6,839 research outputs found
Correlations of center flux in SU(2) Yang-Mills theory
By using the method of center projection the center vortex part of the gauge
field is isolated and its propagator is evaluated in the center Landau gauge,
which minimizes the open 3-dimensional Dirac volumes of non-trivial center
links bounded by the closed 2-dimensional center vortex surfaces. The center
field propagator is found to dominate the gluon propagator (in Landau gauge) in
the low momentum regime and to give rise to an OPE correction to the latter of
.The screening mass of the center vortex field vanishes
above the critical temperature of the deconfinement phase transition, which
naturally explains the second order nature of this transition consistently with
the vortex picture. Finally, the ghost propagator of maximal center gauge is
found to be infrared finite and thus shows no signal of confinement.Comment: Presented at 23rd International Symposium on Lattice Field Field:
Lattice 2005, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland, 25-30 Jul 200
The effect of ambipolar electric fields on the electron heating in capacitive RF plasmas
We investigate the electron heating dynamics in electropositive argon and
helium capacitively coupled RF discharges driven at 13.56 MHz by Particle in
Cell simulations and by an analytical model. The model allows to calculate the
electric field outside the electrode sheaths, space and time resolved within
the RF period. Electrons are found to be heated by strong ambipolar electric
fields outside the sheath during the phase of sheath expansion in addition to
classical sheath expansion heating. By tracing individual electrons we also
show that ionization is primarily caused by electrons that collide with the
expanding sheath edge multiple times during one phase of sheath expansion due
to backscattering towards the sheath by collisions. A synergistic combination
of these different heating events during one phase of sheath expansion is
required to accelerate an electron to energies above the threshold for
ionization. The ambipolar electric field outside the sheath is found to be time
modulated due to a time modulation of the electron mean energy caused by the
presence of sheath expansion heating only during one half of the RF period at a
given electrode. This time modulation results in more electron heating than
cooling inside the region of high electric field outside the sheath on time
average. If an electric field reversal is present during sheath collapse, this
time modulation and, thus, the asymmetry between the phases of sheath expansion
and collapse will be enhanced. We propose that the ambipolar electron heating
should be included in models describing electron heating in capacitive RF
plasmas
Customized ion flux-energy distribution functions in capacitively coupled plasmas by voltage waveform tailoring
We propose a method to generate a single peak at a distinct energy in the ion
flux-energy distribution function (IDF) at the electrode surfaces in
capacitively coupled plasmas. The technique is based on the tailoring of the
driving voltage waveform, i.e. adjusting the phases and amplitudes of the
applied harmonics, to optimize the accumulation of ions created by charge
exchange collisions and their subsequent acceleration by the sheath electric
field. The position of the peak (i.e. the ion energy) and the flux of the ions
within the peak of the IDF can be controlled in a wide domain by tuning the
parameters of the applied RF voltage waveform, allowing optimization of various
applications where surface reactions are induced at particular ion energies
Folded Strings Falling into a Black Hole
We find all the classical solutions (minimal surfaces) of open or closed
strings in {\it any} two dimensional curved spacetime. As examples we consider
the SL(2,R)/R two dimensional black hole, and any 4D black hole in the
Schwarzschild family, provided the motion is restricted to the time-radial
components. The solutions, which describe longitudinaly oscillating folded
strings (radial oscillations in 4D), must be given in lattice-like patches of
the worldsheet, and a transfer operation analogous to a transfer matrix
determines the future evolution. Then the swallowing of a string by a black
hole is analyzed. We find several new features that are not shared by particle
motions. The most surprizing effect is the tunneling of the string into the
bare singularity region that lies beyond the black hole that is classically
forbidden to particles.Comment: 28 pages plus 4 figures, LaTeX, USC-94/HEP-B
Shearing Interferometer for Quantifying the Coherence of Hard X-Ray Beams
We report a quantitative measurement of the full transverse coherence function of the 14.4 keV x-ray radiation produced by an undulator at the Swiss Light Source. An x-ray grating interferometer consisting of a beam splitter phase grating and an analyzer amplitude grating has been used to measure the degree of coherence as a function of the beam separation out to 30 m. Importantly, the technique provides a model-free and spatially resolved measurement of the complex coherence function and is not restricted to high resolution detectors and small fields of view. The spatial characterization of the wave front has important applications in discovering localized defects in beam line optics
Kinetic simulation of the sheath dynamics in the intermediate radio-frequency regime
The dynamics of temporally modulated plasma boundary sheaths is studied in
the intermediate radio frequency regime where the applied radio frequency and
the ion plasma frequency are comparable. Two kinetic simulation codes are
employed and their results are compared. The first code is a realization of the
well-known scheme, Particle-In-Cell with Monte Carlo collisions (PIC/MCC) and
simulates the entire discharge, a planar radio frequency capacitively coupled
plasma (RF-CCP) with an additional heating source. The second code is based on
the recently published scheme Ensemble-in-Spacetime (EST); it resolves only the
sheath and requires the time resolved voltage across and the ion flux into the
sheath as input. Ion inertia causes a temporal asymmetry (hysteresis) of the
sheath charge-voltage relation; also other ion transit time effects are found.
The two codes are in good agreement, both with respect to the spatial and
temporal dynamics of the sheath and with respect to the ion energy
distributions at the electrodes. It is concluded that the EST scheme may serve
as an efficient post-processor for fluid or global simulations and for
measurements: It can rapidly and accurately calculate ion distribution
functions even when no genuine kinetic information is available
The contribution of insect prey to the total nitrogen content of sundews (Drosera spp.) determined in situ by stable isotope analysis
The contribution of insect prey to total N in the carnivorous plants, Drosera rotundifolia and D. intermedia, was quantified in situ and without any experimental manipulation using natural abundance stable isotope analysis.
Samples of D. rotundifolia and D. intermedia, insects and noncarnivorous reference plants were collected from three contrasting locations across Britain. The proportion of Drosera nitrogen obtained from insect prey was calculated by a mixing model using δ<sup>15</sup>N values from the different plant groups.
The mean proportion of Drosera N derived from prey was 50%. There were significant differences in this proportion between sites, and significant differences within sites. There were significant differences between plant tissues and a significant negative relationship between the proportion of N derived from prey and the C : N ratio of Drosera tissues.
There was little evidence of differences in prey capture/utilisation in response to N availability, possibly due to a limited range in available N between the sites. However, evidence of a positive benefit of prey capture was apparent through the decrease in C : N ratio with increasing prey N concentrations in the plants
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