17,440 research outputs found
Femtosecond soliton amplification in nonlinear dispersive traps and soliton dispersion management
The nonlinear pulse propagation in an optical fibers with varying parameters
is investigated. The capture of moving in the frequency domain femtosecond
colored soliton by a dispersive trap formed in an amplifying fiber makes it
possible to accumulate an additional energy and to reduce significantly the
soliton pulse duration. Nonlinear dynamics of the chirped soliton pulses in the
dispersion managed systems is also investigated. The methodology developed does
provide a systematic way to generate infinite ``ocean'' of the chirped soliton
solutions of the nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation (NSE) with varying
coefficients.Comment: 7 pages, 10 figures, RevTe
Superconductivity of Quasi-One-Dimensional Electrons in Strong Magnetic Field
The superconductivity of quasi-one-dimensional electrons in the magnetic
field is studied. The system is described as the one-dimensional electrons with
no frustration due to the magnetic field. The interaction is assumed to be
attractive between electrons in the nearest chains, which corresponds to the
lines of nodes of the energy gap in the absence of the magnetic field. The
effective interaction depends on the magnetic field and the transverse
momentum. As the magnetic field becomes strong, the transition temperature of
the spin-triplet superconductivity oscillates, while that of the spin-singlet
increases monotonically.Comment: 15 pages, RevTeX, 3 PostScript figures in uuencoded compressed tar
file are appende
Variation of Molecular Cloud Properties across the Spiral Arm in M 51
We present the results of high-resolution 13CO(1-0) mapping observations with
the NRO 45m telescope of the area toward the southern bright arm region of M51,
including the galactic center. The obtained map shows the central depression of
the the circumnuclear ring and the spiral arm structure.The arm-to-interarm
ratio of the 13CO(1-0) integrated intensity is 2-4. We also have found a
feature different from that found in the 12CO results. The 12CO/13CO ratio
spatially varies, and shows high values (~20) for the interarm and the central
region, but low values(~10) for the arm. These indicate that there is a denser
gas in the spiral arm than in the interarm. The distribution of the 13CO shows
a better correspondence with that of the H\alpha emission than with the 12CO in
the disk region, except for the central region. We found that the 13CO emission
is located on the downstream side of the 12CO arm, namely there is an offset
between the 12CO and the 13CO as well as the H\alpha emission. This suggests
that there is a time delay between the accumulation of gas caused by the
density wave and dense gas formation, accordingly star formation. This time
delay is estimated to be ~10^7 yr based on the assumption of galactic rotation
derived by the rotation curve and the pattern speed of M51. It is similar to
the growth timescale of a gravitational instability in the spiral arm of M51,
suggesting that the gravitational instability plays an important role for dense
gas formation.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures, PASJ Vol.54, No.2 (2002), in pres
Mechanism of Ambipolar Field-Effect Carrier Injections in One-Dimensional Mott Insulators
To clarify the mechanism of recently reported, ambipolar carrier injections
into quasi-one-dimensional Mott insulators on which field-effect transistors
are fabricated, we employ the one-dimensional Hubbard model attached to a
tight-binding model for source and drain electrodes. To take account of the
formation of Schottky barriers, we add scalar and vector potentials, which
satisfy the Poisson equation with boundary values depending on the drain
voltage, the gate bias, and the work-function difference. The current-voltage
characteristics are obtained by solving the time-dependent Schr\"odinger
equation in the unrestricted Hartree-Fock approximation. Its validity is
discussed with the help of the Lanczos method applied to small systems. We find
generally ambipolar carrier injections in Mott insulators even if the work
function of the crystal is quite different from that of the electrodes. They
result from balancing the correlation effect with the barrier effect. For the
gate-bias polarity with higher Schottky barriers, the correlation effect is
weakened accordingly, owing to collective transport in the one-dimensional
correlated electron systems.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures, to appear in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Compressional properties of nuclear matter in the relativistic mean field theory with the excluded volume effects
Compressional properties of nuclear matter are studied by using the mean
field theory with the excluded volume effects of the nucleons. It is found that
the excluded volume effects make it possible to fit the empirical data of the
Coulomb coefficient of nucleus incompressibility, even if the volume
coefficient is small(MeV). However, the symmetry properties favor
MeV as in the cases of the mean field theory of point-like
nucleons.Comment: PACS numbers, 21.65.+f, 21.30.+
Antiproton Production in p+d Reaction at Subthreshold Energies
An enhancement of antiprotons produced in p+d reaction in comparison with
ones in p+p elementary reaction is investigated.
In the neighborhood of subthreshold energy the enhancement is caused by the
difference of available energies for antiproton production. The cross section
in p+d reaction, on the other hand, becomes just twice of the one in elementary
p+p reaction at the incident energy far from the threshold energy when
non-nucleonic components in deuteron target are not considered.Comment: LaTeX,7 pages with 5 eps figure
Volume, Coulomb, and volume-symmetry coefficients of nucleus incompressibility in the relativistic mean field theory with the excluded volume effects
The relation among the volume coefficient (=incompressibility of the
nuclear matter), the Coulomb coefficient , and the volume-symmetry
coefficient of the nucleus incompressibility are studied in the
framework of the relativistic mean field theory with the excluded volume
effects of the nucleons, under the assumption of the scaling model. It is found
that MeV is necessary to account for the empirical values of ,
, and , simultaneously, as is in the case of the point-like
nucleons. The result is independent on the detail descriptions of the potential
of the -meson self-interaction and is almost independent on the
excluded volume of the nucleons.Comment: PACS numbers, 21.65.+f, 21.30.+
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