1,740 research outputs found
Wilson line approach to gravity in the high energy limit
We examine the high energy (Regge) limit of gravitational scattering using a
Wilson line approach previously used in the context of non-Abelian gauge
theories. Our aim is to clarify the nature of the Reggeization of the graviton
and the interplay between this Reggeization and the so-called eikonal phase
which determines the spectrum of gravitational bound states. Furthermore, we
discuss finite corrections to this picture. Our results are of relevance to
various supergravity theories, and also help to clarify the relationship
between gauge and gravity theories.Comment: 33 pages, 5 figure
30% external quantum efficiency from surface textured, thin-film light-emitting diodes
There is a significant gap between the internal efficiency of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) and their external efficiency. The reason for this shortfall is the narrow escape cone for light in high refractive index semiconductors. We have found that by separating thin-film LEDs from their substrates (by epitaxial lift-off, for example), it is much easier for light to escape from the LED structure and thereby avoid absorption. Moreover, by nanotexturing the thin-film surface using "natural lithography," the light ray dynamics becomes chaotic, and the optical phase-space distribution becomes "ergodic," allowing even more of the light to find the escape cone. We have demonstrated 30% external efficiency in GaAs LEDs employing these principles
Collective chemotactic dynamics in the presence of self-generated fluid flows
In micro-swimmer suspensions locomotion necessarily generates fluid motion,
and it is known that such flows can lead to collective behavior from unbiased
swimming. We examine the complementary problem of how chemotaxis is affected by
self-generated flows. A kinetic theory coupling run-and-tumble chemotaxis to
the flows of collective swimming shows separate branches of chemotactic and
hydrodynamic instabilities for isotropic suspensions, the first driving
aggregation, the second producing increased orientational order in suspensions
of "pushers" and maximal disorder in suspensions of "pullers". Nonlinear
simulations show that hydrodynamic interactions can limit and modify
chemotactically-driven aggregation dynamics. In puller suspensions the dynamics
form aggregates that are mutually-repelling due to the non-trivial flows. In
pusher suspensions chemotactic aggregation can lead to destabilizing flows that
fragment the regions of aggregation.Comment: 4 page
Effects of Lightning on Trees: A Predictive Model Based on in situ Electrical Resistivity
The effects of lightning on trees range from catastrophic death to the absence of observable damage. Such differences may be predictable among tree species, and more generally among plant life history strategies and growth forms. We used fieldâcollected electrical resistivity data in temperate and tropical forests to model how the distribution of power from a lightning discharge varies with tree size and identity, and with the presence of lianas. Estimated heating density (heat generated per volume of tree tissue) and maximum power (maximum rate of heating) from a standardized lightning discharge differed 300% among tree species. Tree size and morphology also were important; the heating density of a hypothetical 10 m tall Alseis blackiana was 49 times greater than for a 30 m tall conspecific, and 127 times greater than for a 30 m tall Dipteryx panamensis. Lianas may protect trees from lightning by conducting electric current; estimated heating and maximum power were reduced by 60% (Âą7.1%) for trees with one liana and by 87% (Âą4.0%) for trees with three lianas. This study provides the first quantitative mechanism describing how differences among trees can influence lightningâtree interactions, and how lianas can serve as natural lightning rods for trees
Meson-like Baryons and the Spin-Orbit Puzzle
I describe a special class of meson-like \Lambda_Q excited states and present
evidence supporting the similarity of their spin-independent spectra to those
of mesons. I then examine spin-dependent forces in these baryons, showing that
predicted effects of spin-orbit forces are small for them for the same reason
they are small for the analogous mesons: a fortuitous cancellation between
large spin-orbit forces due to one-gluon-exchange and equally large inverted
spin-orbit forces due to Thomas precession in the confining potential. In
addition to eliminating the baryon spin-orbit puzzle in these states, this
solution provides a new perspective on spin-orbit forces in all baryons.Comment: 24 pages, 4 figure
A Note on the Picard-Fuchs Equations for N=2 Seiberg-Witten Theories
A concise presentation of the PF equations for N=2 Seiberg-Witten theories
for the classical groups of rank r with N_f massless hypermultiplets in the
fundamental representation is provided. For N_f=0, all r PF equations can be
given in a generic form. For certain cases with N_f\neq zero, not all equations
are generic. However, in all cases there are at least r-2 generic PF equations.
For these cases the classical part of the equations is generic, while the
quantum part can be formulated using a method described in a previous paper by
the authors, which is well suited to symbolic computer calculations.Comment: 25 pages, Latex; some new references adde
Blurred Lines Between Competition and Parasitism
Accurately describing the ecological relationships between species is more than mere semantics-doing so has profound practical and applied implications, not the least of which is that inaccurate descriptions can lead to fundamentally incorrect predicted outcomes of community composition and functioning. Accurate ecological classifications are particularly important in the context of global change, where species interactions can change rapidly following shifts in species composition. Here, we argue that many common ecological interactions-particularly competition and parasitism-can be easily confused and that we often lack empirical evidence for the full reciprocal interaction among species. To make our case and to propose a theoretical framework for addressing this problem, we use the interactions between lianas and trees, whose outcomes have myriad implications for the ecology and conservation of tropical forests (e.g., Schnitzer et al. 2015)
Multi-scale Renormalisation Group Improvement of the Effective Potential
Using the renormalisation group and a conjecture concerning the perturbation
series for the effective potential, the leading logarithms in the effective
potential are exactly summed for scalar and Yukawa theories.Comment: 19 pages, DIAS STP 94-09. Expanded to check large N limit, typo's
corrected, to appear in Phys Rev
Excited B mesons from the lattice
We determine the energies of the excited states of a heavy-light meson
, with a static heavy quark and light quark with mass approximately
that of the strange quark from both quenched lattices and with dynamical
fermions. We are able to explore the energies of orbital excitations up to L=3,
the spin-orbit splitting up to L=2 and the first radial excitation. These mesons will be very narrow if their mass is less than 5775 MeV -- the
threshold. We investigate this in detail and present evidence that the
scalar meson (L=1) will be very narrow and that as many as 6
excited states will have energies close to the threshold and should also
be relatively narrow.Comment: 17 pages, 6 ps figure
Water uptake and transport in lianas and co-occurring trees of a seasonally dry tropical forest
Water uptake and transport were studied in eight liana species in a seasonally dry tropical forest on Barro Colorado Island, Panama. Stable hydrogen isotope composition (δD) of xylem and soil water, soil volumetric water content (θv), and basal sap flow were measured during the 1997 and 1998 dry seasons. Sap flow of several neighboring trees was measured to assess differences between lianas and trees in magnitudes and patterns of daily sap flow. Little seasonal change in θv was observed at 90â120 cm depth in both years. Mean soil water δD during the dry season was â19â° at 0â30 cm, â34â° at 30â60 cm, and â50â° at 90â120 cm. Average values of xylem δD among the liana species ranged from â28â° to â44â° during the middle of the dry season, suggesting that water uptake was restricted to intermediate soil layers (30â60 cm). By the end of the dry season, all species exhibited more negative xylem δD values (â41â° to â62â°), suggesting that they shifted to deeper water sources. Maximum sap flux density in co-occurring lianas and trees were comparable at similar stem diameter (DBH). Furthermore, lianas and trees conformed to the same linear relationship between daily sap flow and DBH. Our observations that lianas tap shallow sources of soil water at the beginning of the dry season and that sap flow is similar in lianas and trees of equivalent stem diameter do not support the common assumptions that lianas rely primarily on deep soil water and that they have higher rates of sap flow than co-occurring trees of similar stem size
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