5,535 research outputs found

    Ancient multiple-layer solutions to the Allen-Cahn equation

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    We consider the parabolic one-dimensional Allen-Cahn equation ut=uxx+u(1−u2)(x,t)∈R×(−∞,0].u_t= u_{xx}+ u(1-u^2)\quad (x,t)\in \mathbb{R}\times (-\infty, 0]. The steady state w(x)=tanh⁥(x/2)w(x) =\tanh (x/\sqrt{2}), connects, as a "transition layer" the stable phases −1-1 and +1+1. We construct a solution uu with any given number kk of transition layers between −1-1 and +1+1. At main order they consist of kk time-traveling copies of ww with interfaces diverging one to each other as t→−∞t\to -\infty. More precisely, we find u(x,t)≈∑j=1k(−1)j−1w(x−Οj(t))+12((−1)k−1−1)ast→−∞, u(x,t) \approx \sum_{j=1}^k (-1)^{j-1}w(x-\xi_j(t)) + \frac 12 ((-1)^{k-1}- 1)\quad \hbox{as} t\to -\infty, where the functions Οj(t)\xi_j(t) satisfy a first order Toda-type system. They are given by Οj(t)=12(j−k+12)log⁥(−t)+Îłjk,j=1,...,k,\xi_j(t)=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\left(j-\frac{k+1}{2}\right)\log(-t)+\gamma_{jk},\quad j=1,...,k, for certain explicit constants $\gamma_{jk}.

    Ancient shrinking spherical interfaces in the Allen-Cahn flow

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    We consider the parabolic Allen-Cahn equation in Rn\mathbb{R}^n, n≄2n\ge 2, ut=Δu+(1−u2)u in Rn×(−∞,0].u_t= \Delta u + (1-u^2)u \quad \hbox{ in } \mathbb{R}^n \times (-\infty, 0]. We construct an ancient radially symmetric solution u(x,t)u(x,t) with any given number kk of transition layers between −1-1 and +1+1. At main order they consist of kk time-traveling copies of ww with spherical interfaces distant O(log⁥∣t∣)O(\log |t| ) one to each other as t→−∞t\to -\infty. These interfaces are resemble at main order copies of the {\em shrinking sphere} ancient solution to mean the flow by mean curvature of surfaces: ∣x∣=−2(n−1)t|x| = \sqrt{- 2(n-1)t}. More precisely, if w(s)w(s) denotes the heteroclinic 1-dimensional solution of wâ€Čâ€Č+(1−w2)w=0w'' + (1-w^2)w=0 w(±∞)=±1w(\pm \infty)= \pm 1 given by w(s)=tanh⁥(s2)w(s) = \tanh \left(\frac s{\sqrt{2}} \right) we have u(x,t)≈∑j=1k(−1)j−1w(∣xâˆŁâˆ’Ïj(t))−12(1+(−1)k) as t→−∞ u(x,t) \approx \sum_{j=1}^k (-1)^{j-1}w(|x|-\rho_j(t)) - \frac 12 (1+ (-1)^{k}) \quad \hbox{ as } t\to -\infty where \rho_j(t)=\sqrt{-2(n-1)t}+\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\left(j-\frac{k+1}{2}\right)\log\left(\frac {|t|}{\log |t| }\right)+ O(1),\quad j=1,\ldots ,k.$

    A Note on the Radiative and Collisional Branching Ratios in Polarized Radiation Transport with Coherent Scattering

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    We discuss the implementation of physically meaningful branching ratios between the CRD and PRD contributions to the emissivity of a polarized multi-term atom in the presence of both inelastic and elastic collisions. Our derivation is based on a recent theoretical formulation of partially coherent scattering, and it relies on a heuristic diagrammatic analysis of the various radiative and collisional processes to determine the proper form of the branching ratios. The expression we obtain for the emissivity is Δ=[Δ(1)−Δf.s.(2)]+Δ(2)\varepsilon=\left[\varepsilon^{\tiny (1)}-\varepsilon^{\tiny (2)}_{\rm f.s.} \right]+\varepsilon^{\tiny (2)}, where Δ(1)\varepsilon^{\tiny (1)} and Δ(2)\varepsilon^{\tiny (2)} are the emissivity terms for the redistributed and partially coherent radiation, respectively, and where "f.s." implies that the corresponding term must be evaluated assuming a flat-spectrum average of the incident radiation

    Mapping the structural diversity of C60 carbon clusters and their infrared spectra

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    The current debate about the nature of the carbonaceous material carrying the infrared (IR) emission spectra of planetary and proto-planetary nebulae, including the broad plateaus, calls for further studies on the interplay between structure and spectroscopy of carbon-based compounds of astrophysical interest. The recent observation of C60 buckminsterfullerene in space suggests that carbon clusters of similar size may also be relevant. In the present work, broad statistical samples of C60 isomers were computationally determined without any bias using a reactive force field, their IR spectra being subsequently obtained following local optimization with the density-functional-based tight-binding theory. Structural analysis reveals four main structural families identified as cages, planar polycyclic aromatics, pretzels, and branched. Comparison with available astronomical spectra indicates that only the cage family could contribute to the plateau observed in the 6-9 micron region. The present framework shows great promise to explore and relate structural and spectroscopic features in more diverse and possibly hydrogenated carbonaceous compounds, in relation with astronomical observations

    Magnetic Field Effects on the Head Structure of Protostellar Jets

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    We present the results of 3-D SPMHD numerical simulations of supermagnetosonic, overdense, radiatively cooling jets. Two initial magnetic configurations are considered: (i) a helical and (ii) a longitudinal field. We find that magnetic fields have important effects on the dynamics and structure of radiative cooling jets, especially at the head. The presence of a helical field suppresses the formation of the clumpy structure which is found to develop at the head of purely hydrodynamical jets. On the other hand, a cooling jet embedded in a longitudinal magnetic field retains clumpy morphology at its head. This fragmented structure resembles the knotty pattern commonly observed in HH objects behind the bow shocks of HH jets. This suggests that a strong (equipartition) helical magnetic field configuration is ruled out at the jet head. Therefore, if strong magnetic fields are present, they are probably predominantly longitudinal in those regions. In both magnetic configurations, we find that the confining pressure of the cocoon is able to excite short-wavelength MHD K-H pinch modes that drive low-amplitude internal shocks along the beam. These shocks are not strong however, and it likely that they could only play a secondary role in the formation of the bright knots observed in HH jets.Comment: 14 pages, 2 Gif figures, uses aasms4.sty. Also available on the web page http://www.iagusp.usp.br/preprints/preprint.html. To appear in The Astrophysical Journal Letter

    Limited complementarity of functional and taxonomic diversity in Chilean benthic marine invertebrates

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    Aim Patterns of benthic biodiversity at the macroecological scale remain poorly characterised throughout the Chilean latitudinal gradient, in part due to the lack of integrated databases, uneven sampling effort, and the use of species richness alone to quantify biodiversity. Different diversity measures, encompassing taxonomic and functional components, may give us extra information on biodiversity relevant to conservation planning and management. Thus, evaluating the spatial complementarity of these measures is essential. Location Coast and continental shelf of Chile. Methods The latitudinal gradient of Chile was divided into five ecoregions according to the Marine Ecosystems of the World classification. Using a 55 × 55 km equal area grid, we estimated the incidence coverage-based estimator (ICE), taxonomic distinctness (Δ+) and three measures of functional diversity: functional richness (FRic), functional evenness (FEve) and functional divergence (FDiv). For each measure, we described spatial patterns, identified hotspots, evaluated hotspot congruence and evaluated complementarity between measures. Results Diversity patterns varied between ecoregions and over the latitudinal gradient. ICE and Δ+ peaked in the Chiloense and Channels and Fjords ecoregions. Δ+ and FRic present a similar pattern at mid-latitudes. FEve showed a contrary pattern, principally with FRic. Areas with high numbers of hotspots differed spatially according to each metric, and three latitudinal bands were observed. ICE, Δ+ and FRic were positively correlated, but the hotspot overlap at the grid cell level was more limited. Main Conclusions The complementarity between taxonomic and functional diversity measures is limited when we observe the overlap between grid cells representing hotspots. However, some regions are consistently identified as highly diverse, with the Magellanic Province (Chiloense and Channels and Fjords ecoregions) being the most important for the richness, taxonomic and functional diversity of benthos. Confirmation of the importance of this region can help prioritise conservation efforts

    Magnetic Reconnection, Cosmic Ray Acceleration, and Gamma-Ray emission around Black Holes and Relativistic Jets

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    Particle acceleration by magnetic reconnection is now recognized as an important process in magnetically dominated regions of galactic and extragalactic black hole sources. This process helps to solve current puzzles specially related to the origin of the very high energy flare emission in these sources. In this review, we discuss this acceleration mechanism and show recent analytical studies and multidimensional numerical SRMHD and GRMHD (special and general relativistic magnetohydrodynamical) simulations with the injection of test particles, which help us to understand this process both in relativistic jets and coronal regions of these sources. The very high energy and neutrino emission resulting from the accelerated particles by reconnection is also discussed.Comment: Invited Review at the International Conference on Black Holes as Cosmic Batteries: UHECRs and Multimessenger Astronomy - BHCB2018, 12-15 September, 2018, Foz du Iguazu, Brasil, in press in Procs. of Science. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1608.0317
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