28,227 research outputs found
Coupling the solar surface and the corona: coronal rotation, Alfv\'en wave-driven polar plumes
The dynamical response of the solar corona to surface and sub-surface
perturbations depends on the chromospheric stratification, and specifically on
how efficiently these layers reflect or transmit incoming Alfv\'en waves. While
it would be desirable to include the chromospheric layers in the numerical
simulations used to study such phenomena, that is most often not feasible. We
defined and tested a simple approximation allowing the study of coronal
phenomena while taking into account a parametrised chromospheric reflectivity.
We addressed the problems of the transmission of the surface rotation to the
corona and that of the generation of polar plumes by Alfv\'en waves (Pinto et
al., 2010, 2011). We found that a high (yet partial) effective chromospheric
reflectivity is required to properly describe the angular momentum balance in
the corona and the way the surface differential rotation is transmitted
upwards. Alfv\'en wave-driven polar plumes maintain their properties for a wide
range of values for the reflectivity, but they become bursty (and eventually
disrupt) when the limit of total reflection is attained.Comment: Solar Wind 13: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Solar Wind
Conferenc
Monitoring thermal ablation via microwave tomography. An ex vivo experimental assessment
Thermal ablation treatments are gaining a lot of attention in the clinics thanks to their reduced invasiveness and their capability of treating non-surgical patients. The effectiveness of these treatments and their impact in the hospital's routine would significantly increase if paired with a monitoring technique able to control the evolution of the treated area in real-time. This is particularly relevant in microwave thermal ablation, wherein the capability of treating larger tumors in a shorter time needs proper monitoring. Current diagnostic imaging techniques do not provide effective solutions to this issue for a number of reasons, including economical sustainability and safety. Hence, the development of alternative modalities is of interest. Microwave tomography, which aims at imaging the electromagnetic properties of a target under test, has been recently proposed for this scope, given the significant temperature-dependent changes of the dielectric properties of human tissues induced by thermal ablation. In this paper, the outcomes of the first ex vivo experimental study, performed to assess the expected potentialities of microwave tomography, are presented. The paper describes the validation study dealing with the imaging of the changes occurring in thermal ablation treatments. The experimental test was carried out on two ex vivo bovine liver samples and the reported results show the capability of microwave tomography of imaging the transition between ablated and untreated tissue. Moreover, the discussion section provides some guidelines to follow in order to improve the achievable performances
Global extraction of the parton-to-pion fragmentation functions at NLO accuracy in QCD
In this review, we discuss the results on the parton-to-pion fragmentation
functions obtained in a combined NLO fit to data of single-inclusive hadron
production in electron-positron annihilation, proton-proton collisions, and
lepton-nucleon deep-inelastic scattering. A more complete discussion can be
found in Ref. [1].Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure. To be published in Journal of Physics Conference
Series (IOP). Joint Proceedings of the XV Mexican Workshop on Particles and
Fields & the XXX Annual Meeting of the Division of Particles and Fields of
the Mexican Physical Societ
Symmetry Aspects in Nonrelativistic Multi-Scalar Field Models and Application to a Coupled Two-Species Dilute Bose Gas
We discuss unusual aspects of symmetry that can happen due to entropic
effects in the context of multi-scalar field theories at finite temperature. We
present their consequences, in special, for the case of nonrelativistic models
of hard core spheres. We show that for nonrelativistic models phenomena like
inverse symmetry breaking and symmetry non-restoration cannot take place, but a
reentrant phase at high temperatures is shown to be possible for some region of
parameters. We then develop a model of interest in studies of Bose-Einstein
condensation in dilute atomic gases and discuss about its phase transition
patterns. In this application to a Bose-Einstein condensation model, however,
no reentrant phases are found.Comment: 8 pages, 1 eps figure, IOP style. Based on a talk given by R. O.
Ramos at the QFEXT05 workshop, Barcelona, Spain, September 5-9, 2005. One
reference was update
Tanaka-Tagoshi Parametrization of post-1PN Spin-Free Gravitational Wave Chirps: Equispaced and Cardinal Interpolated Lattices For First Generation Interferometric Antennas
The spin-free binary-inspiral parameter-space introduced by Tanaka and
Tagoshi to construct a uniformly-spaced lattice of templates at (and possibly
beyond) order is shown to work for all first generation interferometric
gravitational wave antennas. This allows to extend the minimum-redundant
cardinal interpolation techniques of the correlator bank developed by the
Authors to the highest available order PN templates. The total number of 2PN
templates to be computed for a minimal match is reduced by a
factor 4, as in the 1PN case.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Thermal and non-thermal emission from reconnecting twisted coronal loops
Twisted magnetic fields should be ubiquitous in flare-producing active
regions where the magnetic fields are strongly non-potential. It has been shown
that reconnection in helical magnetic coronal loops results in plasma heating
and particle acceleration distributed within a large volume, including the
lower coronal and chromospheric sections of the loops. This scenario can be an
alternative to the standard flare model, where particles are accelerated only
in a small volume located in the upper corona. We use a combination of MHD
simulations and test-particle methods, which describe the development of kink
instability and magnetic reconnection in twisted coronal loops using resistive
compressible MHD, and incorporate atmospheric stratification and large-scale
loop curvature. The resulting distributions of hot plasma let us estimate
thermal X-ray emission intensities. The electric and magnetic fields obtained
are used to calculate electron trajectories using the guiding-centre
approximation. These trajectories combined with the MHD plasma density
distributions let us deduce synthetic HXR bremsstrahlung intensities. Our
simulations emphasise that the geometry of the emission patterns produced by
hot plasma in flaring twisted coronal loops can differ from the actual geometry
of the underlying magnetic fields. The twist angles revealed by the emission
threads (SXR) are consistently lower than the field-line twist present at the
onset of the kink-instability. HXR emission due to the interaction of energetic
electrons with the stratified background are concentrated at the loop
foot-points in these simulations, even though the electrons are accelerated
everywhere within the coronal volume of the loop. The maximum of HXR emission
consistently precedes that of SXR emission, with the HXR light-curve being
approximately proportional to the temporal derivative of the SXR light-curve.Comment: (accepted for publication on A&A
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