23,375 research outputs found
Model of the polarized foreground diffuse Galactic emissions from 33 to 353 GHz
We present 3D models of the Galactic magnetic field including regular and
turbulent components, and of the distribution of matter in the Galaxy including
relativistic electrons and dust grains. By integrating along the line of sight,
we construct maps of the polarized Galactic synchrotron and thermal dust
emissions for each of these models. We perform a likelihood analysis to compare
the maps of the Ka, Q, V and W bands of the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy
Probe (Wmap) and the 353 GHz Archeops data to the models obtained by varying
the pitch angle of the regular magnetic field, the relative amplitude of the
turbulent magnetic field and the extrapolation spectral indices of the
synchrotron and thermal dust emissions. The best-fit parameters obtained for
the different frequency bands are very similar and globally the data seem to
favor a negligible isotropic turbulent magnetic field component at large
angular scales (an anisotropic line-of-sight ordered component can not be
studied using these data). From this study, we conclude that we are able to
propose a consistent model of the polarized diffuse Galac- tic synchrotron and
thermal dust emissions in the frequency range from 33 to 353 GHz, where most of
the CMB studies are performed and where we expect a mixture of these two main
foreground emissions. This model can be very helpful to estimate the
contamination by foregrounds of the polarized CMB anisotropies, for experiments
like the Planck satellite.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figure
Mechanisms for photon sorting based on slit-groove arrays
Mechanisms for one-dimensional photon sorting are theoretically studied in
the framework of a couple mode method. The considered system is a nanopatterned
structure composed of two different pixels drilled on the surface of a thin
gold layer. Each pixel consists of a slit-groove array designed to squeeze a
large fraction of the incident light into the central slit. The Double-Pixel is
optimized to resolve two different frequencies in the near infrared. This
system shows a high transmission efficiency and a small crosstalk. Its response
is found to strongly depend on the effective area shared by overlapping pixels.
Three different regimes for the process of photon sorting are identified and
the main physical trends underneath in such regimes are unveiled. Optimal
efficiencies for the photon sorting are obtained for a moderate number of
grooves that overlap with grooves of the neighbor pixel. Results could be
applied to optical and infrared detectors.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Transmittance of a subwavelength aperture flanked by a finite groove array \\ placed near the focus of a conventional lens
One-dimensional light harvesting structures illuminated by a conventional
lens are studied in this paper. Our theoretical study shows that high
transmission efficiencies are obtained when the structure is placed near the
focal plane of the lens. The considered structure is a finite slit-groove array
(SGA) with a given number of grooves that are symmetrically distributed with
respect to a central slit. The SGA is nano-patterned on an opaque metallic
film. It is found that a total transmittance of 80% is achieved even for a
single slit when (i) Fabry-Perot like modes are excited inside the slit and
(ii) the effective cross section of the aperture becomes of the order of the
full width at half maximum of the incident beam. A further enhancement of 8% is
produced by the groove array. The optimal geometry for the groove array
consists of a moderate number of grooves () at either side of the
slit, separated by a distance of half the incident wavelength .
Grooves should be deeper (with depth ) than those typically
reported for plane wave illumination in order to increase their individual
scattering cross section.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Application of the coherent state formalism to multiply excited states
A general expression is obtained for the matrix element of an m-body operator
between coherent states constructed from multiple orthogonal coherent boson
species. This allows the coherent state formalism to be applied to states
possessing an arbitrarily large number of intrinsic excitation quanta. For
illustration, the formalism is applied to the two-dimensional vibron model
[U(3) model], to calculate the energies of all excited states in the large-N
limit.Comment: LaTeX (iopart); 10 pages; to be published in J. Phys.
Deep into the Water Fountains: The case of IRAS 18043-2116
(Abridged) The formation of large-scale (hundreds to few thousands of AU)
bipolar structures in the circumstellar envelopes (CSEs) of post-Asymptotic
Giant Branch (post-AGB) stars is poorly understood. The shape of these
structures, traced by emission from fast molecular outflows, suggests that the
dynamics at the innermost regions of these CSEs does not depend only on the
energy of the radiation field of the central star. Deep into the Water
Fountains is an observational project based on the results of programs carried
out with three telescope facilities: The Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array
(JVLA), The Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA), and the Very Large
Telescope (SINFONI-VLT). Here we report the results of the observations towards
the WF nebula IRAS 180432116: Detection of radio continuum emission in the
frequency range 1.5GHz - 8.0GHz; HO maser spectral features and radio
continuum emission detected at 22GHz, and H ro-vibrational emission lines
detected at the near infrared. The high-velocity HO maser spectral
features, and the shock-excited H emission detected could be produced in
molecular layers which are swept up as a consequence of the propagation of a
jet-driven wind. Using the derived H column density, we estimated a
molecular mass-loss rate of the order of Myr. On the
other hand, if the radio continuum flux detected is generated as a consequence
of the propagation of a thermal radio jet, the mass-loss rate associated to the
outflowing ionized material is of the order of 10Myr.
The presence of a rotating disk could be a plausible explanation for the
mass-loss rates estimated.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
Environmental changes during secondary succession in a tropical dry forest in Mexico
Vegetation and environment change mutually during secondary succession, yet the idiosyncrasies of the vegetation effect on the understorey environment are poorly understood. To test whether the successional understorey environment changes predictably and is shaped by the structure and seasonality of tropical dry forests, we estimated basal area and vegetation cover, and measured understorey temperature, light and moisture conditions, in 17 plots forming a 60-y chronosequence and a mature forest. Light and air and soil temperature decreased with time (75-15% of open-sky radiation, 31.7-29.3 °C, and +2.5 °C to -0.5 °C relative to ambient, respectively), whereas relative humidity increased (67-74%). Soil water availability increased with early-successional development (-45 to -1 kPa) but decreased afterwards (to -18 kPa). The first axis of a PCA of the rainy-season environment explained 60% of the variation and was strongly related to air temperature and relative humidity. During tropical dry-forest succession, such factors may be more important than light, the reduction in which is not extreme compared with taller and more vertically stratified wet forests. Seasonality significantly affected the successional environmental gradients, which were marked mainly during the wet season. Environmental heterogeneity was higher in the wet than in the dry season, and larger for resources (light and water) than for conditions (temperature and humidity). The wet-season increase in environmental heterogeneity potentially creates differential growing scenarios; the environmental harshness of the dry season would mostly challenge seedling survival
High-order harmonic generation driven by chirped laser pulses induced by linear and non linear phenomena
We present a theoretical study of high-order harmonic generation (HHG) driven
by ultrashort optical pulses with different kind of chirps. The goal of the
present work is perform a detailed study to clarify the relevant parameters in
the chirped pulses to achieve a noticeable cut-off extensions in HHG. These
chirped pulses are generated using both linear and nonlinear dispersive
media.The description of the origin of the physical mechanisms responsible of
this extension is, however, not usually reported with enough detail in the
literature. The study of the behaviour of the harmonic cut-off with these kind
of pulses is carried out in the classical context, by the integration of the
Newton-Lorentz equation complemented with the quantum approach, based on the
integration of the time dependent Schr\"odinger equation in full dimensions
(TDSE-3D), we are able to understand the underlying physics.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
When is Containment Decidable for Probabilistic Automata?
The containment problem for quantitative automata is the natural quantitative generalisation of the classical language inclusion problem for Boolean automata. We study it for probabilistic automata, where it is known to be undecidable in general. We restrict our study to the class of probabilistic automata with bounded ambiguity. There, we show decidability (subject to Schanuel's conjecture) when one of the automata is assumed to be unambiguous while the other one is allowed to be finitely ambiguous. Furthermore, we show that this is close to the most general decidable fragment of this problem by proving that it is already undecidable if one of the automata is allowed to be linearly ambiguous
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