7,996 research outputs found
Implications of Particle Acceleration in Active Galactic Nuclei for Cosmic Rays and High Energy Neutrino Astronomy
We consider the production of high energy neutrinos and cosmic rays in
radio-quiet active galactic nuclei (AGN) or in the central regions of
radio-loud AGN. We use a model in which acceleration of protons takes place at
a shock in an accretion flow onto a supermassive black hole, and follow the
cascade that results from interactions of the accelerated protons in the AGN
environment. We use our results to estimate the diffuse high energy neutrino
intensity and cosmic ray intensity due to AGN. We discuss our results in the
context of high energy neutrino telescopes under construction, and measurements
of the cosmic ray composition in the region of the ``knee'' in the energy
spectrum at GeV.Comment: 37 pages of compressed and uuencoded postscript; hardcopy available
on request; to be published in Astroparticle Physics; ADP-AT-94-
Adaptive finite element analysis based on p-convergence
The results of numerical experiments are presented in which a posteriori estimators of error in strain energy were examined on the basis of a typical problem in linear elastic fracture mechanics. Two estimators were found to give close upper and lower bounds for the strain energy error. The potential significance of this is that the same estimators may provide a suitable basis for adaptive redistribution of the degrees of freedom in finite element models
Attractive Bose-Einstein Condensates in three dimensions under rotation: Revisiting the problem of stability of the ground state in harmonic traps
We study harmonically trapped ultracold Bose gases with attractive
interparticle interactions under external rotation in three spatial dimensions
and determine the critical value of the attraction strength where the gas
collapses as a function of the rotation frequency. To this end we examine the
stationary state in the corotating frame with a many-body approach as well as
within the Gross-Pitaevskii theory of systems in traps with different
anisotropies. In contrast to recently reported results [N. A. Jamaludin, N. G.
Parker, and A. M. Martin, Phys. Rev. A \textbf{77}, 051603(R) (2008)], we find
that the collapse is not postponed in the presence of rotation. Unlike
repulsive gases, the properties of the attractive system remain practically
unchanged under rotation in isotropic and slightly anisotropic traps.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure, 1 tabl
3D-2D crossover in the naturally layered superconductor (LaSe)1.14(NbSe2)
The temperature and angular dependencies of the resistive upper critical
magnetic field reveal a dimensional crossover of the superconducting
state in the highly anisotropic misfit-layer single crystal of
(LaSe)(NbSe) with the critical temperature of 1.23 K. The
temperature dependence of the upper critical field for
a field orientation along the conducting -planes displays a
characteristic upturn at 1.1 K and below this temperature the angular
dependence of has a cusp around the parallel field orientation. Both
these typical features are observed for the first time in a naturally
crystalline layered system.Comment: 7 pages incl. 3 figure
Constraints on Extragalactic Point Source Flux from Diffuse Neutrino Limits
We constrain the maximum flux from extragalactic neutrino point sources by
using diffuse neutrino flux limits. We show that the maximum flux from
extragalactic point sources is E^2(dN/dE) < 1.4 x 10^-9 (L_nu/2x10^43
erg/s)^1/3 GeV cm-^2 s^-1 from individual point sources with average neutrino
luminosity per decade, L_nu. It depends only slightly on factors such as the
inhomogeneous matter density distribution in the local universe, the luminosity
distribution, and the assumed spectral index. The derived constraints are at
least one order of magnitude below the current experimental limits from direct
searches. Significant constraints are also derived on the number density of
neutrino sources and on the total neutrino power density.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, and 2 table
Characterisation of the Etching Quality in Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems by Thermal Transient Methodology
Our paper presents a non-destructive thermal transient measurement method
that is able to reveal differences even in the micron size range of MEMS
structures. Devices of the same design can have differences in their
sacrificial layers as consequence of the differences in their manufacturing
processes e.g. different etching times. We have made simulations examining how
the etching quality reflects in the thermal behaviour of devices. These
simulations predicted change in the thermal behaviour of MEMS structures having
differences in their sacrificial layers. The theory was tested with
measurements of similar MEMS devices prepared with different etching times. In
the measurements we used the T3Ster thermal transient tester equipment. The
results show that deviations in the devices, as consequence of the different
etching times, result in different temperature elevations and manifest also as
shift in time in the relevant temperature transient curves.Comment: Submitted on behalf of TIMA Editions
(http://irevues.inist.fr/tima-editions
Thermal measurement and modeling of multi-die packages
Thermal measurement and modeling of multi-die packages became a hot topic
recently in different fields like RAM chip packaging or LEDs / LED assemblies,
resulting in vertical (stacked) and lateral arrangement. In our present study
we show results for a mixed arrangement: an opto-coupler device has been
investigated with 4 chips in lateral as well as vertical arrangement. In this
paper we give an overview of measurement and modeling techniques and results
for stacked and MCM structures, describe our present measurement results
together with our structure function based methodology of validating the
detailed model of the package being studied. Also, we show how to derive
junction-to-pin thermal resistances with a technique using structure functions.Comment: Submitted on behalf of TIMA Editions
(http://irevues.inist.fr/tima-editions
Electronic structure of amorphous germanium disulfide via density functional molecular dynamics simulations
Using density functional molecular dynamics simulations we study the
electronic properties of glassy g-GeS. We compute the electronic density of
states, which compares very well with XPS measurements, as well as the partial
EDOS and the inverse participation ratio. We show the electronic contour plots
corresponding to different structural environments, in order to determine the
nature of the covalent bonds between the atoms. We finally study the local
atomic charges, and analyze the impact of the local environment on the charge
transfers between the atoms. The broken chemical order inherent to amorphous
systems leads to locally charged zones when integrating the atomic charges up
to nearest-neighbor distances.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures; to appear in Phys. Rev.
Multi-component symmetry-projected approach for molecular ground state correlations
The symmetry-projected Hartree--Fock ansatz for the electronic structure
problem can efficiently account for static correlation in molecules, yet it is
often unable to describe dynamic correlation in a balanced manner. Here, we
consider a multi-component, systematically-improvable approach, that accounts
for all ground state correlations. Our approach is based on linear combinations
of symmetry-projected configurations built out of a set of non-orthogonal,
variationally optimized determinants. The resulting wavefunction preserves the
symmetries of the original Hamiltonian even though it is written as a
superposition of deformed (broken-symmetry) determinants. We show how short
expansions of this kind can provide a very accurate description of the
electronic structure of simple chemical systems such as the nitrogen and the
water molecules, along the entire dissociation profile. In addition, we apply
this multi-component symmetry-projected approach to provide an accurate
interconversion profile among the peroxo and bis(-oxo) forms of
[CuO], comparable to other state-of-the-art quantum chemical
methods
- …