7,718 research outputs found
Polarization probes of vorticity in heavy ion collisions
We discuss the information that can be deduced from a measurement of particle
(hyperon or vector meson) polarization in ultrarelativistic nuclear collisions.
We describe the sensitivity of polarization to initial conditions, hydrodynamic
evolution and mean free path, and find that the polarization observable is
sensitive to all details and stages of the system's evolution. We suggest that
an experimental investigation covering production plane and reaction plane
polarizations, as well as the polarization of jet-associated particles in the
plane defined by the jet and particle direction, can help in disentangling the
factors contributing to this observable. Scans of polarization in energy and
rapidity might also point to a change in the system's properties.Comment: In press, Phys.Rev.C. One new figure, text streamlined and edited,
physics conclusions and reasoning not change
FastChem Cond: Equilibrium chemistry with condensation and rainout for cool planetary and stellar environments
Cool astrophysical objects, such as (exo)planets, brown dwarfs, or asymptotic
giant branch stars, can be strongly affected by condensation. Condensation does
not only directly affect the chemical composition of the gas phase by removing
elements but the condensed material also influences other chemical and physical
processes in these object. This includes, for example, the formation of clouds
in planetary atmospheres and brown dwarfs or the dust-driven winds of evolved
stars. In this study we introduce FastChem Cond, a new version of the FastChem
equilibrium chemistry code that adds a treatment of equilibrium condensation.
Determining the equilibrium composition under the impact of condensation is
complicated by the fact that the number of condensates that can exist in
equilibrium with the gas phase is limited by a phase rule. However, this phase
rule does not directly provide information on which condensates are stable. As
a major advantage of FastChem Cond is able to automatically select the set
stable condensates satisfying the phase rule. Besides the normal equilibrium
condensation, FastChem Cond can also be used with the rainout approximation
that is commonly employed in atmospheres of brown dwarfs or (exo)planets.
FastChem Cond is available as open-source code, released under the GPLv3
licence. In addition to the C++ code, FastChem Cond also offers a Python
interface. Together with the code update we also add about 290 liquid and solid
condensate species to FastChem.Comment: submitted to MNRAS, code available at
https://github.com/exoclime/FastChe
An Entomopathogenic Nematode by Any Other Name
Among the diversity of insect-parasitic nematodes, entomopathogenic nematodes (EPNs) are distinct, cooperating with insect-pathogenic bacteria to kill insect hosts. EPNs have adapted specific mechanisms to associate with and transmit bacteria to insect hosts. New discoveries have expanded this guild of nematodes and refine our understanding of the nature and evolution of insectānematode associations. Here, we clarify the meaning of āentomopathogenicā in nematology and argue that EPNs must rapidly kill their hosts with the aid of bacterial partners and must pass on the associated bacteria to future generations
Helical spin-waves, magnetic order, and fluctuations in the langasite compound Ba3NbFe3Si2O14
We have investigated the spin fluctuations in the langasite compound
Ba3NbFe3Si2O14 in both the ordered state and as a function of temperature. The
low temperature magnetic structure is defined by a spiral phase characterized
by magnetic Bragg peaks at q=(0,0,tau ~ 1/7) onset at TN=27 K as previously
reported by Marty et al. The nature of the fluctuations and temperature
dependence of the order parameter is consistent with a classical second order
phase transition for a two dimensional triangular antiferromagnet. We will show
that the physical properties and energy scales including the ordering
wavevector, Curie-Weiss temperature, and the spin-waves can be explained
through the use of only symmetric exchange constants without the need for the
Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction. This is accomplished through a set of
``helical" exchange pathways along the c direction imposed by the chiral
crystal structure and naturally explains the magnetic diffuse scattering which
displays a strong vector chirality up to high temperatures well above the
ordering temperature. This illustrates a strong coupling between magnetic and
crystalline chirality in this compound.Comment: 16 pages, 16 figures, submitted to Physical Review
Probing nuclear expansion dynamics with -spectra
We study the dynamics of charged pions in the nuclear medium via the ratio of
differential - and -spectra in a coupled-channel BUU (CBUU)
approach. The relative energy shift of the charged pions is found to correlate
with the pion freeze-out time in nucleus-nucleus collisions as well as with the
impact parameter of the heavy-ion reaction. Furthermore, the long-range Coulomb
force provides a 'clock' for the expansion of the hot nuclear system. Detailed
comparisons with experimental data for at 1 GeV/A and at
2.0 GeV/A are presented.Comment: 21 pages, latex, figures include
Accurate Determination of Phenotypic Information from Historic Thoroughbred Horses by Single Base Extension
Historic DNA have the potential to identify phenotypic information otherwise invisible in the historical, archaeological and palaeontological record. In order to determine whether a single nucleotide polymorphism typing protocol based on single based extension (SNaPshotā¢) could produce reliable phenotypic data from historic samples, we genotyped three coat colour markers for a sample of historic Thoroughbred horses for which both phenotypic and correct geotypic information were known from pedigree information in the General Stud Book. Experimental results were consistent with the pedigrees in all cases. Thus we demonstrate that historic DNA techniques can produce reliable phenotypic information from museum specimens.Ā© 2010 Campana et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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