10,206 research outputs found
On the unsteady behavior of turbulence models
Periodically forced turbulence is used as a test case to evaluate the
predictions of two-equation and multiple-scale turbulence models in unsteady
flows. The limitations of the two-equation model are shown to originate in the
basic assumption of spectral equilibrium. A multiple-scale model based on a
picture of stepwise energy cascade overcomes some of these limitations, but the
absence of nonlocal interactions proves to lead to poor predictions of the time
variation of the dissipation rate. A new multiple-scale model that includes
nonlocal interactions is proposed and shown to reproduce the main features of
the frequency response correctly
The Detection of a 3.5-h Period in the Classical Nova Velorum 1999 (V382 Vel) and the Long Term Behavior of the Nova Light Curve
We present CCD photometry, light curve and time series analysis of the
classical nova V382 Vel (N Vel 1999). The source was observed for 2 nights in
2000, 21 nights in 2001 and 7 nights in 2002 using clear filters. We report the
detection of a distinct period in the light curve of the nova P=0.146126(18) d
(3.5 h). The period is evident in all data sets, and we interpret it as the
binary period of the system. We also measured an increase in the amplitude
modulation of the optical light (in magnitude) by more than 55% from 2000 to
2001 and about 64% from 2001 to 2002. The pulse profiles in 2001 show
deviations from a pure sinusoidal shape which progressively become more
sinusoidal by 2002. The main cause of the variations in 2001 and 2002 can be
explained with the occultation of the accretion disk by the secondary star. We
interpret the observed deviations from a pure sinusoidal shape as additional
flux resulting from the aspect variations of the irradiated face of the
secondary star.Comment: 16 pages and 4 figures, accepted as it stands to be published in the
Astronomical Journal (AJ
Lagrangian dynamics and statistical geometric structure of turbulence
The local statistical and geometric structure of three-dimensional turbulent
flow can be described by properties of the velocity gradient tensor. A
stochastic model is developed for the Lagrangian time evolution of this tensor,
in which the exact nonlinear self-stretching term accounts for the development
of well-known non-Gaussian statistics and geometric alignment trends. The
non-local pressure and viscous effects are accounted for by a closure that
models the material deformation history of fluid elements. The resulting
stochastic system reproduces many statistical and geometric trends observed in
numerical and experimental 3D turbulent flows, including anomalous relative
scaling.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, final version, publishe
Comparing phenomenological recipes with a microscopic model for the electric amplitude in strangeness photoproduction
Corrections to the Born approximation in photo-induced strangeness production
off a proton are calculated in a semi-realistic microscopic model. The vertex
corrections and internal contributions to the amplitude of the reaction are included on the one-loop level. Different
gauge-invariant phenomenological prescriptions for the modification of the Born
contribution via the introduction of form factors and contact terms are
discussed. In particular, it is shown that the popular minimal-substitution
method of Ohta corresponds to a special limit of the more realistic approach.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures in the tex
The effect of three years of TNF alpha blocking therapy on markers of bone turnover and their predictive value for treatment discontinuation in patients with ankylosing spondylitis: a prospective longitudinal observational cohort study
INTRODUCTION: The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of three years of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) blocking therapy on bone turnover as well as to analyze the predictive value of early changes in bone turnover markers (BTM) for treatment discontinuation in patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS). METHODS: This is a prospective cohort study of 111 consecutive AS outpatients who started TNF-alpha blocking therapy. Clinical assessments and BTM were assessed at baseline, three and six months, as well as at one, two, and three years. Z-scores of BTM were calculated to correct for age and gender. Bone mineral density (BMD) was assessed yearly. RESULTS: After three years, 72 patients (65%) were still using their first TNF-alpha blocking agent. In these patients, TNF-alpha blocking therapy resulted in significantly increased bone-specific alkaline phosphatase, a marker of bone formation; decreased serum collagen-telopeptide (sCTX), a marker of bone resorption; and increased lumbar spine and hip BMD compared to baseline. Baseline to three months decrease in sCTX Z-score (HR: 0.394, 95% CI: 0.263 to 0.591), AS disease activity score (ASDAS; HR: 0.488, 95% CI: 0.317 to 0.752), and physician's global disease activity (HR: 0.739, 95% CI: 0.600 to 0.909) were independent inversely related predictors of time to treatment discontinuation because of inefficacy or intolerance. Early decrease in sCTX Z-score correlated significantly with good long-term response regarding disease activity, physical function and quality of life. CONCLUSIONS: Three years of TNF-alpha blocking therapy results in a bone turnover balance that favors bone formation, especially mineralization, in combination with continuous improvement of lumbar spine BMD. Early change in sCTX can serve as an objective measure in the evaluation of TNF-alpha blocking therapy in AS, in addition to the currently used more subjective measures
Weakly Admissible Meshes and Discrete Extremal Sets
We present a brief survey on (Weakly) Admissible Meshes and corresponding Discrete Extremal Sets, namely Approximate Fekete Points and Discrete Leja Points. These provide new computational tools for polynomial least squares and interpolation on multidimensional compact sets, with different applications such as numerical cubature, digital filtering, spectral and high-order methods for PDEs
Single crystal growth and physical properties of the layered arsenide BaRh_2As_2
Single crystals of BaRh_2As_2 have been synthesized from a Pb flux. We
present the room temperature crystal structure, single crystal x-ray
diffraction measurements as a function of temperature T, anisotropic magnetic
susceptibility \chi versus T, electrical resistivity in the ab-plane \rho
versus T, Hall coefficient versus T and magnetic field H, and heat capacity C
versus T measurements on the crystals. The single crystal structure
determination confirms that BaRh_2As_2 forms in the tetragonal ThCr_2Si_2 type
structure (space group I4/mmm) with lattice parameters a = b = 4.0564(6)\AA and
c = 12.797(4) \AA. Band structure calculations show that BaRh_2As_2 should be
metallic with a small density of states at the Fermi energy N(E_ F) = 3.49
states/eV f.u. (where f.u. \equiv formula unit) for both spin directions.
\rho(T) data in the ab-plane confirm that the material is indeed metallic with
a residual resistivity \rho(2K) = 29 \mu \Omega cm, and with a residual
resistivity ratio \rho(310K)/\rho(2K) = 5.3. The observed \chi(T) is small
(\sim 10^{-5} cm^3/mol) and weakly anisotropic with \chi_{ab}/\chi_ c \approx
2. The C(T) data indicate a small density of states at the Fermi energy with
the low temperature Sommerfeld coefficient \gamma = 4.7(9) mJ/mol K^2. There
are no indications of superconductivity, spin density wave, or structural
transitions between 2K and 300K. We compare the calculated density of states
versus energy of BaRh_2As_2 with that of BaFe_2As_2.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
QCD Corrections to Production of Higgs Pseudoscalars
Models of electroweak symmetry breaking with more than a single doublet of
Higgs scalars contain a neutral pseudoscalar boson. The production of such a
pseudoscalar in hadron collisions proceeds primarily via gluon fusion through a
top-quark loop (except for those models in which the pseudoscalar coupling to
bottom quarks is strongly enhanced). We compute the QCD corrections to this
process in the heavy-quark limit, using an effective Lagrangian derived from
the axial anomaly.Comment: 9 pages, (BNL number added, 1 typo corrected, PHYZZX format, 4
figures not included, available on request), BNL-4906
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