5,500 research outputs found
Casimir invariants and characteristic identities for
A full set of (higher order) Casimir invariants for the Lie algebra
is constructed and shown to be well defined in the category
generated by the highest weight (unitarizable) irreducible
representations with only a finite number of non-zero weight components.
Moreover the eigenvalues of these Casimir invariants are determined explicitly
in terms of the highest weight. Characteristic identities satisfied by certain
(infinite) matrices with entries from are also determined and
generalize those previously obtained for by Bracken and Green.Comment: 10 pages, PlainTe
Eigenvalues of Casimir operators for
A full set of Casimir operators for the Lie superalgebra is
constructed and shown to be well defined in the category generated by
the highest weight irreducible representations with only a finite number of
non-zero weight components. The eigenvalues of these Casimir operators are
determined explicitly in terms of the highest weight. Characteristic identities
satisfied by certain (infinite) matrices with entries from are
also determined.Comment: 10 pages, Te
Early-type Stars: Most Favorable Targets for Astrometrically Detectable Planets in the Habitable Zone
Early-type stars appear to be a difficult place to look for planets
astrometrically. First, they are relatively heavy, and for fixed planetary mass
the astrometric signal falls inversely as the stellar mass. Second, they are
relatively rare (and so tend to be more distant), and for fixed orbital
separation the astrometric signal falls inversely as the distance.
Nevertheless, because early-type stars are relatively more luminous, their
habitable zones are at larger semi-major axis. Since astrometric signal scales
directly as orbital size, this gives early-type stars a strong advantage, which
more than compensates for the other two factors. Using the Hipparcos catalog,
we show that early-type stars constitute the majority of viable targets for
astrometric searches for planets in the habitable zone. We contrast this
characteristic to transit searches, which are primarily sensitive to habitable
planets around late-type stars.Comment: Submitted to ApJ Letters, 8 pages including 2 figure
M Dwarfs from Hubble Space Telescope Star Counts. IV
We study a sample of about 1400 disk M dwarfs that are found in 148 fields
observed with the Wide Field Camera 2 (WFC2) on the Hubble Space Telescope and
162 fields observed with pre-repair Planetary Camera 1 (PC1), of which 95 of
the WFC2 fields are newly analyzed. The method of maximum likelihood is applied
to derive the luminosity function and the Galactic disk parameters. At first,
we use a local color-magnitude relation and a locally determined
mass-luminosity relation in our analysis. The results are consistent with those
of previous work but with considerably reduced statistical errors. These small
statistical errors motivate us to investigate the systematic uncertainties.
Considering the metallicity gradient above the Galactic plane, we introduce a
modified color-magnitude relation that is a function of Galactic height. The
resultant M dwarf luminosity function has a shape similar to that derived using
the local color-magnitude relation but with a higher peak value. The peak
occurs at and the luminosity function drops sharply toward . We then apply a height-dependent mass-luminosity function
interpolated from theoretical models with different metallicities to calculate
the mass function. Unlike the mass function obtained using local relations,
which has a power-law index , the one derived from the
height-dependent relations tends to be flat (). The resultant
local surface density of disk M dwarfs (12.2 +/- 1.6 M_sun pc^{-2}) is somewhat
smaller than the one obtained using local relations (14.3 +/- 1.3 M_sun
pc^{-2}). Our measurement favors a short disk scale length, H = 2.75 +/- 0.16
(statistical) +/- 0.25 (systematic) kpc.Comment: 20 pages, 10 ps figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Derivatives of spin dynamics simulations
We report analytical equations for the derivatives of spin dynamics
simulations with respect to pulse sequence and spin system parameters. The
methods described are significantly faster, more accurate and more reliable
than the finite difference approximations typically employed. The resulting
derivatives may be used in fitting, optimization, performance evaluation and
stability analysis of spin dynamics simulations and experiments.
Keywords: NMR, EPR, simulation, analytical derivatives, optimal control, spin
chemistry, radical pair.Comment: Accepted by The Journal of Chemical Physic
Dilemmas in doing insider research in professional education
This article explores the dilemmas I encountered when researching social work education in England as an insider researcher who was simultaneously employed as an educator in the host institution. This was an ethnographic project deploying multiple methods and generating rich case study material which informed the student textbook Becoming a Social Worker the four-year period of the project. First, ethical dilemmas emerged around informed consent and confidentiality when conducting surveys of students and reading their portfolios. Second, professional dilemmas stemmed from the ways in which my roles as a researcher, academic tutor, social worker and former practice educator converged and collided. Third, political dilemmas pertained to the potential for the project to crystallize and convey conflicts among stakeholders in the university and community. Since the majority of research in social work education is conducted by insiders, we have a vital interest in making sense of such complexity
The Extreme Microlensing Event OGLE-2007-BLG-224: Terrestrial Parallax Observation of a Thick-Disk Brown Dwarf
Parallax is the most fundamental technique to measure distances to
astronomical objects. Although terrestrial parallax was pioneered over 2000
years ago by Hipparchus (ca. 140 BCE) to measure the distance to the Moon, the
baseline of the Earth is so small that terrestrial parallax can generally only
be applied to objects in the Solar System. However, there exists a class of
extreme gravitational microlensing events in which the effects of terrestrial
parallax can be readily detected and so permit the measurement of the distance,
mass, and transverse velocity of the lens. Here we report observations of the
first such extreme microlensing event OGLE-2007-BLG-224, from which we infer
that the lens is a brown dwarf of mass M=0.056 +- 0.004 Msun, with a distance
of 525 +- 40 pc and a transverse velocity of 113 +- 21 km/s. The velocity
places the lens in the thick disk, making this the lowest-mass thick-disk brown
dwarf detected so far. Follow-up observations may allow one to observe the
light from the brown dwarf itself, thus serving as an important constraint for
evolutionary models of these objects and potentially opening a new window on
sub-stellar objects. The low a priori probability of detecting a thick-disk
brown dwarf in this event, when combined with additional evidence from other
observations, suggests that old substellar objects may be more common than
previously assumed.Comment: ApJ Letters, in press, 15 pages including 2 figure
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