29,718 research outputs found
Low-Altitude Reconnection Inflow-Outflow Observations during a 2010 November 3 Solar Eruption
For a solar flare occurring on 2010 November 3, we present observations using
several SDO/AIA extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) passbands of an erupting flux rope
followed by inflows sweeping into a current sheet region. The inflows are soon
followed by outflows appearing to originate from near the termination point of
the inflowing motion - an observation in line with standard magnetic
reconnection models. We measure average inflow plane-of-sky speeds to range
from ~150-690 km/s with the initial, high-temperature inflows being the
fastest. Using the inflow speeds and a range of Alfven speeds, we estimate the
Alfvenic Mach number which appears to decrease with time. We also provide
inflow and outflow times with respect to RHESSI count rates and find that the
fast, high-temperature inflows occur simultaneously with a peak in the RHESSI
thermal lightcurve. Five candidate inflow-outflow pairs are identified with no
more than a minute delay between detections. The inflow speeds of these pairs
are measured to be 10^2 km/s with outflow speeds ranging from 10^2-10^3 km/s -
indicating acceleration during the reconnection process. The fastest of these
outflows are in the form of apparently traveling density enhancements along the
legs of the loops rather than the loop apexes themselves. These flows could
either be accelerated plasma, shocks, or waves prompted by reconnection. The
measurements presented here show an order of magnitude difference between the
retraction speeds of the loops and the speed of the density enhancements within
the loops - presumably exiting the reconnection site.Comment: 31 pages, 13 figures, 1 table, Accepted to ApJ (expected publication
~July 2012
Relation between phase and dwell times for quantum tunneling of a relativistically propagating particle
The general and explicit relation between the phase time and the dwell time
for quantum tunneling of a relativistically propagating particle is
investigated and quantified. In analogy with previously obtained
non-relativistic results, it is shown that the group delay can be described in
terms of the dwell time and a self-interference delay. Lessons concerning the
phenomenology of the relativistic tunneling are drawn
Strange meson-nucleon states in the quark potential model
The quark potential model and resonating group method are used to investigate
the bound states and/or resonances. The model potential consists of
the t-channel and s-channel one-gluon exchange potentials and the confining
potential with incorporating the QCD renormalization correction and the
spin-orbital suppression effect in it. It was shown in our previous work that
by considering the color octet contribution, use of this model to investigate
the low energy elastic scattering leads to the results which are in pretty
good agreement with the experimental data. In this paper, the same model and
method are employed to calculate the masses of the bound systems.
For this purpose, the resonating group equation is transformed into a standard
Schr\"odinger equation in which a nonlocal effective interaction
potential is included. Solving the Schr\"odinger equation by the variational
method, we are able to reproduce the masses of some currently concerned
states and get a view that these states possibly exist as
molecular states. For the system, the same calculation gives no support to
the existence of the resonance which was announced
recently.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
Mott-Peierls Transition in the extended Peierls-Hubbard model
The one-dimensional extended Peierls-Hubbard model is studied at several band
fillings using the density matrix renormalization group method. Results show
that the ground state evolves from a Mott-Peierls insulator with a correlation
gap at half-filling to a soliton lattice with a small band gap away from
half-filling. It is also confirmed that the ground state of the Peierls-Hubbard
model undergoes a transition to a metallic state at finite doping. These
results show that electronic correlations effects should be taken into account
in theoretical studies of doped polyacetylene. They also show that a
Mott-Peierls theory could explain the insulator-metal transition observed in
this material.Comment: 4 pages with 3 embedded eps figure
Dirac Cosmology and the Acceleration of the Contemporary Universe
A model is suggested to unify the Einstein GR and Dirac Cosmology. There is
one adjusted parameter in our model. After adjusting the parameter
in the model by using the supernova data, we have calculated the gravitational
constant and the physical quantities of , and by using the present day quantities as the initial conditions and
found that the equation of state parameter equals to -0.83, the
ratio of the density of the addition creation and the
ratio of the density of the matter including multiplication creation, radiation
and normal matter at present. The results are self-consistent
and in good agreement with present knowledge in cosmology. These results
suggest that the addition creation and multiplication creation in Dirac
cosmology play the role of the dark energy and dark matter.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
Incremental expansions for Hubbard-Peierls systems
The ground state energies of infinite half-filled Hubbard-Peierls chains are
investigated combining incremental expansion with exact diagonalization of
finite chain segments. The ground state energy of equidistant infinite Hubbard
(Heisenberg) chains is calculated with a relative error of less than for all values of using diagonalizations of 12-site (20-site)
chain segm ents. For dimerized chains the dimerization order parameter as a
function of the onsite repulsion interaction has a maximum at nonzero
values of , if the electron-phonon coupling is lower than a critical
value . The critical value is found with high accuracy to be
. For smaller values of the position of the maximum of is
approximately , and rapidly tends to zero as approaches from
below. We show how our method can be applied to calculate breathers for the
problem of phonon dynamics in Hubbard-Peierls systems.Comment: 4 Pages, 3 Figures, REVTE
Density of Neutral Solitons in Weakly Disordered Peierls Chains
We study the effects of weak off-diagonal disorder on Peierls systems with a
doubly degenerate ground state. We show that for these systems disorder in the
electron hopping amplitudes induces a finite density of solitons in the
minimal-energy lattice configuration of a single chain. These disorder-induced
dimerization kinks are neutral and have spin 1/2. Using a continuum model for
the Peierls chain and treating the lattice classically, we analytically
calculate the average free energy and density of kinks. We compare these
results to numerical calculations for a discrete model and discuss the
implications of the kinks for the optical and magnetic properties of the
conjugated polymer trans-polyacetylene.Comment: 28 pages, revtex, 5 Postscript figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Spontaneous Crystallization of Skyrmions and Fractional Vortices in the Fast-rotating and Rapidly-quenched Spin-1 Bose-Einstein Condensates
We investigate the spontaneous generation of crystallized topological defects
via the combining effects of fast rotation and rapid thermal quench on the
spin-1 Bose-Einstein condensates. By solving the stochastic projected
Gross-Pitaevskii equation, we show that, when the system reaches equilibrium, a
hexagonal lattice of skyrmions, and a square lattice of half-quantized vortices
can be formed in a ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic spinor BEC, respetively,
which can be imaged by using the polarization-dependent phase-contrast method
Synchrotron X-ray Diffraction Study of BaFe2As2 and CaFe2As2 at High Pressures up to 56 GPa: Ambient and Low-Temperatures Down to 33 K
We report high pressure powder synchrotron x-ray diffraction studies on
MFe2As2 (M=Ba, Ca) over a range of temperatures and pressures up to about 56
GPa using a membrane diamond anvil cell. A phase transition to a collapsed
tetragonal phase is observed in both compounds upon compression. However, at
300 (33) K in the Ba-compound the transition occurs at 26 (29) GPa, which is a
much higher pressure than 1.7 (0.3) GPa at 300 (40) K in the Ca-compound, due
to its larger volume. It is important to note that the transition in both
compounds occurs when they are compressed to almost the same value of the unit
cell volume and attain similar ct/at ratios. We also show that the FeAs4
tetrahedra are much less compressible and more distorted in the collapsed
tetragonal phase than their nearly regular shape in the ambient pressure phase.
We present a detailed analysis of the pressure dependence of the structures as
well as equation of states in these important BaFe2As2 and CaFe2As2 compounds.Comment: 26 pages, 12 figure
- …