1,945 research outputs found
Melting of regular and decoupled vortex lattices in BSCCO crystals
The angular dependence of the first-order phase transition (FOT) in the
vortex lattice in BiSrCaCuO crystals was investigated
by a low frequency AC shielding technique (with the AC field ), in
which the static-field component parallel to - () was varied with
the in-plane field held constant. The linear decrease of the
FOT field with increasing ends at a
temperature--dependent critical value of . A new transition,
marked by the abrupt drop of the -plane shielding current, appears at this
point. We draw a new phase diagram with and field
components as coordinates; this features at least two distinct regions in the
vortex solid phase, that are determined by the different interplay between the
pancake vortex-- and Josephson vortex lattice.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures Paper submitted to the conference proceedings of
M2S-2000 Houston, T
Ambiguity of gamma-ray tracking of "two-interaction" events
Tracking of gamma-ray interactions in germanium detectors can allow
reconstruction of the photon paths, and is useful for many applications.
Scrutiny of the kinematics and geometry of gamma rays which are Compton
scattered only once prior to full absorption reveals that there are cases where
even perfect spatial and energy resolution cannot resolve the true interaction
sequence and consequently gamma-ray tracks cannot be reconstructed. The photon
energy range where this ambiguity exists is from 255 keV to around 700 keV.
This is a region of importance for nuclear structure research where two-point
interactions are probable.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure
Nucleon form factors and a nonpointlike diquark
Nucleon form factors are calculated on q^2 in [0,3] GeV^2 using an Ansatz for
the nucleon's Fadde'ev amplitude motivated by quark-diquark solutions of the
relativistic Fadde'ev equation. Only the scalar diquark is retained, and it and
the quark are confined. A good description of the data requires a nonpointlike
diquark correlation with an electromagnetic radius of 0.8 r_pi. The composite,
nonpointlike nature of the diquark is crucial. It provides for diquark-breakup
terms that are of greater importance than the diquark photon absorption
contribution.Comment: 5 pages, REVTEX, epsfig, 3 figure
Diquarks: condensation without bound states
We employ a bispinor gap equation to study superfluidity at nonzero chemical
potential: mu .neq. 0, in two- and three-colour QCD. The two-colour theory,
QC2D, is an excellent exemplar: the order of truncation of the quark-quark
scattering kernel: K, has no qualitative impact, which allows a straightforward
elucidation of the effects of mu when the coupling is strong. In rainbow-ladder
truncation, diquark bound states appear in the spectrum of the three-colour
theory, a defect that is eliminated by an improvement of K. The corrected gap
equation describes a superfluid phase that is semi-quantitatively similar to
that obtained using the rainbow truncation. A model study suggests that the
width of the superfluid gap and the transition point in QC2D provide reliable
quantitative estimates of those quantities in QCD.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, REVTEX, epsfi
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Solar spectral conversion for improving the photosynthetic activity in algae reactors
Sustainable biomass production is expected to be one of the major supporting pillars for future energy supply, as well as for renewable material provision. Algal beds represent an exciting resource for biomass/biofuel, fine chemicals and CO2 storage. Similar to other solar energy harvesting techniques, the efficiency of algal photosynthesis depends on the spectral overlap between solar irradiation and chloroplast absorption. Here we demonstrate that spectral conversion can be employed to significantly improve biomass growth and oxygen production rate in closed-cycle algae reactors. For this purpose, we adapt a photoluminescent phosphor of the type Ca 0.59Sr0.40Eu0.01S, which enables efficient conversion of the green part of the incoming spectrum into red light to better match the Qy peak of chlorophyll b. Integration of a Ca 0.59Sr0.40Eu0.01S backlight converter into a flat panel algae reactor filled with Haematococcus pluvialis as a model species results in significantly increased photosynthetic activity and algae reproduction rate
Polariton Analysis of a Four-Level Atom Strongly Coupled to a Cavity Mode
We present a complete analytical solution for a single four-level atom
strongly coupled to a cavity field mode and driven by external coherent laser
fields. The four-level atomic system consists of a three-level subsystem in an
EIT configuration, plus an additional atomic level; this system has been
predicted to exhibit a photon blockade effect. The solution is presented in
terms of polaritons. An effective Hamiltonian obtained by this procedure is
analyzed from the viewpoint of an effective two-level system, and the dynamic
Stark splitting of dressed states is discussed. The fluorescence spectrum of
light exiting the cavity mode is analyzed and relevant transitions identified.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
Progressive transformation of a flux rope to an ICME
The solar wind conditions at one astronomical unit (AU) can be strongly
disturbed by the interplanetary coronal mass ejections (ICMEs). A subset,
called magnetic clouds (MCs), is formed by twisted flux ropes that transport an
important amount of magnetic flux and helicity which is released in CMEs. At 1
AU from the Sun, the magnetic structure of MCs is generally modeled neglecting
their expansion during the spacecraft crossing. However, in some cases, MCs
present a significant expansion. We present here an analysis of the huge and
significantly expanding MC observed by the Wind spacecraft during 9 and 10
November, 2004. After determining an approximated orientation for the flux rope
using the minimum variance method, we precise the orientation of the cloud axis
relating its front and rear magnetic discontinuities using a direct method.
This method takes into account the conservation of the azimuthal magnetic flux
between the in- and out-bound branches, and is valid for a finite impact
parameter (i.e., not necessarily a small distance between the spacecraft
trajectory and the cloud axis). Moreover, using the direct method, we find that
the ICME is formed by a flux rope (MC) followed by an extended coherent
magnetic region. These observations are interpreted considering the existence
of a previous larger flux rope, which partially reconnected with its
environment in the front. These findings imply that the ejected flux rope is
progressively peeled by reconnection and transformed to the observed ICME (with
a remnant flux rope in the front part).Comment: Solar Physics (in press
Mapping states’ Paris climate pledges: Analysing targets and groups at COP 21
Prior to the 2015 Paris Conference of the Parties (COP), every state was requested to submit a pledge of their own design. To date, there has been a lack of large-n studies that provide a broad picture of these pledges. We employ Discourse Network Analysis to examine critically the climate pledges of all 162 actors at the Paris COP. Our research offers four main contributions. First, we provide data regarding the mitigation and adaptation components of every national pledge. Second, we identify six types of mitigation targets, and visually cluster every state according to these formats. Third, we argue that the pledges of the Umbrella Group of non-EU developed states, and of the group of oil exporting countries, showed greater internal similarity than the group comprising Brazil, China, India and South Africa. Finally, we critique the method as a means of analysing the new global climate governance context and argue that the method offers an innovative and unique means of understanding this complex policy landscape, when applied in a specific and focused manner
Dyson-Schwinger Equations - aspects of the pion
The contemporary use of Dyson-Schwinger equations in hadronic physics is
exemplified via applications to the calculation of pseudoscalar meson masses,
and inclusive deep inelastic scattering with a determination of the pion's
valence-quark distribution function.Comment: 4 pages. Contribution to the Proceedings of ``DPF 2000,'' the Meeting
of the Division of Particles and Fields of the American Physical Society,
August 9-12, 2000, Department of Physics, the Ohio State University,
Columbus, Ohi
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