2,205 research outputs found
Thomas-Fermi Calculations of Atoms and Matter in Magnetic Neutron Stars II: Finite Temperature Effects
We present numerical calculations of the equation of state for dense matter
in high magnetic fields, using a temperature dependent Thomas-Fermi theory with
a magnetic field that takes all Landau levels into account. Free energies for
atoms and matter are also calculated as well as profiles of the electron
density as a function of distance from the atomic nucleus for representative
values of the magnetic field strength, total matter density, and temperature.
The Landau shell structure, which is so prominent in cold dense matter in high
magnetic fields, is still clearly present at finite temperature as long as it
is less than approximately one tenth of the cyclotron energy. This structure is
reflected in an oscillatory behaviour of the equation of state and other
thermodynamic properties of dense matter and hence also in profiles of the
density and pressure as functions of depth in the surface layers of magnetic
neutron stars. These oscillations are completely smoothed out by thermal
effects at temperatures of the order of the cyclotron energy or higher.Comment: 37 pages, 17 figures included, submitted to Ap
Thermal X-Ray Pulses Resulting From Pulsar Glitches
The non-spherically symmetric transport equations and exact thermal evolution
model are used to calculate the transient thermal response to pulsars. The
three possible ways of energy release originated from glitches, namely the
`shell', `ring' and `spot' cases are compared. The X-ray light curves resulting
from the thermal response to the glitches are calculated. Only the `spot' case
and the `ring' case are considered because the `shell' case does not produce
significant modulative X-rays. The magnetic field () effect, the
relativistic light bending effect and the rotational effect on the photons
being emitted in a finite region are considered. Various sets of parameters
result in different evolution patterns of light curves. We find that this
modulated thermal X-ray radiation resulting from glitches may provide some
useful constraints on glitch models.Comment: 48 pages, 20 figures, submitted to Ap
Constraining stochastic 3-D structural geological models with topology information using Approximate Bayesian Computation in GemPy 2.1
Acknowledgements. We would like to thank Total E&P UK in Aberdeen for funding this research. We also thank Fabian Stamm for providing the wonderful synthetic geomodel used in this paper. We are grateful for the constructive reviews from Ashton Krajnovich and an anonymous reviewer for helping us improve this manuscript.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Low-mass normal-matter atmospheres of strange stars and their radiation
The quark surface of a strange star has a very low emissivity for X-ray
photons. I find that a small amount of normal matter at the quark surface with
temperature in the range 10^7\la T_{_S}} \ll mc^2/k\simeq 6\times 10^9 K is
enough to produce X-rays with high luminosity, . For the total atmosphere mass
, this luminosity may be as high as
the Eddington limit. The mean energy of X-ray photons which are radiated from
such a low-mass atmosphere of a strange star is times larger than the mean energy of X-ray photons which are
radiated from the surface of both a neutron star and a strange star with a
massive normal-matter envelope, , for a fixed
temperature at the stellar core. This raises the possibility that some black
hole candidates with hard X-ray spectra are, in fact, such strange stars with a
low-mass atmosphere. The X-ray emission from single strange stars is estimated.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, AAS
LATEX macroc v4.0, 9 page
Adsorption of colloidal particles in the presence of external field
We present a new class of sequential adsorption models in which the adsorbing
particles reach the surface following an inclined direction (shadow models).
Capillary electrophoresis, adsorption in the presence of a shear or on an
inclined substrate are physical manifestations of these models. Numerical
simulations are carried out to show how the new adsorption mechanisms are
responsible for the formation of more ordered adsorbed layers and have
important implications in the kinetics, in particular modifying the jamming
limit.Comment: LaTex file, 3 figures available upon request, to appear in
Phys.Rev.Let
Basis States for Relativistic, Dynamically-Entangled Particles
In several recent papers on entanglement in relativistic quantum systems and
relativistic Bell's inequalities, relativistic Bell-type two-particle states
have been constructed in analogy to non-relativistic states. These
constructions do not have the form suggested by relativistic invariance of the
dynamics. Two relativistic formulations of Bell-type states are shown for
massive particles, one using the standard Wigner spin basis and one using the
helicity basis. The construction hinges on the use of Clebsch-Gordan
coefficients of the Poincar\'e group to reduce the direct product of two
unitary irreducible representations (UIRs) into a direct sum of UIRs.Comment: 19 pages, three tables, revte
Fatigue during acute systemic inflammation is associated with reduced mental effort expenditure while task accuracy is preserved
BACKGROUNDEarlier work within the physical domain showed that acute inflammation changes motivational prioritization and effort allocation rather than physical abilities. It is currently unclear whether a similar motivational framework accounts for the mental fatigue and cognitive symptoms of acute sickness. Accordingly, this study aimed to assess the relationship between fatigue, cytokines and mental effort-based decision making during acute systemic inflammation.METHODSEighty-five participants (41 males; 18-30 years (M = 23.0, SD = 2.4)) performed a mental effort-based decision-making task before, 2 h after, and 5 h after intravenous administration of 1 ng/kg bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to induce systemic inflammation. Plasma concentrations of cytokines (interleukin (IL)-6, IL-8 and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)) and fatigue levels were assessed at similar timepoints. In the task, participants decided whether they wanted to perform (i.e., 'accepted') arithmetic calculations of varying difficulty (3 levels: easy, medium, hard) in order to obtain rewards (3 levels: 5, 6 or 7 points). Acceptance rates were analyzed using a binomial generalized estimated equation (GEE) approach with effort, reward and time as independent variables. Arithmetic performance was measured per effort level prior to the decisions and included as a covariate. Associations between acceptance rates, fatigue (self-reported) and cytokine concentration levels were analyzed using partial correlation analyses.RESULTSPlasma cytokine concentrations and fatigue were increased at 2 h post-LPS compared to baseline and 5 h post-LPS administration. Acceptance rates decreased for medium, but not for easy or hard effort levels at 2 h post-LPS versus baseline and 5 h post-LPS administration, irrespective of reward level. These reductions in acceptance rates occurred despite improved accuracy on the arithmetic calculations itself. Reduced acceptance rates for medium effort were associated with increased fatigue, but not with increased cytokine concentrations.CONCLUSIONFatigue during acute systemic inflammation is associated with alterations in mental effort allocation, similarly as observed previously for physical effort-based choice. Specifically, willingness to exert mental effort depended on effort and not reward information, while task accuracy was preserved. These results extend the motivational account of inflammation to the mental domain and suggest that inflammation may not necessarily affect domain-specific mental abilities, but rather affects domain-general effort-allocation processes.</p
Polarization Evolution in Strong Magnetic Fields
Extremely strong magnetic fields change the vacuum index of refraction.
Although this polarization dependent effect is small for typical neutron stars,
it is large enough to decouple the polarization states of photons traveling
within the field. The photon states evolve adiabatically and follow the
changing magnetic field direction. The combination of a rotating magnetosphere
and a frequency dependent state decoupling predicts polarization phase lags
between different wave bands, if the emission process takes place well within
the light cylinder. This QED effect may allow observations to distinguish
between different pulsar emission mechanisms and to reconstruct the structure
of the magnetosphere.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
THERMAL RADIATION FROM MAGNETIZED NEUTRON STARS: A look at the Surface of a Neutron Star.
Surface thermal emission has been detected by ROSAT from four nearby young
neutron stars. Assuming black body emission, the significant pulsations of the
observed light curves can be interpreted as due to large surface temperature
differences produced by the effect of the crustal magnetic field on the flow of
heat from the hot interior toward the cooler surface. However, the energy
dependence of the modulation observed in Geminga is incompatible with blackbody
emission: this effect will give us a strong constraint on models of the neutron
star surface.Comment: 10 pages. tar-compressed and uuencoded postcript file. talk given at
the `Jubilee Gamow Seminar', St. Petersburg, Sept. 1994
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