26,072 research outputs found
The potential (iz)^m generates real eigenvalues only, under symmetric rapid decay conditions
We consider the eigenvalue problems -u"(z) +/- (iz)^m u(z) = lambda u(z), m
>= 3, under every rapid decay boundary condition that is symmetric with respect
to the imaginary axis in the complex z-plane. We prove that the eigenvalues
lambda are all positive real.Comment: 23 pages and 1 figur
Dynamical evolution of the mass function and radial profile of the Galactic globular cluster system
Evolution of the mass function (MF) and radial distribution (RD) of the
Galactic globular cluster (GC) system is calculated using an advanced and a
realistic Fokker-Planck (FP) model that considers dynamical friction,
disc/bulge shocks and eccentric cluster orbits. We perform hundreds of FP
calculations with different initial cluster conditions, and then search a
wide-parameter space for the best-fitting initial GC MF and RD that evolves
into the observed present-day Galactic GC MF and RD. By allowing both MF and RD
of the initial GC system to vary, which is attempted for the first time in the
present Letter, we find that our best-fitting models have a higher peak mass
for a lognormal initial MF and a higher cut-off mass for a power-law initial MF
than previous estimates, but our initial total masses in GCs, M_{T,i} =
1.5-1.8x10^8 Msun, are comparable to previous results. Significant findings
include that our best-fitting lognormal MF shifts downward by 0.35 dex during
the period of 13 Gyr, and that our power-law initial MF models well-fit the
observed MF and RD only when the initial MF is truncated at >~10^5 Msun. We
also find that our results are insensitive to the initial distribution of orbit
eccentricity and inclination, but are rather sensitive to the initial
concentration of the clusters and to how the initial tidal radius is defined.
If the clusters are assumed to be formed at the apocentre while filling the
tidal radius there, M_{T,i} can be as high as 6.9x10^8 Msun, which amounts to
~75 per cent of the current mass in the stellar halo.Comment: To appear in May 2008 issue of MNRAS, 386, L6
The D0 same-charge dimuon asymmetry and possibile new CP violation sources in the system
Recently, the D0 collaboration reported a large CP violation in the same-sign
dimuon charge asymmetry which has the deviation from the value
estimated in the Standard Model. In this paper, several new physics models are
considered: the MSSM, two Higgs doublet model, the recent dodeca model, and a
new model. Generally, it is hard to achieve such a large CP violation
consistently with other experimental constraints. We find that a scheme with
extra non-anomalous U(1) gauge symmetry is barely consistent. In general,
the extra gauge boson induces the flavor changing neutral current
interactions at tree level, which is the basic reason allowing a large new
physics CP violation. To preserve the U(1) symmetry at high energy,
SU(2) singlet exotic heavy quarks of mass above 1 TeV and the Standard
Model gauge singlet scalars are introduced.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figure
Hawking Radiation of Black p-Branes from Gravitational Anomaly
We investigate the Hawking radiation of black -branes of superstring
theories using the method of anomaly cancelation, specially, we use the method
of [S. Iso, H. Umetsu and F. Wilczek, {\sl Phys. Rev. Lett.} {\bf 96}, 151302
(2006); {\sl Phys. Rev. D} {\bf 74}, 044017 (2006)]. The metrics of black
-branes are spherically symmetric, but not the Schwarzschild type. In order
to simplify the calculation, we first make a coordinate transformation to
transform the metric to the Schwarzschild type. Then we calculate its
energy-momentum flux from the method of anomaly cancelation of the above
mentioned references. The obtained energy-momentum flux is equal to a black
body radiation, the thermodynamic temperature of the radiation is equal to its
Hawking temperature. And we find that the results are not changed for the
original non-Schwarzschild type spherically symmetric metric.Comment: 19 pages Latex, some mistakes correcte
Thermalization of quark-gluon matter by 2-to-2 and 3-to-3 elastic scatterings
Thermalization of quark-gluon matter is studied with a transport equation
that includes contributions of 2-to-2 and 3-to-3 elastic scatterings.
Thermalization time is related to the squared amplitudes for the elastic
scatterings that are calculated in perturbative QCD.Comment: LaTex, 6 pages, 3 figures, talk presented at the 19th international
conference on ultra-relativistic nucleus-nucleus collisions, Shanghai, China,
Nov. 200
Eigenvalues of PT-symmetric oscillators with polynomial potentials
We study the eigenvalue problem
with the boundary
conditions that decays to zero as tends to infinity along the rays
, where is a polynomial and integers . We provide an
asymptotic expansion of the eigenvalues as , and prove
that for each {\it real} polynomial , the eigenvalues are all real and
positive, with only finitely many exceptions.Comment: 23 pages, 1 figure. v2: equation (14) as well as a few subsequent
equations has been changed. v3: typos correcte
Person prominence and relation prominence : on the typology of syntactic relations with particular reference to Yucatec Maya
PM3969, ISO 639-3 : -, Maya language--Syntax1. Introduction 2. Theoretical background 2.1. The cognitive structure of a situation 2.1.1. Situation, situation core, and participants 2.1.2. Participant features 2.1.3. Participant roles 2.2. Syntactic functions 2.3. Correlation between syntactic functions and participant roles 3. Prominence in typology 3.1. Subject prominence vs. topic prominence 3.2. Reference domination vs. role domination 3.3. Person prominence vs. relation prominence 4. Languages investigated 4.1. Yucatec Maya 4.2. Samoan 4.3. Maori 4.4. Tamil 4.5. Lezgian 4.6. Korean 5. Prominence in syntactic constructions 5.1. Introduction 5.2. Higher predicates 5.2.1. Modal predicates 5.2.2. Phase predicates 5.2.3. Tense, aspect, and aktionsart auxiliaries 5.3. Possessive constructions 5.3.1. Part-whole relations 5.3.2. Ascription of possession 5.3.3. Predication of belonging 5.3.4. Ascription of property to body part 5.3.5. Affection of possessor 5.4. Mental, sensual, and emotional states and processes 5.4.1. Preliminaries 5.4.2. Sensual states and processes 5.4.3. Emotional states and processes 5.4.4. Mental states and processes 5.4.5. Conclusion 5.5. Benefactive 6. Relation prominence in YM: a historical-comparative perspective 6.1. Colonial Yucatec Maya 6.1.1. Preliminaries 6.1.2. Modal predicates 6.1.3. Phase predicates 6.1.4. Aspect auxiliaries 6.1.5. Conclusion 6.2. Cognate languages 6.2.1. Preliminaries 6.2.2. Higher predicates 6.2.3. Possessive constructions 6.2.4. Mental, sensual and emotional states and processes 6.2.5. Benefactive 6.2.6. Conclusion 7. Typology 7.1. Empirical generalizations 7.1.1. The domain of possession 136 7.1.2. Higher predicates 7.1.3. Participant roles 7.2. Grammatical correlations 7.3. Conclusion Indices Abbreviations Morpheme glosses & syntactic categories Languages Sources of data Bibliographical references LIST OF FIGURES LIST OF TABLE
On the shape of spectra for non-self-adjoint periodic Schr\"odinger operators
The spectra of the Schr\"odinger operators with periodic potentials are
studied. When the potential is real and periodic, the spectrum consists of at
most countably many line segments (energy bands) on the real line, while when
the potential is complex and periodic, the spectrum consists of at most
countably many analytic arcs in the complex plane.
In some recent papers, such operators with complex -symmetric
periodic potentials are studied. In particular, the authors argued that some
energy bands would appear and disappear under perturbations. Here, we show that
appearance and disappearance of such energy bands imply existence of nonreal
spectra. This is a consequence of a more general result, describing the local
shape of the spectrum.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Distribution of magnetic domain pinning fields in GaMnAs ferromagnetic films
Using the angular dependence of the planar Hall effect in GaMnAs
ferromagnetic films, we were able to determine the distribution of magnetic
domain pinning fields in this material. Interestingly, there is a major
difference between the pinning field distribution in as-grown and in annealed
films, the former showing a strikingly narrower distribution than the latter.
This conspicuous difference can be attributed to the degree of non-uniformity
of magnetic anisotropy in both types of films. This finding provides a better
understanding of the magnetic domain landscape in GaMnAs that has been the
subject of intense debate
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