360 research outputs found

    Direct reconstruction of the two-dimensional pair distribution function in systems with angular correlations

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    An x-ray scattering approach to determine the two-dimensional (2D) pair distribution function (PDF) in partially ordered 2D systems is proposed. We derive relations between the structure factor and PDF that enable quantitative studies of positional and bond-orientational (BO) order in real space. We apply this approach in the x-ray study of a liquid crystal (LC) film undergoing the smectic-hexatic phase transition, to analyze the interplay between the positional and BO order during the temperature evolution of the LC film. We analyze the positional correlation length in different directions in real space.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figure

    Modulational Instability and Complex Dynamics of Confined Matter-Wave Solitons

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    We study the formation of bright solitons in a Bose-Einstein condensate of 7^7Li atoms induced by a sudden change in the sign of the scattering length from positive to negative, as reported in a recent experiment (Nature {\bf 417}, 150 (2002)). The numerical simulations are performed by using the 3D Gross-Pitaevskii equation (GPE) with a dissipative three-body term. We show that a number of bright solitons is produced and this can be interpreted in terms of the modulational instability of the time-dependent macroscopic wave function of the Bose condensate. In particular, we derive a simple formula for the number of solitons that is in good agreement with the numerical results of 3D GPE. By investigating the long time evolution of the soliton train solving the 1D GPE with three-body dissipation we find that adjacent solitons repel each other due to their phase difference. In addition, we find that during the motion of the soliton train in an axial harmonic potential the number of solitonic peaks changes in time and the density of individual peaks shows an intermittent behavior. Such a complex dynamics explains the ``missing solitons'' frequently found in the experiment.Comment: to be published in Phys. Rev. Let

    The Australia Telescope campaign to study southern class I methanol masers

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    The Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) and the Mopra facility have been used to search for new southern class I methanol masers at 9.9, 25 (J=5) and 104 GHz, which are thought to trace more energetic conditions in the interface regions of molecular outflows, than the widespread class I masers at 44 and 95 GHz. One source shows a clear outflow association.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure (composed from 3 files), to appear in proceedings of IAU Symposium 242 "Astrophysical masers and their environment" (eds. J. Chapman and W. Baan

    The 6.7-GHz and 25-GHz methanol masers in OMC-1

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    The Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) has been used to search for methanol maser emission at 6.7 GHz towards OMC-1. Two features peaking at 7.2 km/s and -1.1 km/s have been detected. The former has at least two components close in both velocity and position. It is located south-east of the Orion Kleinmann-Low (Orion-KL) nebula in the region of outflow traced by the 25-GHz methanol masers and the 95-GHz methanol emission. It is shown by modelling that in contrast to the widespread opinion that simultaneous masing of methanol transitions of different classes is impossible there are conditions for which simultaneous masing of the class II transition at 6.7-GHz and some class I transitions (e.g. the series at 25 GHz) is possible. A relevant example is provided, in which the pumping occurs via the first torsionally excited state and is driven by radiation of the dust intermixed with the gas in the cloud. In this regime the dust temperature is significantly lower (T is about 60 K) than in the case of bright 6.7-GHz masers (T>150 K). The narrow spectral feature at -1.1 km/s has a brightness temperature greater than about 1400 K, which suggests that it is probably a maser. It emanates from the Orion South region and is probably associated with the approaching part of outflow seen in CO. The 25-GHz maser associated with OMC-1 was observed quasi-simultaneously with the 6.7-GHz observations. No 25-GHz emission associated with the -1.1 km/s 6.7 GHz feature towards Orion South was detected.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables, mn2e.cls included; accepted by MNRA

    Marangoni instability in oblate droplets suspended on a circular frame

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    We study theoretically internal flows in a small oblate droplet suspended on the circular frame. Marangoni convection arises due to a vertical temperature gradient across the drop and is driven by the surface tension variations at the free drop interface. Using the analytical basis for the solutions of Stokes equation in coordinates of oblate spheroid we have derived the linearly independent stationary solutions for Marangoni convection in terms of Stokes stream functions. The numerical simulations of the thermocapillary motion in the drops are used to study the onset of the stationary regime. Both analytical and numerical calculations predict the axially-symmetric circulatory convection motion in the drop, the dynamics of which is determined by the magnitude of the temperature gradient across the drop. The analytical solutions for the critical temperature distribution and velocity fields are obtained for the large temperature gradients across the oblate drop. These solutions reveal the lateral separation of the critical and stationary motions within the drops. The critical vortices are localized near the central part of a drop, while the intensive stationary flow is located closer to its butt end. A crossover to the limit of the plane film is studied within the formalism of the stream functions by reducing the droplet ellipticity ratio to zero value. The initial stationary regime for the strongly oblate drops becomes unstable relative to the many-vortex perturbations in analogy with the plane fluid films with free boundaries
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