64,540 research outputs found
Geochemistry of reduced inorganic sulfur, reactive iron, and organic carbon in fluvial and marine surface sediment in the Laizhou Bay region, China
Understanding the geochemical cycling of sulfur in sediments is important because it can have implications for both modern environments (e.g., deterioration of water quality) and interpretation of the ancient past (e.g., sediment C/S ratios can be used as indicators of palaeodepositional environment). This study investigates the geochemical characteristics of sulfur, iron, and organic carbon in fluvial and coastal surface sediments of the Laizhou Bay region, China. A total of 63 sediment samples were taken across the whole Laizhou Bay marine region and the 14 major tidal rivers draining into it. Acid volatile sulfur, chromium (II)-reducible sulfur and elemental sulfur, total organic carbon, and total nitrogen were present in higher concentrations in the fluvial sediment than in the marine sediment of Laizhou Bay. The composition of reduced inorganic sulfur in surface sediments was dominated by acid volatile sulfur and chromium (II)-reducible sulfur. In fluvial sediments, sulfate reduction and formation of reduced inorganic sulfur were controlled by TOC and reactive iron synchronously. High C/S ratios in the marine sediments indicate that the diagenetic processes in Laizhou Bay have been affected by rapid deposition of sediment from the Yellow River in recent decades
On a Localized Riemannian Penrose Inequality
Consider a compact, orientable, three dimensional Riemannian manifold with
boundary with nonnegative scalar curvature. Suppose its boundary is the
disjoint union of two pieces: the horizon boundary and the outer boundary,
where the horizon boundary consists of the unique closed minimal surfaces in
the manifold and the outer boundary is metrically a round sphere. We obtain an
inequality relating the area of the horizon boundary to the area and the total
mean curvature of the outer boundary. Such a manifold may be thought as a
region, surrounding the outermost apparent horizons of black holes, in a
time-symmetric slice of a space-time in the context of general relativity. The
inequality we establish has close ties with the Riemannian Penrose Inequality,
proved by Huisken and Ilmanen, and by Bray.Comment: 16 page
Subleading corrections to parity-violating pion photoproduction
We compute the photon asymmetry Bγ for near threshold parity-violating (PV) pion photoproduction through subleading order. We show that subleading contributions involve a new combination of PV couplings not included in previous analyses of hadronic PV. We argue that existing constraints on the leading order contribution to Bγ—obtained from the PV γ-decay of 18F—suggest that the impact of the subleading contributions may be more significant than expected from naturalness arguments
Geometries and energetics of methanol–ethanol clusters: a VUV laser/time-of-flight mass spectrometry and density functional theory study
Hydrogen-bonded clusters, formed above liquid methanol (Me) and ethanol (Et) mixtures of various compositions, were entrained in a supersonic jet and probed using 118 nm vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) laser single-photon ionization/time-of-flight mass spectrometry. The spectra are dominated by protonated cluster ions, formed by ionizing hydrogen-bonded MemEtn neutrals, m = 0–4, n = 0–3, and m + n = 2–5. The structures and energetics of the neutral and ionic species were investigated using both the all-atom optimized potential for liquid state, OPLS-AA, and the density functional (DFT) calculations. The energetic factors affecting the observed cluster distributions were examined. Calculations indicate that the large change in binding energy going from trimer to tetramer can be attributed more to pair-wise interactions than to cooperativity effects
Chiral Symmetry and the Parity-Violating Yukawa Coupling
We construct the complete SU(2) parity-violating (PV)
interaction Lagrangian with one derivative, and calculate the chiral
corrections to the PV Yukawa coupling constant through in the leading order of heavy baryon expansion. We
discuss the relationship between the renormalized \hpi, the measured value of
\hpi, and the corresponding quantity calculated microscopically from the
Standard Model four-quark PV interaction.Comment: RevTex, 26 pages + 5 PS figure
Theory of selective excitation in Stimulated Raman Scattering
A semiclassical model is used to investigate the possibility of selectively
exciting one of two closely spaced, uncoupled Raman transitions. The duration
of the intense pump pulse that creates the Raman coherence is shorter than the
vibrational period of a molecule (impulsive regime of interaction). Pulse
shapes are found that provide either enhancement or suppression of particular
vibrational excitations.Comment: RevTeX4,10 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys.Rev.
Temperature-Dependent Frequency Shifts in Collective Excitations of a Bose-Einstein Condensate
By including the contribution of the thermal cloud to the Lagrangian of the
condensate of a Bose gas, we extend the time-dependent variational method at
zero temperature to study temperature-dependent low collective excitation
modes. A Gaussian trial wave function of the condensate and a static
distribution density of the thermal cloud are used, and analytical expressions
for temperature-dependent excitation frequencies obtained. Theoretical results
are compared with measurements in the JILA and MIT experiments.Comment: 13 pages, RevTex, 2 EPS figure
The classification of traveling wave solutions and superposition of multi-solutions to Camassa-Holm equation with dispersion
Under the traveling wave transformation, Camassa-Holm equation with
dispersion is reduced to an integrable ODE whose general solution can be
obtained using the trick of one-parameter group. Furthermore combining complete
discrimination system for polynomial, the classifications of all single
traveling wave solutions to the Camassa-Holm equation with dispersion is
obtained. In particular, an affine subspace structure in the set of the
solutions of the reduced ODE is obtained. More general, an implicit linear
structure in Camassa-Holm equation with dispersion is found. According to the
linear structure, we obtain the superposition of multi-solutions to
Camassa-Holm equation with dispersion
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