28,558 research outputs found
The miracle as a randomization device: a lesson from Richard Wagner's romantic opera Tannhauser und der Sankerkrieg auf Wartburg
In this paper we provide textual evidence on the sophistication of medieval deterrence
strategies. Drawing on one of the great opera librettos based on medieval sources, Wagner’s
Tannhäuser, we shall illustrate the use of optimal randomization strategies that can be derived
by applying notions of dominance or trembling-hand perfection. Particular attention is paid to
the employed randomization device
Nuclear Medium Modifications of Hadrons from Generalized Parton Distributions
We study the structure of generalized parton distributions in spin 0 nuclei
within a microscopic approach for nuclear dynamics. GPDs can be used on one
side as tools to unravel the deep inelastic transverse structure of nuclei in
terms of both transverse spatial and transverse momentum degrees of freedom. On
the other, one can obtain information on GPDs themselves by observing how they
become modified in the nuclear environment. We derive the structure of the
nuclear deeply virtual Compton scattering tensor and generalized parton
distributions at leading order in in a field-theoretical framework. The
nuclear generalized parton distributions are calculated using a two step
process -- the convolution approach -- where the scattering process happens
from a quark inside a nucleon, itself inside a nucleus, disregarding final
state interactions with both the nuclear and nucleon debris. We point out that
details of the nuclear long range interactions such as two-body currents, can
be disregarded compared to the deep inelastic induced modifications of the
bound GPDs. We show how the pattern of nuclear modifications predicted, and in
particular the deviations of off-shell effects from the longitudinal
convolution provide clear signals to be sought in experimental measurements.
Finally, we find interesting relationships by studying Mellin moments in
nuclei: in particular we predict the -dependence for the -term of GPDs
within a microscopic approach, and the behavior with of the total momentum
carried by quarks in a nucleus. The latter provides an important element for
the evaluation of nuclear hadronization phenomena which are vital for
interpreting current and future data at RHIC, HERMES and Jefferson Lab.Comment: 29 pages, 10 figure
UVMULTIFIT: A versatile tool for fitting astronomical radio interferometric data
The analysis of astronomical interferometric data is often performed on the
images obtained after deconvolution of the interferometer's point spread
function (PSF). This strategy can be understood (especially for cases of sparse
arrays) as fitting models to models, since the deconvolved images are already
non-unique model representations of the actual data (i.e., the visibilities).
Indeed, the interferometric images may be affected by visibility gridding,
weighting schemes (e.g., natural vs. uniform), and the particulars of the
(non-linear) deconvolution algorithms. Fitting models to the direct
interferometric observables (i.e., the visibilities) is preferable in the cases
of simple (analytical) sky intensity distributions. In this paper, we present
UVMULTIFIT, a versatile library for fitting visibility data, implemented in a
Python-based framework. Our software is currently based on the CASA package,
but can be easily adapted to other analysis packages, provided they have a
Python API. We have tested the software with synthetic data, as well as with
real observations. In some cases (e.g., sources with sizes smaller than the
diffraction limit of the interferometer), the results from the fit to the
visibilities (e.g., spectra of close by sources) are far superior to the output
obtained from the mere analysis of the deconvolved images. UVMULTIFIT is a
powerful improvement of existing tasks to extract the maximum amount of
information from visibility data, especially in cases close to the
sensitivity/resolution limits of interferometric observations.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures. Accepted in A&A. Code available at
http://nordic-alma.se/support/software-tool
Patients' and relatives' assessment of clozapine treatment
Published version: http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=PS
Exact Results for Evaporating Black Holes in Curvature-Squared Lovelock Gravity: Gauss-Bonnet Greybody Factors
Lovelock gravity is an important extension of General Relativity that
provides a promising framework to study curvature corrections to the Einstein
action, while avoiding ghosts and keeping second order field equations. This
paper derives the greybody factors for D-dimensional black holes arising in a
theory with a Gauss-Bonnet curvature-squared term. These factors describe the
non-trivial coupling between black holes and quantum fields during the
evaporation process: they can be used both from a theoretical viewpoint to
investigate the intricate spacetime structure around such a black hole, and for
phenomenological purposes in the framework of braneworld models with a low
Planck scale. We derive exact spectra for the emission of scalar, fermion and
gauge fields emitted on the brane, and for scalar fields emitted in the bulk,
and demonstrate how the Gauss-Bonnet term can change the bulk-to-brane emission
rates ratio in favour of the bulk channel in particular frequency regimes.Comment: 29 pages, Latex file, 11 figures, Data files (greybody factors)
available at http://lpsc.in2p3.fr/ams/greybody/, typos corrected, references
added, version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Bulk and Brane Decay of a (4+n)-Dimensional Schwarzschild-De-Sitter Black Hole: Scalar Radiation
In this paper, we extend the idea that the spectrum of Hawking radiation can
reveal valuable information on a number of parameters that characterize a
particular black hole background - such as the dimensionality of spacetime and
the value of coupling constants - to gain information on another important
aspect: the curvature of spacetime. We investigate the emission of Hawking
radiation from a D-dimensional Schwarzschild-de-Sitter black hole emitted in
the form of scalar fields, and employ both analytical and numerical techniques
to calculate greybody factors and differential energy emission rates on the
brane and in the bulk. The energy emission rate of the black hole is
significantly enhanced in the high-energy regime with the number of spacelike
dimensions. On the other hand, in the low-energy part of the spectrum, it is
the cosmological constant that leaves a clear footprint, through a
characteristic, constant emission rate of ultrasoft quanta determined by the
values of black hole and cosmological horizons. Our results are applicable to
"small" black holes arising in theories with an arbitrary number and size of
extra dimensions, as well as to pure 4-dimensional primordial black holes,
embedded in a de Sitter spacetime.Comment: 31 pages, latex file, data files available at
http://lpsc.in2p3.fr/ams/greybody/ some clarifying comments and references
added, typos corrected, version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Two-Dimensional Hydrodynamics of Pre-Core Collapse: Oxygen Shell Burning
By direct hydrodynamic simulation, using the Piecewise Parabolic Method (PPM)
code PROMETHEUS, we study the properties of a convective oxygen burning shell
in a SN 1987A progenitor star prior to collapse. The convection is too
heterogeneous and dynamic to be well approximated by one-dimensional
diffusion-like algorithms which have previously been used for this epoch.
Qualitatively new phenomena are seen.
The simulations are two-dimensional, with good resolution in radius and
angle, and use a large (90-degree) slice centered at the equator. The
microphysics and the initial model were carefully treated. Many of the
qualitative features of previous multi-dimensional simulations of convection
are seen, including large kinetic and acoustic energy fluxes, which are not
accounted for by mixing length theory. Small but significant amounts of
carbon-12 are mixed non-uniformly into the oxygen burning convection zone,
resulting in hot spots of nuclear energy production which are more than an
order of magnitude more energetic than the oxygen flame itself. Density
perturbations (up to 8%) occur at the `edges' of the convective zone and are
the result of gravity waves generated by interaction of penetrating flows into
the stable region. Perturbations of temperature and electron fraction at the
base of the convective zone are of sufficient magnitude to create angular
inhomogeneities in explosive nucleosynthesis products, and need to be included
in quantitative estimates of yields. Combined with the plume-like velocity
structure arising from convection, the perturbations will contribute to the
mixing of nickel-56 throughout supernovae envelopes. Runs of different
resolution, and angular extent, were performed to test the robustness of theseComment: For mpeg movies of these simulations, see
http://www.astrophysics.arizona.edu/movies.html Submitted to the
Astrophysical Journa
High Ratio of 44Ti/56Ni in Cas A and Axisymmetric Collapse-Driven Supernova Explosion
The large abundance ratio of in Cas A is puzzling. In fact,
the ratio seems to be larger than the theoretical constraint derived by Woosley
& Hoffman (1991). However, this constraint is obtained on the assumption that
the explosion is spherically symmetric, whereas Cas A is famous for the
asymmetric form of the remnant. Recently, Nagataki et al. (1997) calculated the
explosive nucleosynthesis of axisymmetrically deformed collapse-driven
supernova. They reported that the ratio of was enhanced by
the stronger alpha-rich freezeout in the polar region. In this paper, we apply
these results to Cas A and examine whether this effect can explain the large
amount of and the large ratio of . We demonstrate
that the conventional spherically symmetric explosion model can not explain the
Ti mass produced in Cas A if its lifetime is shorter than 80
years and the intervening space is transparent to the gamma-ray line from the
decay of Ti. On the other hand, we show the axisymmetric explosion
models can solve the problem. We expect the same effect from a three
dimensionally asymmetric explosion, since the stronger alpha-rich freezeout
will also occur in that case in the region where the larger energy is
deposited.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX text and 3 postscript figure
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