2,942 research outputs found
Isospin Breaking and -> Decay
We study decay up to including all orders of the chiral
expansion and one-loop level of mesons in formlism of chiral constituent quark
model. This G-parity forbidden decay is caused by and
electromagnetic interaction of mesons. We illustrate that in the formlism both
nonresonant contact interaction and resonance exchange contribute to
this process, and the contribution from resonance exchange is dominant.
We obtain that transition matrix element is
MeV, and
isospin breaking parameter is MeV at energy scale .Comment: Revtex file, 16 pages, four eps figur
Measurements of the magnetic field induced by a turbulent flow of liquid metal
Initial results from the Madison Dynamo Experiment provide details of the
inductive response of a turbulent flow of liquid sodium to an applied magnetic
field. The magnetic field structure is reconstructed from both internal and
external measurements. A mean toroidal magnetic field is induced by the flow
when an axial field is applied, thereby demonstrating the omega effect.
Poloidal magnetic flux is expelled from the fluid by the poloidal flow.
Small-scale magnetic field structures are generated by turbulence in the flow.
The resulting magnetic power spectrum exhibits a power-law scaling consistent
with the equipartition of the magnetic field with a turbulent velocity field.
The magnetic power spectrum has an apparent knee at the resistive dissipation
scale. Large-scale eddies in the flow cause significant changes to the
instantaneous flow profile resulting in intermittent bursts of non-axisymmetric
magnetic fields, demonstrating that the transition to a dynamo is not smooth
for a turbulent flow.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figures, invited talk by C. B. Forest at 2005 APS DPP
meeting, resubmitted to Physics of Plasma
Intermittent magnetic field excitation by a turbulent flow of liquid sodium
The magnetic field measured in the Madison Dynamo Experiment shows
intermittent periods of growth when an axial magnetic field is applied. The
geometry of the intermittent field is consistent with the fastest growing
magnetic eigenmode predicted by kinematic dynamo theory using a laminar model
of the mean flow. Though the eigenmodes of the mean flow are decaying, it is
postulated that turbulent fluctuations of the velocity field change the flow
geometry such that the eigenmode growth rate is temporarily positive.
Therefore, it is expected that a characteristic of the onset of a turbulent
dynamo is magnetic intermittency.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figure
Time-Series Photometry of M67: W UMa Systems, Blue Stragglers, and Related Systems
We present an analysis of over 2200 V images taken on 14 nights at the Mt.
Laguna 1 m telescope of the open cluster M67. Our observations overlap but
extend beyond the field analyzed by Gilliland et al. (1991), and complement
data recently published by van den Berg et al. (2002) and Stassun et al.
(2002). We show variability in the light curves of all 4 of the known W UMa
variables on timescales ranging from a day to decades (for AH Cnc). We have
modeled the light curve of AH Cnc, and the total eclipses allow us to determine
q = 0.16 +0.03/-0.02 and i = 86 +4/-8 degrees. The position of this system near
the turnoff of M67 makes it useful for constraining the turnoff mass for the
cluster. We have also detected two unusual features in the light curve of AH
Cnc that may be caused by prominences. We have also monitored cluster blue
stragglers for variability, and we present evidence hinting at low level
variations in the stragglers S752, S968, and S1263, and we place limits on the
variability of a number of other cluster blue stragglers. Finally, we provide
photometry of the sub-subgiant branch star S1063 showing variability on
timescales similar to the orbital period, while the ``red straggler'' S1040
shows evidence of an unexplained drop in brightness at phases corresponding to
the passage of the white dwarf in front of the giant.Comment: 44 pages, 16 figures, AASTeX, accepted for A
Supernova Remnants in the Fossil Starburst in M82
We report the discovery of ten compact H-alpha-bright sources in the
post-starburst region northeast of the center of M82, ``M82 B.'' These objects
have H alpha luminosities and sizes consistent with Type II supernova remnants
(SNRs). They fall on the same H alpha surface brightness-diameter (Sigma-D)
relation defined by SNRs in other nearby star-forming galaxies, with the M82
candidates lying preferentially at the small diameter end. These are the first
candidates for optically-visible SNRs in M82 outside the heavily obscured
central starburst within ~250 pc from the galactic center. If these sources are
SNRs, they set an upper limit to the end of the starburst in region ``B2,''
about 500 pc from the galaxy's core, of ~50 Myr. Region ``B1,'' about 1000 pc
from the core, lacks good SNR candidates and is evidently somewhat older. This
suggests star formation in the galaxy has propagated inward toward the
present-day intense starburst core.Comment: Re-submitted to AJ, referee's comments taken into account, 15 pages
LaTeX preprint style, 4 postscript figures; full-resolution figures available
from http://www.astro.virginia.edu/~rd7a/snrs/ Changes: minor textual changes
and orientation/axes of Fig.
Dynamics of a tagged particle in the asymmetric exclusion process with the step initial condition
The one-dimensional totally asymmetric simple exclusion process (TASEP) is
considered. We study the time evolution property of a tagged particle in TASEP
with the step-type initial condition. Calculated is the multi-time joint
distribution function of its position. Using the relation of the dynamics of
TASEP to the Schur process, we show that the function is represented as the
Fredholm determinant. We also study the scaling limit. The universality of the
largest eigenvalue in the random matrix theory is realized in the limit. When
the hopping rates of all particles are the same, it is found that the joint
distribution function converges to that of the Airy process after the time at
which the particle begins to move. On the other hand, when there are several
particles with small hopping rate in front of a tagged particle, the limiting
process changes at a certain time from the Airy process to the process of the
largest eigenvalue in the Hermitian multi-matrix model with external sources.Comment: 48 pages, 8 figure
Stamp transferred suspended graphene mechanical resonators for radio-frequency electrical readout
We present a simple micromanipulation technique to transfer suspended
graphene flakes onto any substrate and to assemble them with small localized
gates into mechanical resonators. The mechanical motion of the graphene is
detected using an electrical, radio-frequency (RF) reflection readout scheme
where the time-varying graphene capacitor reflects a RF carrier at f=5-6 GHz
producing modulation sidebands at f +/- fm. A mechanical resonance frequency up
to fm=178 MHz is demonstrated. We find both hardening/softening Duffing effects
on different samples, and obtain a critical amplitude of ~40 pm for the onset
of nonlinearity in graphene mechanical resonators. Measurements of the quality
factor of the mechanical resonance as a function of DC bias voltage Vdc
indicate that dissipation due to motion-induced displacement currents in
graphene electrode is important at high frequencies and large Vdc
Weak reaction freeze-out constraints on primordial magnetic fields
We explore constraints on the strength of the primordial magnetic field based
upon the weak reaction freeze-out in the early universe. We find that limits on
the strength of the magnetic field found in other works are recovered simply by
examining the temperature at which the rate of weak reactions drops below the
rate of universal expansion ( H). The temperature for which the
ratio at freeze-out leads to acceptable helium production implies limits
on the magnetic field. This simplifies the application of magnetic fields to
other cosmological variants of the standard big-bang. As an illustration we
also consider effects of neutrino degeneracy on the allowed limits to the
primordial magnetic field.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. D., 6 pages, 2 figure
Production of intermediate-mass dileptons in relativistic heavy ion collisions
The production of intermediate mass dileptons in ultrarelativistic nuclear
collisions at SPS energies is studied. The acceptance and detector resolution
inherent to measurements by the NA50 experimental collaboration are accurately
modeled. The measured centrality dependence of the intermediate mass lepton
pair excess is also addressed.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, ReVTe
The Star Clusters in the Starburst Irregular Galaxy NGC 1569
We examine star clusters in the irregular, starburst galaxy NGC 1569 from HST
images. In addition to the two known super star clusters, we identify 45 other
clusters that are compact but resolved. Integrated UVI colors of the clusters
span a large range, and suggest that ages range from 3 Myrs to 1 Gyr. However,
most of the clusters were formed at the tail end of the recent starburst.
Numerous clusters in addition to the know super star clusters are similar in
luminosity to a small globular cluster. We examined the radial surface
brightness of four of the clusters. Their half-light radii and core radii are
in the range observed in present-day globular clusters. Therefore, conditions
that produced the recent starburst have also been those necessary for producing
compact, bright star clusters.
We examine resolved stars in the outer parts of the two super star clusters.
Cluster A is dominated by bright blue stars with a small population of red
supergiants. Sub-components A1 and A2 have similar colors and a two-dimensional
color map does not offer evidence that one component is dominated by red
supergiants and the other not. The contradiction of the presence of red super-
giants with Wolf-Rayet stars may instead not be a contradiction at all since
there coexistence in a coeval population is not inconsistent with the evolution
of massive stars. Cluster B is dominated by red supergiants, and this is
confirmed by the presence of the stellar CO absorption feature in an integrated
spectrum. The various age indicators are consistent with a picture in which
cluster B is of order 10--20 Myrs old, and cluster A is >4-5 Myrs old.Comment: To be published in AJ, November 200
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