11,023 research outputs found
Ground-state properties of one-dimensional anyon gases
We investigate the ground state of the one-dimensional interacting anyonic
system based on the exact Bethe ansatz solution for arbitrary coupling constant
() and statistics parameter (). It
is shown that the density of state in quasi-momentum space and the ground
state energy are determined by the renormalized coupling constant . The
effect induced by the statistics parameter exhibits in the momentum
distribution in two aspects: Besides the effect of renormalized coupling, the
anyonic statistics results in the nonsymmetric momentum distribution when the
statistics parameter deviates from 0 (Bose statistics) and
(Fermi statistics) for any coupling constant . The momentum distribution
evolves from a Bose distribution to a Fermi one as varies from 0 to
. The asymmetric momentum distribution comes from the contribution of the
imaginary part of the non-diagonal element of reduced density matrix, which is
an odd function of . The peak at positive momentum will shift to
negative momentum if is negative.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, published version in Phys. Rev.
Realistic Magnetohydrodynamical Simulation of Solar Local Supergranulation
Three-dimensional numerical simulations of solar surface magnetoconvection
using realistic model physics are conducted. The thermal structure of
convective motions into the upper radiative layers of the photosphere, the main
scales of convective cells and the penetration depths of convection are
investigated. We take part of the solar photosphere with size of 60x60 Mm in
horizontal direction and by depth 20 Mm from level of the visible solar
surface. We use a realistic initial model of the Sun and apply equation of
state and opacities of stellar matter. The equations of fully compressible
radiation magnetohydrodynamics with dynamical viscosity and gravity are solved.
We apply: 1) conservative TVD difference scheme for the magnetohydrodynamics,
2) the diffusion approximation for the radiative transfer, 3) dynamical
viscosity from subgrid scale modeling. In simulation we take uniform
two-dimesional grid in gorizontal plane and nonuniform grid in vertical
direction with number of cells 600x600x204. We use 512 processors with
distributed memory multiprocessors on supercomputer MVS-100k in the Joint
Computational Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, submitted to the proceedings of the GONG 2008 /
SOHO XXI conferenc
Some Exact Results for Spanning Trees on Lattices
For -vertex, -dimensional lattices with , the number
of spanning trees grows asymptotically as
in the thermodynamic limit. We present an exact closed-form result for the
asymptotic growth constant for spanning trees on the
-dimensional body-centered cubic lattice. We also give an exact integral
expression for on the face-centered cubic lattice and an exact
closed-form expression for on the lattice.Comment: 7 pages, 1 tabl
Slow Relaxation Process in Ising like Heisenberg Kagome Antiferromagnets due to Macroscopic Degeneracy in the Ordered State
We study relaxation phenomena in the ferromagnetically ordered state of the
Ising-like Heisenberg kagome antiferromagnets. We introduce the "weathervane
loop" in order to characterize macroscopic degenerate ordered states and study
the microscopic mechanism of the slow relaxation from a view point of the
dynamics of the weathervane loop configuration. This mechanism may give a
possible origin of the slow relaxation reported in recent experiments.Comment: 6pages, 4figures, HFM2006 proceeding
Structure in the nucleus of NGC 1068 at 10 microns
New 8 to 13 micron array camera images of the central kiloparsec of Seyfert 2 galaxy NGC 1068 resolve structure that is similar to that observed at visible and radio wavelengths. The images reveal an infrared source which is extended and asymmetric, with its long axis oriented at P.A. 33 deg. Maps of the spatial distribution of 8 to 13 micron color temperature and warm dust opacity are derived from the multiwavelength infrared images. The results suggest that there exist two pointlike luminosity sources in the central regions of NGC 1068, with the brighter source at the nucleus and the fainter one some 100 pc to the northeast. This geometry strengthens the possibility that the 10 micron emission observed from grains in the nucleus is powered by a nonthermal source. In the context of earlier visible and radio studies, these results considerably strengthen the case for jet induced star formation in NGC 1068
The 8.3 and 12.4 micron imaging of the Galactic Center source complex with the Goddard infrared array camera
A 30 x 30 arcsec field at the Galactic Center (1.5 x 1.5 parsec) was mapped at 8.3 microns and 12.41 microns with high spatial resolution and accurate relative astrometry, using the 16 x 16 Si:Bi accumulation mode charge injection device Goddard infrared array camera. The design and performance of the array camera detector electronics system and image data processing techniques are discussed. Color temperature and dust opacity distributions derived from the spatially accurate images indicate that the compact infrared sources and the large scale ridge structure are bounded by warmer, more diffuse material. None of the objects appear to be heated appreciably by internal luminosity sources. These results are consistent with the model proposing that the complex is heated externally by a strong luminosity source at the Galactic Center, which dominates the energetics of the inner few parsecs of the galaxy
Vorticity Budget of Weak Thermal Convection in Keplerian disks
By employing the equations of mean-square vorticity (enstrophy) fluctuations
in strong shear flows, we demonstrate that unlike energy production of
turbulent vorticity in nonrotating shear flows, the turbulent vorticity of weak
convection in Keplerian disks cannot gain energy from vortex stretching/tilting
by background shear unless the asscoiated Reynolds stresses are negative. This
is because the epicyclic motion is an energy sink of the radial component of
mean-square turbulent vorticity in Keplerian disks when Reynolds stresses are
positive. Consequently, weak convection cannot be self-sustained in Keplerian
flows. This agrees with the results implied from the equations of mean-square
velocity fluctuations in strong shear flows. Our analysis also sheds light on
the explanation of the simulation result in which positive kinetic helicity is
produced by the Balbus-Hawley instability in a vertically stratified Keplerian
disk. We also comment on the possibility of outward angular momentum transport
by strong convection based on azimuthal pressure perturbations and directions
of energy cascade.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, emulateapj.sty, revised version in response to
referee's comments, accepted by Ap
- âŠ