7,472 research outputs found
Pseudospin excitations in coaxial nanotubes
In a 2DEG confined to two coaxial tubes the `tube degree of freedom' can be
described in terms of pseudospin-1/2 dynamics. The presence of tunneling
between the two tubes leads to a collective oscillation known as pseudospin
resonance. We employ perturbation theory to examine the dependence of the
frequency of this mode with respect to a coaxial magnetic field for the case of
small intertube distances. Coulomb interaction leads to a shift of the
resonance frequency and to a finite lifetime of the pseudospin excitations. The
presence of the coaxial magnetic field gives rise to pronounced peaks in the
shift of the resonance frequency. For large magnetic fields this shift vanishes
due to the effects of Zeeman splitting. Finally, an expression for the
linewidth of the resonance is derived. Numerical analysis of this expression
suggests that the linewidth strongly depends on the coaxial magnetic field,
which leads to several peaks of the linewidth as well as regions where damping
is almost completely suppressed.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
The evolution of the cluster X-ray scaling relations in the WARPS sample at 0.6<z<1.0
The X-ray properties of a sample of 11 high-redshift (0.6<z<1.0) clusters
observed with Chandra and/or XMM are used to investigate the evolution of the
cluster scaling relations. The observed evolution of the L-T and M-L relations
is consistent with simple self-similar predictions, in which the properties of
clusters reflect the properties of the universe at their redshift of
observation. When the systematic effect of assuming isothermality on the
derived masses of the high-redshift clusters is taken into account, the
high-redshift M-T and Mgas-T relations are also consistent with self-similar
evolution. Under the assumption that the model of self-similar evolution is
correct and that the local systems formed via a single spherical collapse, the
high-redshift L-T relation is consistent with the high-z clusters having formed
at a significantly higher redshift than the local systems. The data are also
consistent with the more realistic scenario of clusters forming via the
continuous accretion of material. The slope of the L-T relation at
high-redshift (B=3.29+/-0.38) is consistent with the local relation, and
significantly steeper then the self-similar prediction of B=2. This suggests
that the non-gravitational processes causing the steepening occurred at z>1 or
in the early stages of the clusters' formation, prior to their observation. The
properties of the intra-cluster medium at high-redshift are found to be similar
to those in the local universe. The mean surface-brightness profile slope for
the sample is 0.66+/-0.05, the mean gas mass fractions within R2500 and R200
are 0.073+/-0.010 and 0.12+/-0.02 respectively, and the mean metallicity of the
sample is 0.28+/-0.16 solar.Comment: 23 pages, 17 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Revised to
match accepted version: reanalysed data with latest calibrations, several
minor changes. Conclusions unchange
Kink stability, propagation, and length scale competition in the periodically modulated sine-Gordon equation
We have examined the dynamical behavior of the kink solutions of the
one-dimensional sine-Gordon equation in the presence of a spatially periodic
parametric perturbation. Our study clarifies and extends the currently
available knowledge on this and related nonlinear problems in four directions.
First, we present the results of a numerical simulation program which are not
compatible with the existence of a radiative threshold, predicted by earlier
calculations. Second, we carry out a perturbative calculation which helps
interpret those previous predictions, enabling us to understand in depth our
numerical results. Third, we apply the collective coordinate formalism to this
system and demonstrate numerically that it accurately reproduces the observed
kink dynamics. Fourth, we report on a novel occurrence of length scale
competition in this system and show how it can be understood by means of linear
stability analysis. Finally, we conclude by summarizing the general physical
framework that arises from our study.Comment: 19 pages, REVTeX 3.0, 24 figures available from A S o
On Gauge Invariance and Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking
We show how the widely used concept of spontaneous symmetry breaking can be
explained in causal perturbation theory by introducing a perturbative version
of quantum gauge invariance. Perturbative gauge invariance, formulated
exclusively by means of asymptotic fields, is discussed for the simple example
of Abelian U(1) gauge theory (Abelian Higgs model). Our findings are relevant
for the electroweak theory, as pointed out elsewhere.Comment: 13 pages, latex, no figure
Quantum Gravitational Bremsstrahlung, Massless versus Massive Gravity
The massive spin-2 quantum gauge theory previously developed is applied to
calculate gravitational bremsstrahlung. It is shown that this theory is unique
and free from defects. In particular, there is no strong coupling if the
graviton mass becomes small. The cross sections go over smoothly into the ones
of the massless theory in the limit of vanishing graviton mass. The massless
cross sections are calculated for the full tensor theory.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figur
Discovery of a very X-ray luminous galaxy cluster at z=0.89 in the WARPS survey
We report the discovery of the galaxy cluster ClJ1226.9+3332 in the Wide
Angle ROSAT Pointed Survey (WARPS). At z=0.888 and L_X=1.1e45 erg/s (0.5-2.0
keV, h_0=0.5) ClJ1226.9+3332 is the most distant X-ray luminous cluster
currently known. The mere existence of this system represents a huge problem
for Omega_0=1 world models.
At the modest (off-axis) resolution of the ROSAT PSPC observation in which
the system was detected, ClJ1226.9+3332 appears relaxed; an off-axis HRI
observation confirms this impression and rules out significant contamination
from point sources. However, in moderately deep optical images (R and I band)
the cluster exhibits signs of substructure in its apparent galaxy distribution.
A first crude estimate of the velocity dispersion of the cluster galaxies based
on six redshifts yields a high value of 1650 km/s, indicative of a very massive
cluster and/or the presence of substructure along the line of sight. While a
more accurate assessment of the dynamical state of this system requires much
better data at both optical and X-ray wavelengths, the high mass of the cluster
has already been unambiguously confirmed by a very strong detection of the
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect in its direction (Joy et al. 2001).
Using ClJ1226.9+3332 and ClJ0152.7-1357 (z=0.835), the second-most distant
X-ray luminous cluster currently known and also a WARPS discovery, we obtain a
first estimate of the cluster X-ray luminosity function at 0.8<z<1.4 and
L_X>5e44 erg/s. Using the best currently available data, we find the comoving
space density of very distant, massive clusters to be in excellent agreement
with the value measured locally (z<0.3), and conclude that negative evolution
is not required at these luminosities out to z~1. (truncated)Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ Letters, 6 pages, 2 figures, uses
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