4,789 research outputs found
On the Prospects for Laser Cooling of TlF
We measure the upper state lifetime and two ratios of vibrational branching
fractions f_{v'v} on the B^{3}\Pi_{1}(v') - X^{1}\Sigma^{+}(v) transition of
TlF. We find the B state lifetime to be 99(9) ns. We also determine that the
off-diagonal vibrational decays are highly suppressed: f_{01}/f_{00} <
2x10^{-4} and f_{02}/f_{00} = 1.10(6)%, in excellent agreement with their
predicted values of f_{01}/f_{00} < 8x10^{-4} and f_{02}/f_{00} = 1.0(2)% based
on Franck-Condon factors calculated using Morse and RKR potentials. The
implications of these results for the possible laser cooling of TlF and
fundamental symmetries experiments are discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
New Limits on Local Lorentz Invariance in Mercury and Cesium
We report new bounds on Local Lorentz Invariance (LLI) violation in Cs and
Hg. The limits are obtained through the observation of the the spin- precession
frequencies of 199Hg and 133Cs atoms in their ground states as a function of
the orientation of an applied magnetic field with respect to the fixed stars.
We measure the amplitudes of the dipole couplings to a preferred direction in
the equatorial plane to be 19(11) nHz for Hg and 9(5) microHz for Cs. The upper
bounds established here improve upon previous bounds by about a factor of four.
The improvement is primarily due to mounting the apparatus on a rotating table.
New bounds are established on several terms in the standard model extension
including the first bounds on the spin-couplings of the neutron and proton to
the z direction, <7e-30 GeV and <7e-29 GeV, respectively.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure
A Flaring Megamaser in Mrk 348
We report new observations of the H2O megamaser in the Seyfert 2 galaxy Mrk
348. Following our initial detection in 2000 March using the Effelsberg 100 m
telescope, re-analysis of previous data on this source indicates that the maser
was present but only marginally detectable in late 1997. Monitoring through
late 2000 shows that the maser has again decreased to its original level. The
H2O line is redshifted by ~130 km/s with respect to the systemic velocity, is
extremely broad, with a FWHM of 130 km/s, and has no detectable high velocity
components within 1500 km/s on either side of the strong line. Followup VLBA
observations show that the maser emission emanates entirely from a region >0.25
pc in extent, toward the base of the radio jet.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Cosmic Masers: from Protostars to
Black Holes, IAU 206, Eds. V. Migenes et al., ASP Conference Serie
Disentangling the Circumnuclear Environs of Centaurus A: III. An Inner Molecular Ring, Nuclear Shocks and the CO to warm H2 interface
We present the distribution and kinematics of the molecular gas in the
circumnuclear disk (CND, 400 pc x 200 pc) of Centaurus A with resolutions of ~5
pc (0.3 arcsec) and shed light onto the mechanism feeding the Active Galactic
Nucleus (AGN) using CO(3-2), HCO+(4-3), HCN(4-3), and CO(6-5) observations
obtained with ALMA. Multiple filaments or streamers of tens to a hundred parsec
scale exist within the CND, which form a ring-like structure with an
unprojected diameter of 9 x 6 arcsec (162pc x 108pc) and a position angle PA =
155deg. Inside the nuclear ring, there are two leading and straight filamentary
structures with lengths of about 30-60pc at PA = 120deg on opposite sides of
the AGN, with a rotational symmetry of 180deg and steeper position-velocity
diagrams, which are interpreted as nuclear shocks due to non-circular motions.
Along the filaments, and unlike other nearby AGNs, several dense molecular
clumps present low HCN/HCO+(4-3) ratios (~0.5). The filaments abruptly end in
the probed transitions at r = 20pc from the AGN, but previous near-IR H2
(J=1-0) S(1) maps show that they continue in an even ~1000 K), winding up in
the form of nuclear spirals, and forming an inner ring structure with another
set of symmetric filaments along the N-S direction and within r = 10pc. The
molecular gas is governed primarily by non-circular motions, being the
successive shock fronts at different scales where loss of angular momentum
occurs, a mechanism which may feed efficiently powerful radio galaxies down to
parsec scales.Comment: 46 pages. Accepted for publication in Ap
Refractive Index of Humid Air in the Infrared: Model Fits
The theory of summation of electromagnetic line transitions is used to
tabulate the Taylor expansion of the refractive index of humid air over the
basic independent parameters (temperature, pressure, humidity, wavelength) in
five separate infrared regions from the H to the Q band at a fixed percentage
of Carbon Dioxide. These are least-squares fits to raw, highly resolved spectra
for a set of temperatures from 10 to 25 C, a set of pressures from 500 to 1023
hPa, and a set of relative humidities from 5 to 60%. These choices reflect the
prospective application to characterize ambient air at mountain altitudes of
astronomical telescopes.Comment: Corrected exponents of c0ref, c1ref and c1p in Table
Measurement of the electron electric dipole moment using GdIG
A new method for the detection of the electron edm using a solid is
described. The method involves the measurement of a voltage induced across the
solid by the alignment of the samples magnetic dipoles in an applied magnetic
field, H. A first application of the method to GdIG has resulted in a limit on
the electron edm of 5E-24 e-cm, which is a factor of 40 below the limit
obtained from the only previous solid-state edm experiment. The result is
limited by the imperfect discrimination of an unexpectedly large voltage that
is even upon the reversal of the sample magnetization.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, v2:references corrected, submitted to PRL,
v3:added labels to figure
X-ray emission from massive stars in Cyg OB2
We report on the analysis of the Chandra-ACIS data of O, B and WR stars in
the young association Cyg OB2. X-ray spectra of 49 O-stars, 54 B-stars and 3
WR-stars are analyzed and for the brighter sources, the epoch dependence of the
X-ray fluxes is investigated. The O-stars in Cyg\,OB2 follow a well-defined
scaling relation between their X-ray and bolometric luminosities: log(Lx/Lbol)
= -7.2 +/- 0.2. This relation is in excellent agreement with the one previously
derived for the Carina OB1 association. Except for the brightest O-star
binaries, there is no general X-ray overluminosity due to colliding winds in
O-star binaries. Roughly half of the known B-stars in the surveyed field are
detected, but they fail to display a clear relationship between Lx and Lbol.
Out of the three WR stars in Cyg OB2, probably only WR144 is itself responsible
for the observed level of X-ray emission, at a very low log(Lx/Lbol) = -8.8 +/-
0.2. The X-ray emission of the other two WR-stars (WR145 and 146) is most
probably due to their O-type companion along with a moderate contribution from
a wind-wind interaction zone.Comment: Accepted for an ApJS Special Issue devoted to the Chandra Cygnus OB2
Legacy Surve
Biomechanical analysis of bone remodeling following mandibular reconstruction using fibula free flap
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in this record.Whilst the newly established biomechanical conditions following mandibular reconstruction using fibula free flap can be a critical determinant for achieving favorable bone union, little has been known about their association in a time-dependent fashion. This study evaluated the bone healing/remodeling activity in reconstructed mandible and its influence on jaw biomechanics using CT data, and further quantified their correlation with mechanobiological responses through an in-silico approach. A 66-year-old male pa- tient received mandibular reconstruction was studied. Post-operative CT scans were taken at 0, 4, 16 and 28 months. Longitudinal change of bone morphologies and mineral densities were measured at three bone union interfaces (two between the fibula and mandibular bones and one between the osteotomized fibulas) to investigate bone healing/remodeling events. Three-dimensional finite element models were created to quantify mechanobiological responses in the bone at these different time points. Bone mineral density increased rapidly along the bone interfaces over the first four months. Cortical bridging formed at the osteotomized interface earlier than the other two interfaces with larger shape discrepancy between fibula and mandibular bones. Bone morphology significantly affected mechanobiological responses in the osteotomized region ( R 2 > 0.77). The anatomic position and shape discrepancy at bone union affected the bone healing/remodeling process.This work was supported by the Australian Research Council (ARC) through the Discovery and Fellowship schemes ( DP160104602 and FT120100947 )
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