85,383 research outputs found
Multibody Interplanetary Swingby Trajectories /MIST-1/
Computer program incorporates new isolation procedure to determine interplanetary trajectories which utilize a maximum of three flybys. Program also computes singe planet flybys and direct transfer trajectories. The three principle systems employed in MIST-1 use as their fundamental plane the mean plane of the earth's orbit around the sun
A Fluid Generalization of Membranes
In a certain sense a perfect fluid is a generalization of a point particle.
This leads to the question as to what is the corresponding generalization for
extended objects. The lagrangian formulation of a perfect fluid is much
generalized and this has as a particular example a fluid which is a classical
generalization of a membrane, however there is as yet no indication of any
relationship between their quantum theories.Comment: To appear in CEJP, updated to coincide with published versio
Tectonics and Sedimentation of the Meso- to Neoproterozoic Timan-Varanger Belt along the Northeastern Margin of Baltica
A microgravity isolation mount
The design and preliminary testing of a system for isolating microgravity sensitive payloads from spacecraft vibrational and impulsive disturbances is discussed. The Microgravity Isolation Mount (MGIM) concept consists of a platform which floats almost freely within a limited volume inside the spacecraft, but which is constrained to follow the spacecraft in the long term by means of very weak springs. The springs are realized magnetically and form part of a six degree of freedom active magnetic suspension system. The latter operates without any physical contact between the spacecraft and the platform itself. Power and data transfer is also performed by contactless means. Specifications are given for the expected level of input disturbances and the tolerable level of platform acceleration. The structural configuration of the mount is discussed and the design of the principal elements, i.e., actuators, sensors, control loops and power/data transfer devices are described. Finally, the construction of a hardware model that is being used to verify the predicted performance of the MGIM is described
On the complexion of pseudoscalar mesons
A strongly momentum-dependent dressed-quark mass function is basic to QCD. It
is central to the appearance of a constituent-quark mass-scale and an
existential prerequisite for Goldstone modes. Dyson-Schwinger equation (DSEs)
studies have long emphasised this importance, and have proved that QCD's
Goldstone modes are the only pseudoscalar mesons to possess a nonzero leptonic
decay constant in the chiral limit when chiral symmetry is dynamically broken,
while the decay constants of their radial excitations vanish. Such features are
readily illustrated using a rainbow-ladder truncation of the DSEs. In this
connection we find (in GeV): f_{eta_c(1S)}= 0.233, m_{eta_c(2S)}=3.42; and
support for interpreting eta(1295), eta(1470) as the first radial excitations
of eta(548), eta'(958), respectively, and K(1460) as the first radial
excitation of the kaon. Moreover, such radial excitations have electromagnetic
diameters greater than 2fm. This exceeds the spatial length of lattices used
typically in contemporary lattice-QCD.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures. Contribution to the proceedings of the "10th
International Symposium on Meson-Nucleon Physics and the Structure of the
Nucleon (MENU04)," IHEP, Beijing, China, 30/Aug.-4/Sept./0
Proper Motions of Ionized Gas at the Galactic Center: Evidence for Unbound Orbiting Gas
We present radio continuum observations of the spiral-shaped ionized feature
(Sgr A West) within the inner pc of the Galactic center at three epochs
spanning 1986 to 1995. The VLA A-configuration was used at 2cm
(resolution of 0\dasec10\dasec2). We detect proper motions of a number
of features in the Northern and Eastern Arms of Sgr A West including the
ionized gas associated with IRS 13 with V(RA)= 113 \pm 10, V(Dec)=150 \pm15
km/s, IRS 2 with V(RA)= 122 \pm 11, V(Dec)=24 \pm 34 km/s and the Norther Arm
V(RA)= 126 \pm 30, V(Dec)=--207 \pm 58 km/s. We also report the detection of
features having transverse velocities > 1000 km/s including a head-tail radio
structure, the ``Bullet'', northwest of Sgr A with V(RA)= 722
\pm 156, V(Dec)=832 \pm 203 km/s, exceeding the escape velocity at the Galactic
center.
The proper motion measurements when combined with previous H92 radio
recombination line data suggest an unambiguous direction of the flow of ionized
gas orbiting the Galactic center. The measured velocity distribution suggests
that the ionized gas in the Northern Arm is not bound to the Galactic center
assuming a 2.5 million solar mass of dark matter residing at the Galactic
center. This implies that the stellar and ionized gas systems are not
dynamically coupled, thus, supporting a picture in which the gas features in
the Northern Arm and its extensions are the result of an energetic phenomenon
that has externally driven a cloud of gas cloud into the Galactic center.Comment: 11 pages, three figures (one color) and one table. Astrophysical
Journal Letters in pres
Strong D* -> D+pi and B* -> B+pi couplings
We compute g_{D* D pi} and g_{B* B pi} using a framework in which all
elements are constrained by Dyson-Schwinger equation studies of QCD, and
therefore incorporates a consistent, direct and simultaneous description of
light- and heavy-quarks and the states they may constitute. We link these
couplings with the heavy-light-meson leptonic decay constants, and thereby
obtain g_{D* D pi}=15.9+2.1/-1.0 and g_{B* B pi}=30.0+3.2/-1.4. From the latter
we infer \hat-g_B=0.37+0.04/-0.02. A comparison between g_{D* D pi} and g_{B* B
pi} indicates that when the c-quark is a system's heaviest constituent,
Lambda_{QCD}/m_c-corrections are not under good control.Comment: 5 pages, 1 table, 2 figure
On Nucleon Electromagnetic Form Factors
A Poincare' covariant Faddeev equation, which describes baryons as composites
of confined-quarks and -nonpointlike-diquarks, is solved to obtain masses and
Faddeev amplitudes for the nucleon and Delta. The amplitudes are a component of
a nucleon-photon vertex that automatically fulfills the Ward-Takahashi identity
for on-shell nucleons. These elements are sufficient for the calculation of a
quark core contribution to the nucleons' electromagnetic form factors. An
accurate description of the static properties is not possible with the core
alone but the error is uniformly reduced by the incorporation of meson-loop
contributions. Such contributions to form factors are noticeable for Q^2 < ~2
GeV^2 but vanish with increasing momentum transfer. Hence, larger Q^2
experiments probe the quark core. The calculated behaviour of
G_E^p(Q^2)/G_M^p(Q^2) on Q^2 \in [2,6] GeV^2 agrees with that inferred from
polarisation transfer data. Moreover, \sqrt{Q^2} F_2(Q^2)/F_1(Q^2) is
approximately constant on this domain. These outcomes result from correlations
in the proton's amplitude.Comment: 31 pages, 7 figures, 5 table
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