21,056 research outputs found
Comparisons of monthly mean cosmic ray counting rates observes from worldwide network of neutron monitors
In order to examine the stability of neutron monitor observation, each of the monthly average counting rates of a neutron monitors is correlated to those of Kiel neutron monitor. The regression coefficients thus obtained are compared with the coupling coefficients of isotropic intensity radiation. The results of the comparisons for five year periods during 1963 to 1982, and for whole period are given. The variation spectrum with a single power law with an exponent of -0.75 up to 50 GV is not so unsatisfactory one. More than one half of the stations show correlations with the coefficient greater than 0.9. Some stations have shifted the level of mean counting rates by changing the instrumental characteristics which can be adjusted
Cosmological Shock Waves in the Large Scale Structure of the Universe: Non-gravitational Effects
Cosmological shock waves result from supersonic flow motions induced by
hierarchical clustering of nonlinear structures in the universe. These shocks
govern the nature of cosmic plasma through thermalization of gas and
acceleration of nonthermal, cosmic-ray (CR) particles. We study the statistics
and energetics of shocks formed in cosmological simulations of a concordance
CDM universe, with a special emphasis on the effects of
non-gravitational processes such as radiative cooling, photoionization/heating,
and galactic superwind feedbacks. Adopting an improved model for gas
thermalization and CR acceleration efficiencies based on nonlinear diffusive
shock acceleration calculations, we then estimate the gas thermal energy and
the CR energy dissipated at shocks through the history of the universe. Since
shocks can serve as sites for generation of vorticity, we also examine the
vorticity that should have been generated mostly at curved shocks in
cosmological simulations. We find that the dynamics and energetics of shocks
are governed primarily by the gravity of matter, so other non-gravitational
processes do not affect significantly the global energy dissipation and
vorticity generation at cosmological shocks. Our results reinforce scenarios in
which the intracluster medium and warm-hot intergalactic medium contain
energetically significant populations of nonthermal particles and turbulent
flow motions.Comment: Submitted to ApJ. Pdf with full resolution figures can be downloaded
from http://canopus.cnu.ac.kr/ryu/krco.pd
Growth of Magnetic Fields Induced by Turbulent Motions
We present numerical simulations of driven magnetohydrodynamic (MHD)
turbulence with weak/moderate imposed magnetic fields. The main goal is to
clarify dynamics of magnetic field growth. We also investigate the effects of
the imposed magnetic fields on the MHD turbulence, including, as a limit, the
case of zero external field. Our findings are as follows. First, when we start
off simulations with weak mean magnetic field only (or with small scale random
field with zero imposed field), we observe that there is a stage at which
magnetic energy density grows linearly with time. Runs with different numerical
resolutions and/or different simulation parameters show consistent results for
the growth rate at the linear stage. Second, we find that, when the strength of
the external field increases, the equilibrium kinetic energy density drops by
roughly the product of the rms velocity and the strength of the external field.
The equilibrium magnetic energy density rises by roughly the same amount.
Third, when the external magnetic field is not very strong (say, less than ~0.2
times the rms velocity when measured in the units of Alfven speed), the
turbulence at large scales remains statistically isotropic, i.e. there is no
apparent global anisotropy of order B_0/v. We discuss implications of our
results on astrophysical fluids.Comment: 16 pages, 18 figures; ApJ, accepte
Topological Insulators and Superconductors from String Theory
Topological insulators and superconductors in different spatial dimensions
and with different discrete symmetries have been fully classified recently,
revealing a periodic structure for the pattern of possible types of topological
insulators and supercondutors, both in terms of spatial dimensions and in terms
of symmetry classes. It was proposed that K-theory is behind the periodicity.
On the other hand, D-branes, a solitonic object in string theory, are also
known to be classified by K-theory. In this paper, by inspecting low-energy
effective field theories realized by two parallel D-branes, we establish a
one-to-one correspondence between the K-theory classification of topological
insulators/superconductors and D-brane charges. In addition, the string theory
realization of topological insulators and superconductors comes naturally with
gauge interactions, and the Wess-Zumino term of the D-branes gives rise to a
gauge field theory of topological nature, such as ones with the Chern-Simons
term or the -term in various dimensions. This sheds light on
topological insulators and superconductors beyond non-interacting systems, and
the underlying topological field theory description thereof. In particular, our
string theory realization includes the honeycomb lattice Kitaev model in two
spatial dimensions, and its higher-dimensional extensions. Increasing the
number of D-branes naturally leads to a realization of topological insulators
and superconductors in terms of holography (AdS/CFT).Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures;references update
From modes to movement in the behavior of C. elegans
Organisms move through the world by changing their shape, and here we explore
the mapping from shape space to movements in the nematode C. elegans as it
crawls on a planar agar surface. We characterize the statistics of the
trajectories through the correlation functions of the orientation angular
velocity, orientation angle and the mean-squared displacement, and we find that
the loss of orientational memory has significant contributions from both
abrupt, large amplitude turning events and the continuous dynamics between
these events. Further, we demonstrate long-time persistence of orientational
memory in the intervals between abrupt turns. Building on recent work
demonstrating that C. elegans movements are restricted to a low-dimensional
shape space, we construct a map from the dynamics in this shape space to the
trajectory of the worm along the agar. We use this connection to illustrate
that changes in the continuous dynamics reveal subtle differences in movement
strategy that occur among mutants defective in two classes of dopamine
receptors
Holographic Derivation of Entanglement Entropy from AdS/CFT
A holographic derivation of the entanglement entropy in quantum (conformal)
field theories is proposed from AdS/CFT correspondence. We argue that the
entanglement entropy in d+1 dimensional conformal field theories can be
obtained from the area of d dimensional minimal surfaces in AdS_{d+2},
analogous to the Bekenstein-Hawking formula for black hole entropy. We show
that our proposal perfectly reproduces the correct entanglement entropy in 2D
CFT when applied to AdS_3. We also compare the entropy computed in AdS_5 \times
S^5 with that of the free N=4 super Yang-Mills.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, Revtex, references adde
Boundary criticality at the Anderson transition between a metal and a quantum spin Hall insulator in two dimensions
Static disorder in a noninteracting gas of electrons confined to two
dimensions can drive a continuous quantum (Anderson) transition between a
metallic and an insulating state when time-reversal symmetry is preserved but
spin-rotation symmetry is broken. The critical exponent that
characterizes the diverging localization length and the bulk multifractal
scaling exponents that characterize the amplitudes of the critical wave
functions at the metal-insulator transition do not depend on the topological
nature of the insulating state, i.e., whether it is topologically trivial
(ordinary insulator) or nontrivial (a insulator supporting a quantum spin
Hall effect). This is not true of the boundary multifractal scaling exponents
which we show (numerically) to depend on whether the insulating state is
topologically trivial or not.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures, selected for an Editors' Suggestion in PR
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