1,174 research outputs found
Analytic vortex solutions in an unusual Mexican hat potential
We introduce an unusual Mexican hat potential, a piecewise parabolic one, and
we show that its vortex solutions can be found analytically, in contrast to the
case of the standard Psi^4 field theory.Comment: 4 pages and 1 figure (missing in this version
An Application of the Coherent Noise Model for the Prediction of Aftershock Magnitude Time Series
Recently, the study of the coherent noise model has led to a simple (binary) prediction algorithm for the forthcoming earthquake magnitude in aftershock sequences. This algorithm is based on the concept of natural time and exploits the complexity exhibited by the coherent noise model. Here, using the relocated catalogue from Southern California Seismic Network for 1981 to June 2011, we evaluate the application of this algorithm for the aftershocks of strong earthquakes of magnitude Mâ„6. The study is also extended by using the Global Centroid Moment Tensor Project catalogue to the case of the six strongest earthquakes in the Earth during the last almost forty years. The predictor time series exhibits the ubiquitous 1/f noise behavior
Identifying the Occurrence Time of the Destructive KahramanmaraĆ-Gazientep Earthquake of Magnitude M7.8 in Turkey on 6 February 2023
Here, we employ natural time analysis of seismicity together with non-extensive statistical mechanics aiming at shortening the occurrence time window of the KahramanmaraĆ-Gazientep M7.8 earthquake. The results obtained are in the positive direction pointing to the fact that after 3 February 2023 at 11:05:58 UTC, a strong earthquake was imminent. Natural time analysis also reveals a minimum fluctuation of the order parameter of seismicity almost three and a half months before the M7.8 earthquake, pointing to the initiation of seismic electrical activity. Moreover, before this earthquake occurrence, the detrended fluctuation analysis of the earthquake magnitude time-series reveals random behavior. Finally, when applying earthquake nowcasting, we find average earthquake potential score values which are compatible with those previously observed before strong (Mâ„7.1) earthquakes. The results obtained may improve our understanding of the physics of crustal phenomena that lead to strong earthquakes
Towards Understanding Photodegradation Pathways in Lignins:The Role of Intramolecular Hydrogen Bonding in Excited States
The photoinduced dynamics of the lignin building blocks syringol, guaiacol, and phenol were studied using time-resolved ion yield spectroscopy and velocity map ion imaging. Following irradiation of syringol and guaiacol with a broad-band femtosecond ultraviolet laser pulse, a coherent superposition of out-of-plane OH torsion and/or OMe torsion/flapping motions is created in the first excited 1ÏÏ* (S1) state, resulting in a vibrational wavepacket, which is probed by virtue of a dramatic nonplanar â planar geometry change upon photoionization from S1 to the ground state of the cation (D0). Any similar quantum beat pattern is absent in phenol. In syringol, the nonplanar geometry in S1 is pronounced enough to reduce the degree of intramolecular H bonding (between OH and OMe groups), enabling H atom elimination from the OH group. For guaiacol, H bonding is preserved after excitation, despite the nonplanar geometry in S1, and prevents OâH bond fission. This behavior affects the propensities for forming undesired phenoxyl radical sites in these three lignin chromophores and provides important insight into their relative âphotostabilitiesâ within the larger biopolymer
Photoprotection:extending lessons learned from studying natural sunscreens to the design of artificial sunscreen constituents
Ultrafast pumpâprobe spectroscopies and computational chemistry unravel the excited state photophysics responsible for the photostability of molecules in natural and commercial sunscreens.</p
Extreme population inversion in the fragments formed by UV photoinduced S-H bond fission in 2-thiophenethiol
H atom loss following near ultraviolet photoexcitation of gas phase 2-thiophenethiol molecules has been studied experimentally, by photofragment translational spectroscopy (PTS) methods, and computationally, by ab initio electronic structure calculations. The long wavelength (277.5 ℠λphot â„ 240 nm) PTS data are consistent with SâH bond fission after population of the first 1ÏÏ* state. The partner thiophenethiyl (R) radicals are formed predominantly in their first excited Ă2AâČ state, but assignment of a weak signal attributable to H + R([X with combining tilde]2AâČâČ) products allows determination of the SâH bond strength, D0 = 27 800 ± 100 cmâ1 and the Ăâ[X with combining tilde] state splitting in the thiophenethiyl radical (ÎE = 3580 ± 100 cmâ1). The deduced population inversion between the Ă and [X with combining tilde] states of the radical reflects the non-planar ground state geometry (wherein the SâH bond is directed near orthogonal to the ring plane) which, post-photoexcitation, is unable to planarise sufficiently prior to bond fission. This dictates that the dissociating molecules follow the adiabatic fragmentation pathway to electronically excited radical products. Ï* â Ï absorption dominates at shorter excitation wavelengths. Coupling to the same 1ÏÏ* potential energy surface (PES) remains the dominant dissociation route, but a minor yield of H atoms attributable to a rival fragmentation pathway is identified. These products are deduced to arise via unimolecular decay following internal conversion to the ground (S0) state PES via a conical intersection accessed by intra-ring CâS bond extension. The measured translational energy disposal shows a more striking change once λphot †220 nm. Once again, however, the dominant decay pathway is deduced to be SâH bond fission following coupling to the 1ÏÏ* PES but, in this case, many of the evolving molecules are deduced to have sufficiently near-planar geometries to allow passage through the conical intersection at extended SâH bond lengths and dissociation to ground ([X with combining tilde]) state radical products. The present data provide no definitive evidence that complete ring opening can compete with fast SâH bond fission following near UV photoexcitation of 2-thiophenethiol
Groebli solution for three magnetic vortices
The dynamics of N point vortices in a fluid is described by the
Helmholtz-Kirchhoff (HK) equations which lead to a completely integrable
Hamiltonian system for N=2 or 3 but chaotic dynamics for N>3. Here we consider
a generalization of the HK equations to describe the dynamics of magnetic
vortices within a collective-coordinate approximation. In particular, we
analyze in detail the dynamics of a system of three magnetic vortices by a
suitable generalization of the solution for three point vortices in an ordinary
fluid obtained by Groebli more than a century ago. The significance of our
results for the dynamics of ferromagnetic elements is briefly discussed.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figure
Visualization of the significance of Receiver Operating Characteristics based on confidence ellipses
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