2,370 research outputs found
A new type of nuclear collective motion - the spin scissors mode
The coupled dynamics of low lying modes and various giant resonances are
studied with the help of the Wigner Function Moments method on the basis of
Time Dependent Hartree-Fock equations in the harmonic oscillator model
including spin-orbit potential plus quadrupole-quadrupole and spin-spin
residual interactions. New low lying spin dependent modes are analyzed. Special
attention is paid to the spin scissors mode.Comment: 21 page
Orbital and spin scissors modes in superfluid nuclei
Nuclear scissors modes are considered in the frame of Wigner function moments
method generalized to take into account spin degrees of freedom and pair
correlations simultaneously. A new source of nuclear magnetism, connected with
counter-rotation of spins up and down around the symmetry axis (hidden angular
momenta), is discovered. Its inclusion into the theory allows one to improve
substantially the agreement with experimental data in the description of
energies and transition probabilities of scissors modes in rare earth nuclei.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1301.251
Nuclear Pairing in the T=0 channel revisited
Recent published data on the isoscalar gap in symmetric nuclear matter using
the Paris force and the corresponding BHF single particle dispersion are
corrected leading to an extremely high proton-neutron gap of
MeV at . Arguments whether this value can be reduced due
to screening effects are discussed. A density dependent delta interaction with
cut off is adjusted so as to approximately reproduce the nuclear matter values
with the Paris force.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
BENEFITS OF CONTROLLING SALINE WATER IN COLORADO
The Arkansas River in Colorado is confronted with a salinity issue; the majority of this salinity problem is due to agricultural runoff caused by irrigation. Reducing applications of irrigation water through adoption of more technically efficient irrigation systems is one means of improving water quality in the Arkansas River basin. This research uses positive mathematical programming to model the cropping practices of the farms along the Arkansas River. It examines the affect of acreage and profit levels of these farms given the choice of changing their irrigation technologies.Environmental Economics and Policy,
Tracking Vector Magnetograms with the Magnetic Induction Equation
The differential affine velocity estimator (DAVE) developed in Schuck (2006)
for estimating velocities from line-of-sight magnetograms is modified to
directly incorporate horizontal magnetic fields to produce a differential
affine velocity estimator for vector magnetograms (DAVE4VM). The DAVE4VM's
performance is demonstrated on the synthetic data from the anelastic
pseudospectral ANMHD simulations that were used in the recent comparison of
velocity inversion techniques by Welsch (2007). The DAVE4VM predicts roughly
95% of the helicity rate and 75% of the power transmitted through the
simulation slice. Inter-comparison between DAVE4VM and DAVE and further
analysis of the DAVE method demonstrates that line-of-sight tracking methods
capture the shearing motion of magnetic footpoints but are insensitive to flux
emergence -- the velocities determined from line-of-sight methods are more
consistent with horizontal plasma velocities than with flux transport
velocities. These results suggest that previous studies that rely on velocities
determined from line-of-sight methods such as the DAVE or local correlation
tracking may substantially misrepresent the total helicity rates and power
through the photosphere.Comment: 30 pages, 13 figure
Spontaneous generation of spin-orbit coupling in magnetic dipolar Fermi gases
The stability of an unpolarized two-component dipolar Fermi gas is studied
within mean-field theory. Besides the known instability towards spontaneous
magnetization with Fermi sphere deformation, another instability towards
spontaneous formation of a spin-orbit coupled phase with a Rashba-like spin
texture is found. A phase diagram is presented and consequences are briefly
discussed
FARMER EDUCATION AND ADOPTION OF SLASH AND BURN AGRICULTURE
Education can play a critical role in moving farmers in developing countries away from environmentally harmful slash and burn agriculture. The present research examines the extent to which extension education can promote adoption of cropping systems other than slash and burn. Choice of cropping system by farmers in Cameroon, whether slash and burn, multiple crops, or mono-cropping, is modeled as a function of farm size, farmer educational level, and visits by extension personnel. Results indicate that higher visitation rates by extension personnel reduce not only the likelihood of farmers choosing slash and burn agriculture, but also promotes movement into mono-cropping. Since mono-cropping represents a move toward export-oriented agriculture in Cameroon, this movement may assist in promoting greater economic development across western Africa. Continued efforts in extension education are, therefore, critical in both reducing the environmental damage from slash and burn agriculture and promoting adoption of more profitable cropping systems.conservation, slash and burn, production technology, economic development, Farm Management,
Energy-level quantization in YBa2Cu3O7-x phase-slip nanowires
Significant progress has been made in the development of superconducting
quantum circuits, however new quantum devices that have longer decoherence
times at higher temperatures are urgently required for quantum technologies.
Superconducting nanowires with quantum phase slips are promising candidates for
use in novel devices that operate on quantum principles. Here, we demonstrate
ultra-thin YBa2Cu3O7-x nanowires with phase-slip dynamics and study their
switching-current statistics at temperatures below 20 K. We apply theoretical
models that were developed for Josephson junctions and show that our results
provide strong evidence for energy-level quantization in the nanowires. The
crossover temperature to the quantum regime is 12-13 K, while the lifetime in
the excited state exceeds 20 ms at 5.4 K. Both values are at least one order of
magnitude higher than those in conventional Josephson junctions based on
low-temperature superconductors. We also show how the absorption of a single
photon changes the phase-slip and quantum state of a nanowire, which is
important for the development of single-photon detectors with high operating
temperature and superior temporal resolution. Our findings pave the way for a
new class of superconducting nanowire devices for quantum sensing and
computing
- …
