5,123 research outputs found
Evolution of the Dark Matter Distribution at the Galactic Center
Annihilation radiation from neutralino dark matter at the Galactic center
(GC) would be greatly enhanced if the dark matter were strongly clustered
around the supermassive black hole (SBH). The existence of a dark-matter
"spike" is made plausible by the observed, steeply-rising stellar density near
the GC SBH. Here the time-dependent equations describing gravitational
interaction of the dark matter particles with the stars are solved. Scattering
of dark matter particles by stars would substantially lower the dark matter
density near the GC SBH over 10^10 yr, due both to kinetic heating, and to
capture of dark matter particles by the SBH. This result suggests that
enhancements in the dark matter density around a SBH would be modest whether or
not the host galaxy had experienced the scouring effects of a binary SBH.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to Physical Review Letter
Suppression of energetic electron transport in flares by double layers
During flares and coronal mass ejections, energetic electrons from coronal
sources typically have very long lifetimes compared to the transit times across
the systems, suggesting confinement in the source region. Particle-in-cell
simulations are carried out to explore the mechanisms of energetic electron
transport from the corona to the chromosphere and possible confinement. We set
up an initial system of pre-accelerated hot electrons in contact with ambient
cold electrons along the local magnetic field, and let it evolve over time.
Suppression of transport by a nonlinear, highly localized electrostatic
electric field (in the form of a double layer) is observed after a short phase
of free-streaming by hot electrons. The double layer (DL) emerges at the
contact of the two electron populations. It is driven by an ion-electron
streaming instability due to the drift of the back-streaming return current
electrons interacting with the ions. The DL grows over time and supports a
significant drop in temperature and hence reduces heat flux between the two
regions that is sustained for the duration of the simulation. This study shows
transport suppression begins when the energetic electrons start to propagate
away from a coronal acceleration site. It also implies confinement of energetic
electrons with kinetic energies less than the electrostatic energy of the DL
for the DL lifetime, which is much longer than the electron transit time
through the source region
Chromosome mapping: radiation hybrid data and stochastic spin models
This work approaches human chromosome mapping by developing algorithms for
ordering markers associated with radiation hybrid data. Motivated by recent
work of Boehnke et al. [1], we formulate the ordering problem by developing
stochastic spin models to search for minimum-break marker configurations. As a
particular application, the methods developed are applied to 14 human
chromosome-21 markers tested by Cox et al. [2]. The methods generate
configurations consistent with the best found by others. Additionally, we find
that the set of low-lying configurations is described by a Markov-like ordering
probability distribution. The distribution displays cluster correlations
reflecting closely linked loci.Comment: 26 Pages, uuencoded LaTex, Submitted to Phys. Rev. E,
[email protected], [email protected]
Phase Transition in Two Species Zero-Range Process
We study a zero-range process with two species of interacting particles. We
show that the steady state assumes a simple factorised form, provided the
dynamics satisfy certain conditions, which we derive. The steady state exhibits
a new mechanism of condensation transition wherein one species induces the
condensation of the other. We study this mechanism for a specific choice of
dynamics.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Gradient expansion, curvature perturbations and magnetized plasmas
The properties of magnetized plasmas are always investigated under the
hypothesis that the relativistic inhomogeneities stemming from the fluid
sources and from the geometry itself are sufficiently small to allow for a
perturbative description prior to photon decoupling. The latter assumption is
hereby relaxed and pre-decoupling plasmas are described within a suitable
expansion where the inhomogeneities are treated to a given order in the spatial
gradients. It is argued that the (general relativistic) gradient expansion
shares the same features of the drift approximation, customarily employed in
the description of cold plasmas, so that the two schemes are physically
complementary in the large-scale limit and for the low-frequency branch of the
spectrum of plasma modes. The two-fluid description, as well as the
magnetohydrodynamical reduction, are derived and studied in the presence of the
spatial gradients of the geometry. Various solutions of the coupled system of
evolution equations in the anti-Newtonian regime and in the quasi-isotropic
approximation are presented. The relation of this analysis to the so-called
separate Universe paradigm is outlined. The evolution of the magnetized
curvature perturbations in the nonlinear regime is addressed for the magnetized
adiabatic mode in the plasma frame.Comment: 40 pages, no figure
Nonlinear theory of resonant slow waves in anisotropic and dispersive plasmas
The solar corona is a typical example of a plasma with strongly anisotropic transport processes. The main dissipative mechanisms in the solar corona acting on slow magnetoacoustic waves are the anisotropic thermal conductivity and viscosity [Ballai et al., Phys. Plasmas 5, 252 (1998)] developed the nonlinear theory of driven slow resonant waves in such a regime. In the present paper the nonlinear behavior of driven magnetohydrodynamic waves in the slow dissipative layer in plasmas with strongly anisotropic viscosity and thermal conductivity is expanded by considering dispersive effects due to Hall currents. The nonlinear governing equation describing the dynamics of nonlinear resonant slow waves is supplemented by a term which describes nonlinear dispersion and is of the same order of magnitude as nonlinearity and dissipation. The connection formulas are found to be similar to their nondispersive counterparts
Determination of complex dielectric functions of ion implanted and implanted‐annealed amorphous silicon by spectroscopic ellipsometry
Measuring with a spectroscopic ellipsometer (SE) in the 1.8–4.5 eV photon energy region we determined the complex dielectric function (ϵ = ϵ1 + iϵ2) of different kinds of amorphous silicon prepared by self‐implantation and thermal relaxation (500 °C, 3 h). These measurements show that the complex dielectric function (and thus the complex refractive index) of implanted a‐Si (i‐a‐Si) differs from that of relaxed (annealed) a‐Si (r‐a‐Si). Moreover, its ϵ differs from the ϵ of evaporated a‐Si (e‐a‐Si) found in the handbooks as ϵ for a‐Si. If we use this ϵ to evaluate SE measurements of ion implanted silicon then the fit is very poor. We deduced the optical band gap of these materials using the Davis–Mott plot based on the relation: (ϵ2E2)1/3 ∼ (E− Eg). The results are: 0.85 eV (i‐a‐Si), 1.12 eV (e‐a‐Si), 1.30 eV (r‐a‐Si). We attribute the optical change to annihilation of point defects
Pre-logarithmic and logarithmic fields in a sandpile model
We consider the unoriented two-dimensional Abelian sandpile model on the
half-plane with open and closed boundary conditions, and relate it to the
boundary logarithmic conformal field theory with central charge c=-2. Building
on previous results, we first perform a complementary lattice analysis of the
operator effecting the change of boundary condition between open and closed,
which confirms that this operator is a weight -1/8 boundary primary field,
whose fusion agrees with lattice calculations. We then consider the operators
corresponding to the unit height variable and to a mass insertion at an
isolated site of the upper half plane and compute their one-point functions in
presence of a boundary containing the two kinds of boundary conditions. We show
that the scaling limit of the mass insertion operator is a weight zero
logarithmic field.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures. v2: minor corrections + added appendi
Taming the Runaway Problem of Inflationary Landscapes
A wide variety of vacua, and their cosmological realization, may provide an
explanation for the apparently anthropic choices of some parameters of particle
physics and cosmology. If the probability on various parameters is weighted by
volume, a flat potential for slow-roll inflation is also naturally understood,
since the flatter the potential the larger the volume of the sub-universe.
However, such inflationary landscapes have a serious problem, predicting an
environment that makes it exponentially hard for observers to exist and giving
an exponentially small probability for a moderate universe like ours. A general
solution to this problem is proposed, and is illustrated in the context of
inflaton decay and leptogenesis, leading to an upper bound on the reheating
temperature in our sub-universe. In a particular scenario of chaotic inflation
and non-thermal leptogenesis, predictions can be made for the size of CP
violating phases, the rate of neutrinoless double beta decay and, in the case
of theories with gauge-mediated weak scale supersymmetry, for the fundamental
scale of supersymmetry breaking.Comment: 31 pages, including 3 figure
Ohmic currents and pre-decoupling magnetism
Ohmic currents induced prior to decoupling are investigated in a standard
transport model accounting both for the expansion of the background geometry as
well as of its relativistic inhomogeneities. The relative balance of the Ohmic
electric fields in comparison with the Hall and thermoelectric contributions is
specifically addressed. The impact of the Ohmic currents on the evolution of
curvature perturbations is discussed numerically and it is shown to depend
explicitly upon the evolution of the conductivity.Comment: 8 pages, 4 included figure
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