978 research outputs found
Propagation of a laser beam in a plasma
This paper shows that for a nonabsorbing medium with a prescribed index of refraction, the effects of beam stability, line focusing, and beam distortion can be predicted from simple ray optics. When the paraxial approximation is used, diffraction effects are examined for Gaussian, Lorentzian, and square beams. Most importantly, it is shown that for a Gaussian beam, diffraction effects can be included simply by adding imaginary solutions to the paraxial ray equations. Also presented are several procedures to extend the paraxial approximation so that the solution will have a domain of validity of greater extent
High sensitivity phonon spectroscopy of Bose-Einstein condensates using matter-wave interference
We study low momentum excitations of a Bose-Einstein condensate using a novel
matter-wave interference technique. In time-of-flight expansion images we
observe strong matter-wave fringe patterns. The fringe contrast is a sensitive
spectroscopic probe of in-trap phonons and is explained by use of a Bogoliubov
excitation projection method applied to the rescaled order parameter of the
expanding condensate. Gross-Pitaevskii simulations agree with the experimental
data and confirm the validity of the theoretical interpretation. We show that
the high sensitivity of this detection scheme gives access to the quantized
quasiparticle regime.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, author list update
Exploring The Responsibilities Of Single-Inhabitant Smart Homes With Use Cases
DOI: 10.3233/AIS-2010-0076This paper makes a number of contributions to the field of requirements analysis for Smart Homes. It introduces Use Cases as a tool for exploring the responsibilities of Smart Homes and it proposes a modification of the conventional Use Case structure to suit the particular requirements of Smart Homes. It presents a taxonomy of Smart-Home-related Use Cases with seven categories. It draws on those Use Cases as raw material for developing questions and conclusions about the design of Smart Homes for single elderly inhabitants, and it introduces the SHMUC repository, a web-based repository of Use Cases related to Smart Homes that anyone can exploit and to which anyone may contribute
WIYN/Hydra Detection of Lithium Depletion in F Stars of the Young Open Cluster M35 and Implications for the Development of the Lithium Gap
We report discovery of significant depletion of Li on the surfaces of F dwarf
stars in the 150-Myr-old open cluster M35, analagous to a feature in the
700-Myr-old Hyades cluster that has been referred to as the ``Li gap.'' We have
caught the gap in the act of forming: using high resolution, high S/N,
WIYN/Hydra observations, we detect Li in all but a few M35 F stars; the maximum
depletion lies at least 0.6-0.8 dex below minimally depleted (or undepleted)
stars. The M35 Li depletion region, a) is quite wide, with clear depletion seen
from 6000K to 6700K or hotter; b) shows a significant dispersion in Li
abundance at all T_eff, even with stars of the same T_eff; and c) contains
undepleted stars (as well as depleted ones) in the (narrow) classical Hyades
gap region, which itself shows no undepleted stars. All of these M35 Li
depletion properties support rotationally-induced slow mixing as the primary
physical mechanism that forms the gap, and argues against other proposed
mechanisms, particularly diffusion and steady main sequence mass loss. When
viewed in the context of the M35 Li depletion properties, the Hyades Li gap may
well be wider than is usually recognized.Comment: 14 Pages, 3 figures. Accepted to ApJ Letter
The Li Overabundance of J37: Diffusion or Accretion?
In September 2002 the discovery of a super Li-rich F-dwarf (J37) in NGC 6633,
an iron poor analogue of the better studied Hyades and Praecepe open clusters,
was announced. This unique star was thought to be the smoking gun for the
action of diffusion, models of which predict a narrow "Li-peak" at
approximately the correct temperature. However, with more detailed studies into
J37s abundance pattern this star provides firm evidence for the accretion of
planetesimals or other material from the circumstellar environment of new born
stars.
Thanks to the specific predictions made about the behaviour of Be abundances,
(the most striking of which being no Be in super-Li-rich dwarfs subject to
diffusion) the opposing diffusion/accretion predictions can be tested.
Initial modelling of the Be line indicates that J37 is as Be rich as it is Li
rich; log N(Be) = 2.25 +/- 0.25, and so is broadly consistent with an
accretion-fuelled enhancement. However, that both Li and Be are enhanced by
much more than the iron-peak elements (as determined in previous studies)
suggests that diffusion also plays a role in increasing the abundances of Li
and Be specifically.
Furthermore, a new data set from the UVES/UT2 combination has allowed the
elemental abundance of Iron to be measured, and the set of preliminary stellar
parameters determined; Teff ~ 7340 K, log g ~ 4.1, microturbulence ~ 4.3 km/s,
[Fe/H] ~ 0.50. This again provides distinct evidence for the effects of
accretion in J37 and requires a new synthesis of the Be doublet.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Poster presented at IAU Symposium 224 "The A Star
Puzzle", 7-13 July 2004, Poprad, Slovaki
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