34,945 research outputs found
The Two-Nucleon 1S0 Amplitude Zero in Chiral Effective Field Theory
We present a new rearrangement of short-range interactions in the
nucleon-nucleon channel within Chiral Effective Field Theory. This is intended
to reproduce the amplitude zero (scattering momentum 340 MeV) at
leading order, and it includes subleading corrections perturbatively in a way
that is consistent with renormalization-group invariance. Systematic
improvement is shown at next-to-leading order, and we obtain results that fit
empirical phase shifts remarkably well all the way up to the pion-production
threshold. An approach in which pions have been integrated out is included,
which allows us to derive analytic results that also fit phenomenology
surprisingly well.Comment: 34 pages, 7 figure
Transport properties of armchair graphene nanoribbon junctions between graphene electrodes
The transmission properties of armchair graphene nanoribbon junctions between
graphene electrodes are investigated by means of first-principles quantum
transport calculations. First the dependence of the transmission function on
the size of the nanoribbon has been studied. Two regimes are highlighted: for
small applied bias transport takes place via tunneling and the length of the
ribbon is the key parameter that determines the junction conductance; at higher
applied bias resonant transport through HOMO and LUMO starts to play a more
determinant role, and the transport properties depend on the details of the
geometry (width and length) of the carbon nanoribbon. In the case of the
thinnest ribbon it has been verified that a tilted geometry of the central
phenyl ring is the most stable configuration. As a consequence of this rotation
the conductance decreases due to the misalignment of the orbitals between
the phenyl ring and the remaining part of the junction. All the computed
transmission functions have shown a negligible dependence on different
saturations and reconstructions of the edges of the graphene leads, suggesting
a general validity of the reported results
A standardised method for measuring in situ denitrification in shallow aquifers: numerical validation and measurements in riparian wetlands
A tracer test to examine in situ denitrification in shallow groundwater by a piezometer with a packer system used bromide as a tracer of dilution and acetylene (10%) to block the denitrification process at the nitrous oxide stage. During the test, dissolved oxygen, nitrate (NO3-), bromide (Br-), nitrous oxide (N2O) and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) were measured. To calibrate the experimental method, comparison with numerical simulations of the groundwater transfer were carried out, taking into account the environmental characteristics. The method was tested by measurements undertaken in different environmental conditions (geology, land use and hydrology) in two riparian wetlands. Denitrification rates measured by this method ranged from 5.7 10-6 g N-NO3-L-1 h-1 to 1.97 10-3 g N-NO3-L-1 h-1 The method is applicable in shallow aquifers with a permeability from 10-2 to 10-4m s-1
Interactions and star formation activity in Wolf-Rayet galaxies
We present the main results of the PhD Thesis carried out by
L\'opez-S\'anchez (2006), in which a detailed morphological, photometrical and
spectroscopical analysis of a sample of 20 Wolf-Rayet (WR) galaxies was
realized. The main aims are the study of the star formation and O and WR
stellar populations in these galaxies and the role that interactions between
low surface companion objects have in the triggering of the bursts. We analyze
the morphology, stellar populations, physical conditions, chemical abundances
and kinematics of the ionized gas, as well as the star-formation activity of
each system.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figure
The merging/AGN connection II. Ionization of the circumnuclear regions
We report the first results of a study of a sample of 20 galaxy
mergers/interacting systems, using the VIMOS and PMAS integral field
spectrographs. For each object, we extracted the integrated spectrum of the
central regions and analyzed the ionization state using classical diagnostic
diagrams (Veilleux & Osterbrock 1987). There is evidence of AGN ionization in 4
of the objects, i.e. 20% of the sample, a considerably higher fraction than
found in previous studies ~4%Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publishing in A&A Letter
Imperfect Imitation Can Enhance Cooperation
The promotion of cooperation on spatial lattices is an important issue in
evolutionary game theory. This effect clearly depends on the update rule: it
diminishes with stochastic imitative rules whereas it increases with
unconditional imitation. To study the transition between both regimes, we
propose a new evolutionary rule, which stochastically combines unconditional
imitation with another imitative rule. We find that, surprinsingly, in many
social dilemmas this rule yields higher cooperative levels than any of the two
original ones. This nontrivial effect occurs because the basic rules induce a
separation of timescales in the microscopic processes at cluster interfaces.
The result is robust in the space of 2x2 symmetric games, on regular lattices
and on scale-free networks.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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