2,782 research outputs found
Tracking the phase-transition energy in disassembly of hot nuclei
In efforts to determine phase transitions in the disintegration of highly
excited heavy nuclei, a popular practice is to parametrise the yields of
isotopes as a function of temperature in the form
, where 's are the measured yields
and and are fitted to the yields. Here would be
interpreted as the phase transition temperature. For finite systems such as
those obtained in nuclear collisions, this parametrisation is only approximate
and hence allows for extraction of in more than one way. In this work we
look in detail at how values of differ, depending on methods of
extraction. It should be mentioned that for finite systems, this approximate
parametrisation works not only at the critical point, but also for first order
phase transitions (at least in some models). Thus the approximate fit is no
guarantee that one is seeing a critical phenomenon. A different but more
conventional search for the nuclear phase transition would look for a maximum
in the specific heat as a function of temperature . In this case is
interpreted as the phase transition temperature. Ideally and would
coincide. We invesigate this possibility, both in theory and from the ISiS
data, performing both canonical () and microcanonical ()
calculations. Although more than one value of can be extracted from the
approximate parmetrisation, the work here points to the best value from among
the choices. Several interesting results, seen in theoretical calculations, are
borne out in experiment.Comment: Revtex, 10 pages including 8 figures and 2 table
Classical Cepheid Pulsation Models: IX. New Input Physics
We constructed several sequences of classical Cepheid envelope models at
solar chemical composition () to investigate the dependence of
the pulsation properties predicted by linear and nonlinear hydrodynamical
models on input physics. To study the dependence on the equation of state (EOS)
we performed several numerical experiments by using the simplified analytical
EOS originally developed by Stellingwerf and the recent analytical EOS
developed by Irwin. Current findings suggest that the pulsation amplitudes as
well as the topology of the instability strip marginally depend on the adopted
EOS.
We also investigated the dependence of observables predicted by theoretical
models on the mass-luminosity (ML) relation and on the spatial resolution
across the Hydrogen and the Helium partial ionization regions. We found that
nonlinear models are marginally affected by these physical and numerical
assumptions. In particular, the difference between new and old models in the
location as well as in the temperature width of the instability strip is on
average smaller than 200 K. However, the spatial resolution somehow affects the
pulsation properties. The new fine models predict a period at the center of the
Hertzsprung Progression (9.84 days) that reasonably agree with
empirical data based on light curves ( days;
\citealt{mbm92}) and on radial velocity curves ( days;
\citealt{mall00}), and improve previous predictions by Bono, Castellani, and
Marconi (2000, hereinafter BCM00).Comment: 35 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Spinodal decomposition of expanding nuclear matter and multifragmentation
Density fluctuations of expanding nuclear matter are studied within a
mean-field model in which fluctuations are generated by an external stochastic
field. Fluctuations develop about a mean one-body phase-space density
corresponding to a hydrodinamic motion that describes a slow expansion of the
system. A fluctuation-dissipation relation suitable for a uniformly expanding
medium is obtained and used to constrain the strength of the stochastic field.
The distribution of the liquid domains in the spinodal decomposition is
derived. Comparison of the related distribution of the fragment size with
experimental data on the nuclear multifragmentation is quite satisfactory.Comment: 19 RevTex4 pages, 6 eps figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Introduction to the special issue : From RIDGE to Ridge 2000
Author Posting. © The Oceanography Society, 2012. This article is posted here by permission of The Oceanography Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Oceanography 25, no. 1 (2012): 12â17, doi:10.5670/oceanog.2012.01.Articles in this special issue of Oceanography represent a compendium of research that spans the disciplinary and thematic breadth of the National Science Foundation's Ridge 2000 Program, as well as its geographic focal points. The mid-ocean ridge (MOR) crest is where much of Earth's volcanism is focused and where most submarine volcanic activity occurs. If we could look down from space at our planet with the ocean drained, the MOR's topography and shape, along with its intervening fracture zones, would resemble the seams on a baseball, with the ocean basins dominating our planetary panorama. The volcanic seafloor is hidden beneath the green-blue waters of the world's ocean, yet therein lie fundamental clues to how our planet works and has evolved over billions of years, something that was not clearly understood 65 years agoâwitness the following quote from H.H. Hess (1962) in his essay on "geopoetry" and commentary on J.H.F. Umbgrove's (1947) comprehensive summary of Earth and ocean history:
The birth of the oceans is a matter of conjecture, the subsequent history is obscure, and the present structure is just beginning to be understood. Fascinating speculation on these subjects has been plentiful, but not much of it predating the last decade [the 1950s] holds water.This special issue was funded by
a supplement to the Ridge 2000 Office
grant at the Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution (NSF-OCE-0838923)
Quantum corrections for pion correlations involving resonance decays
A method is presented to include quantum corrections into the calculation of
two-pion correlations for the case where particles originate from resonance
decays. The technique uses classical information regarding the space-time
points at which resonances are created. By evaluating a simple thermal model,
the method is compared to semiclassical techniques that assume exponential
decaying resonances moving along classical trajectories. Significant
improvements are noted when the resonance widths are broad as compared to the
temperature.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Does the Milky Way have a Maximal Disk?
The Milky Way is often considered to be the best example of a spiral for
which the dark matter not only dominates the outer kinematics, but also plays a
major dynamical role in the inner galaxy: the Galactic disk is therefore said
to be ``sub-maximal.'' This conclusion is important to the understanding of the
evolution of galaxies and the viability of particular dark matter models. The
Galactic evidence rests on a number of structural and kinematic measurements,
many of which have recently been revised. The new constraints indicate not only
that the Galaxy is a more typical member of its class (Sb-Sc spirals) than
previously thought, but also require a re-examination of the question of
whether or not the Milky Way disk is maximal. By applying to the Milky Way the
same definition of ``maximal disk'' that is applied to external galaxies, it is
shown that the new observational constraints are consistent with a Galactic
maximal disk of reasonable . In particular, the local disk column can be
substantially less than the oft-quoted required \Sigma_{\odot} \approx 100
\msolar pc^{-2} - as low as 40 \msolar pc^{-2} in the extreme case - and
still be maximal, in the sense that the dark halo provides negligible rotation
support in the inner Galaxy. This result has possible implications for any
conclusion that rests on assumptions about the potentials of the Galactic disk
or dark halo, and in particular for the interpretation of microlensing results
along both LMC and bulge lines of sight.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. 23
Latex-generated pages, one (new) table, three figures (two new). A few
additions to the bibliography, an expanded discussion, and slight
quantitative changes, none of which affect the conclusion
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