
exponents are calculated indicating that the system may exhibit mutational
meltdown. The relevance of the model in the context of fissile reproduction
groups as many protozoa and coelenterates is discussed.Comment: LaTeX file, 15 pages, 2 ps figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Catastrophic senescence and semelparity in the Penna aging model
The catastrophic senescence of the Pacific salmon is among the initial tests
used to validate the Penna aging model. Based on the mutation accumulation
theory, the sudden decrease in fitness following reproduction may be solely
attributed to the semelparity of the species. In this work, we report other
consequences of mutation accumulation. Contrary to earlier findings, such
dramatic manifestation of aging depends not only on the choice of breeding
strategy but also on the value of the reproduction age, R, and the mutation
threshold, T. Senescence is catastrophic when . As the organism's
tolerance for harmful genetic mutations increases, the aging process becomes
more gradual. We observe senescence that is threshold dependent whenever T>R.
That is, the sudden drop in survival rate occurs at age equal to the mutation
threshold value
Syrian Refugees and the Digital Passage to Europe: Smartphone Infrastructures and Affordances
This research examines the role of smartphones in refugeesâ journeys. It traces the risks and possibilities afforded by smartphones for facilitating information, communication, and migration flows in the digital passage to Europe. For the Syrian and Iraqi refugee respondents in this France-based qualitative study, smartphones are lifelines, as important as water and food. They afford the planning, navigation, and documentation of journeys, enabling regular contact with family, friends, smugglers, and those who help them. However, refugees are simultaneously exposed to new forms of exploitation and surveillance with smartphones as migrations are financialised by smugglers and criminalized by European policies, and the digital passage is dependent on a contingent range of sociotechnical and material assemblages. Through an infrastructural lens, we capture the dialectical dynamics of opportunity and vulnerability, and the forms of resilience and solidarity, that arise as forced migration and digital connectivity coincide
- âŠ