7,851 research outputs found
Zone Diagrams in Euclidean Spaces and in Other Normed Spaces
Zone diagram is a variation on the classical concept of a Voronoi diagram.
Given n sites in a metric space that compete for territory, the zone diagram is
an equilibrium state in the competition. Formally it is defined as a fixed
point of a certain "dominance" map.
Asano, Matousek, and Tokuyama proved the existence and uniqueness of a zone
diagram for point sites in Euclidean plane, and Reem and Reich showed existence
for two arbitrary sites in an arbitrary metric space. We establish existence
and uniqueness for n disjoint compact sites in a Euclidean space of arbitrary
(finite) dimension, and more generally, in a finite-dimensional normed space
with a smooth and rotund norm. The proof is considerably simpler than that of
Asano et al. We also provide an example of non-uniqueness for a norm that is
rotund but not smooth. Finally, we prove existence and uniqueness for two point
sites in the plane with a smooth (but not necessarily rotund) norm.Comment: Title page + 16 pages, 20 figure
Tenth-order lepton g-2: Contribution from diagrams containing a sixth-order light-by-light-scattering subdiagram internally
This paper reports the result of our evaluation of the tenth-order QED
correction to the lepton g-2 from Feynman diagrams which have sixth-order
light-by-light-scattering subdiagrams, none of whose vertices couple to the
external magnetic field. The gauge-invariant set of these diagrams, called Set
II(e), consists of 180 vertex diagrams. In the case of the electron g-2 (a_e),
where the light-by-light subdiagram consists of the electron loop, the
contribution to a_e is found to be - 1.344 9 (10) (\alpha /\pi)^5. The
contribution of the muon loop to a_e is - 0.000 465 (4) (\alpha /\pi)^5. The
contribution of the tau-lepton loop is about two orders of magnitudes smaller
than that of the muon loop and hence negligible. The sum of all of these
contributions to a_e is - 1.345 (1) (\alpha /\pi)^5. We have also evaluated the
contribution of Set II(e) to the muon g-2 (a_\mu). The contribution to a_\mu
from the electron loop is 3.265 (12) (\alpha /\pi)^5, while the contribution of
the tau-lepton loop is -0.038 06 (13) (\alpha /\pi)^5. The total contribution
to a_\mu, which is the sum of these two contributions and the mass-independent
part of a_e, is 1.882 (13) (\alpha /\pi)^5.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, REVTeX4, axodraw.sty used, changed title,
corrected uncertainty of a_mu, added a referenc
Influence of magnetic impurities on charge transport in diffusive-normal-metal / superconductor junctions
Charge transport in the diffusive normal metal (DN) / insulator / - and -wave superconductor junctions is studied in the presence of magnetic
impurities in DN in the framework of the quasiclassical Usadel equations with
the generalized boundary conditions. The cases of - and d-wave
superconducting electrodes are considered. The junction conductance is
calculated as a function of a bias voltage for various parameters of the DN
metal: resistivity, Thouless energy, the magnetic impurity scattering rate and
the transparency of the insulating barrier between DN and a superconductor. It
is shown that the proximity effect is suppressed by magnetic impurity
scattering in DN for any value of the barrier transparency. In low-transparent
s-wave junctions this leads to the suppression of the normalized zero-bias
conductance. In contrast to that, in high transparent junctions zero-bias
conductance is enhanced by magnetic impurity scattering. The physical origin of
this effect is discussed. For the d-wave junctions, the dependence on the
misorientation angle between the interface normal and the crystal axis
of a superconductor is studied. The zero-bias conductance peak is suppressed by
the magnetic impurity scattering only for low transparent junctions with
. In other cases the conductance of the d-wave junctions does
not depend on the magnetic impurity scattering due to strong suppression of the
proximity effect by the midgap Andreev resonant states.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures;d-wave case adde
Protein-crystal growth experiment (planned)
To evaluate the effectiveness of a microgravity environment on protein crystal growth, a system was developed using 5 cubic feet Get Away Special payload canister. In the experiment, protein (myoglobin) will be simultaneously crystallized from an aqueous solution in 16 crystallization units using three types of crystallization methods, i.e., batch, vapor diffusion, and free interface diffusion. Each unit has two compartments: one for the protein solution and the other for the ammonium sulfate solution. Compartments are separated by thick acrylic or thin stainless steel plates. Crystallization will be started by sliding out the plates, then will be periodically recorded up to 120 hours by a still camera. The temperature will be passively controlled by a phase transition thermal storage component and recorded in IC memory throughout the experiment. Microgravity environment can then be evaluated for protein crystal growth by comparing crystallization in space with that on Earth
Spin-dependent observables in surrogate reactions
Observables emitted from various spin states in compound U nuclei are
investigated to validate usefulness of the surrogate reaction method. It was
found that energy spectrum of cascading -rays and their multiplicities,
spectrum of evaporated neutrons, and mass-distribution of fission fragments
show clear dependence on the spin of decaying nuclei. The present results
indicate that they can be used to infer populated spin distributions which
significantly affect the decay branching ratio of the compound system produced
by the surrogate reactions
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