4,017 research outputs found
Nucleation in a Fermi liquid at negative pressure
Experimental investigation of cavitation in liquid helium 3 has revealed a
singular behaviour in the degenerate region at low temperature. As the
temperature decreases below 80 mK, the cavitation pressure becomes
significantly more negative. To investigate this, we have extrapolated the
Fermi parameters in the negative pressure region. This allowed us to calculate
the zero sound velocity, which we found to remain finite at the spinodal limit
where the first sound velocity vanishes. We discuss the impact on the
nucleation of the gas phase in terms of a quantum stiffness of the Fermi
liquid. As a result we predict a cavitation pressure which is nearer to the
spinodal line than previously thought.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. To be published in Journal of Low Temperature
Physics, Proceedings of the International Symposium on Quantum Fluids and
Solids QFS200
Optical BVRI Photometry of Common Proper Motion F/G/K+M Wide Separation Binaries
We present optical (BVRI) photometric measurements of a sample of 76 common
proper motion wide separation main sequence binary pairs. The pairs are
composed of a F-, G-, or K-type primary star and an M-type secondary. The
sample is selected from the revised NLTT catalog and the LSPM catalog. The
photometry is generally precise to 0.03 mag in all bands. We separate our
sample into two groups, dwarf candidates and subdwarf candidates, using the
reduced proper motion (RPM) diagram constructed with our improved photometry.
The M subdwarf candidates in general have larger colors than the M dwarf
candidates at a given color. This is consistent with an average
metallicity difference between the two groups, as predicted by the
PHOENIX/BT-Settl models. The improved photometry will be used as input into a
technique to determine the metallicities of the M-type stars.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in A
Total Opacity of Local Group Galaxies and Large Scale Structure behind the Galactic Bulge
Recently, we have developed and calibrated the Synthetic Field Method to
derive total extinction through disk galaxies. The method is based on the
number counts and colors of distant background field galaxies that can be seen
through the foreground object. Here, we investigate how large (10-m) and very
large (20 to 30-m), diffraction-limited, optical and infrared telescopes in
space would improve the detection of background galaxies behind Local Group
objects, including the Galactic bulge. We find that, besides and perhaps more
important than telescope size, a well-behaved, well-characterized PSF would
facilitate in general the detection of faint objects in crowded fields, and
greatly benefit several other important research areas, like the search for
extrasolar planets, the study of quasar hosts and, most relevant for this
meeting, the surveying of nearby large scale structure in the Zone of
Avoidance, in particular behind the Galactic bulge.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, uses asp2004.sty. To appear in ``Nearby
Large-Scale Structures and the Zone of Avoidance,'' eds. A.P. Fairall, P.
Woudt, ASP Conf. Series, in press, San Francisco: Astronomical Society of the
Pacifi
DevA, a GntR-like transcriptional regulator required for development in streptomyces coelicolor
The gram-positive filamentous bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor has a complex developmental cycle with three distinct phases: growth of the substrate mycelium, development of reproductive structures called aerial hyphae, and differentiation of these aerial filaments into long chains of exospores. During a transposon mutagenesis screen, we identified a novel gene (devA) required for proper development. The devA mutant produced only rare aerial hyphae, and those that were produced developed aberrant spore chains that were much shorter than wild-type chains and had misplaced septa. devA encodes a member of the GntR superfamily, a class of transcriptional regulators that typically respond to metabolite effector molecules. devA forms an operon with the downstream gene devB, which encodes a putative hydrolase that is also required for aerial mycelium formation on R5 medium. S1 nuclease protection analysis showed that transcription from the single devA promoter was temporally associated with vegetative growth, and enhanced green fluorescent protein transcriptional fusions showed that transcription was spatially confined to the substrate hyphae in the wild type. In contrast, devAB transcript levels were dramatically upregulated in a devA mutant and the devA promoter was also active in aerial hyphae and spores in this background, suggesting that DevA might negatively regulate its own production. This suggestion was confirmed by gel mobility shift assays that showed that DevA binds its own promoter region in vitro
A high bandwidth quantum repeater
We present a physical- and link-level design for the creation of entangled
pairs to be used in quantum repeater applications where one can control the
noise level of the initially distributed pairs. The system can tune
dynamically, trading initial fidelity for success probability, from high
fidelity pairs (F=0.98 or above) to moderate fidelity pairs. The same physical
resources that create the long-distance entanglement are used to implement the
local gates required for entanglement purification and swapping, creating a
homogeneous repeater architecture. Optimizing the noise properties of the
initially distributed pairs significantly improves the rate of generating
long-distance Bell pairs. Finally, we discuss the performance trade-off between
spatial and temporal resources.Comment: 5 page
Evolution of self-gravitating magnetized disks. II- Interaction between MHD turbulence and gravitational instabilities
We present 3D magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) numerical simulations of the
evolution of self--gravitating and weakly magnetized disks with an adiabatic
equation of state. Such disks are subject to the development of both the
magnetorotational and gravitational instabilities, which transport angular
momentum outward. As in previous studies, our hydrodynamical simulations show
the growth of strong m=2 spiral structure. This spiral disturbance drives
matter toward the central object and disappears when the Toomre parameter Q has
increased well above unity. When a weak magnetic field is present as well, the
magnetorotational instability grows and leads to turbulence. In that case, the
strength of the gravitational stress tensor is lowered by a factor of about~2
compared to the hydrodynamical run and oscillates periodically, reaching very
small values at its minimum. We attribute this behavior to the presence of a
second spiral mode with higher pattern speed than the one which dominates in
the hydrodynamical simulations. It is apparently excited by the high frequency
motions associated with MHD turbulence. The nonlinear coupling between these
two spiral modes gives rise to a stress tensor that oscillates with a frequency
which is a combination of the frequencies of each of the modes. This
interaction between MHD turbulence and gravitational instabilities therefore
results in a smaller mass accretion rate onto the central object.Comment: 31 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, animation
avalaible at http://www2.iap.fr/users/fromang/simu3d/simu3d.htm
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