2,691 research outputs found
Alpha decay and proton-neutron correlations
We study the influence of proton-neutron (p-n) correlations on alpha-decay
width. It is shown from the analysis of alpha Q values that the p-n
correlations increase the penetration of the alpha particle through the Coulomb
barrier in the treatment following Gamow's formalism, and enlarges the total
alpha-decay width significantly.
In particular, the isoscalar p-n interactions play an essential role in
enlarging the alpha-decay width.
The so-called "alpha-condensate" in Z > 84 isotopes are related to the strong
p-n correlations.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. C (R.C.
Distributed optical fibre devices based on liquid crystal infiltrated photonic crystal fibers
Thermal Decomposition of an Impure (Roxbury) Siderite: Relevance to the Presence of Chemically Pure Magnetite Crystals in ALH84001 Carbonate Disks
The question of the origin of nanophase magnetite in Martian meteorite ALH84001 has been widely debated for nearly a decade. Golden et al. have reported producing nearly chemically pure magnetite from thermal decomposition of chemically impure siderite [(Fe, Mg, Mn)CO3]. This claim is significant for three reasons: first, it has been argued that chemically pure magnetite present in the carbonate disks in Martian meteorite ALH84001 could have formed by the thermal decomposition of the impure carbonate matrix in which they are embedded; second, the chemical purity of magnetite has been previously used to identify biogenic magnetite; and, third, previous studies of thermal decomposition of impure (Mg,Ca,Mn)-siderites, which have been investigated under a wide variety of conditions by numerous researchers, invariably yields a mixed metal oxide phase as the product and not chemically pure magnetite. The explanation for this observation is that these siderites all possess the same crystallographic structure (Calcite; R3c) so solid solutions between these carbonates are readily formed and can be viewed on an atomic scale as two chemically different but structurally similar lattices
"Dark energy" in the Local Void
The unexpected discovery of the accelerated cosmic expansion in 1998 has
filled the Universe with the embarrassing presence of an unidentified "dark
energy", or cosmological constant, devoid of any physical meaning. While this
standard cosmology seems to work well at the global level, improved knowledge
of the kinematics and other properties of our extragalactic neighborhood
indicates the need for a better theory. We investigate whether the recently
suggested repulsive-gravity scenario can account for some of the features that
are unexplained by the standard model. Through simple dynamical considerations,
we find that the Local Void could host an amount of antimatter
() roughly equivalent to the mass of a typical
supercluster, thus restoring the matter-antimatter symmetry. The antigravity
field produced by this "dark repulsor" can explain the anomalous motion of the
Local Sheet away from the Local Void, as well as several other properties of
nearby galaxies that seem to require void evacuation and structure formation
much faster than expected from the standard model. At the global cosmological
level, gravitational repulsion from antimatter hidden in voids can provide more
than enough potential energy to drive both the cosmic expansion and its
acceleration, with no need for an initial "explosion" and dark energy.
Moreover, the discrete distribution of these dark repulsors, in contrast to the
uniformly permeating dark energy, can also explain dark flows and other
recently observed excessive inhomogeneities and anisotropies of the Universe.Comment: 6 pages, accepted as a Letter to the Editor by Astrophysics and Space
Scienc
Origin of Magnetite Crystals in Martian Meteorite ALH84001 Carbonate Disks
Martian meteorite ALH84001 preserves evidence of interaction with aqueous fluids while on Mars in the form of microscopic carbonate disks which are believed to have precipitated approx.3.9 Ga ago at beginning of the Noachian epoch. Intimately associated within and throughout these carbonate disks are nanocrystal magnetites (Fe3O4) with unusual chemical and physical properties, whose origins have become the source of considerable debate. One group of hypotheses argues that these Fe3O4 are the product of partial thermal decomposition of the host carbonate. Alternatively, the origins of Fe3O4 and carbonate may be unrelated; that is, from the perspective of the carbonate the magnetite is allochthonous. We have sought to resolve between these hypotheses through the detailed characterized of the compositional and structural relationships of the carbonate disks and associated magnetites with the orthopyroxene matrix in which they are embedded [1]. We focus this discussion on the composition of ALH84001 magnetites and then compare these observations with those from our thermal decomposition studies of sideritic carbonates under a range of plausible geological heating scenarios
Flux-lattice melting in two-dimensional disordered superconductors
The flux line lattice melting transition in two-dimensional pure and
disordered superconductors is studied by a Monte Carlo simulation using the
lowest Landau level approximation and quasi-periodic boundary condition on a
plane. The position of the melting line was determined from the diffraction
pattern of the superconducting order parameter. In the clean case we confirmed
the results from earlier studies which show the existence of a quasi-long range
ordered vortex lattice at low temperatures. Adding frozen disorder to the
system the melting transition line is shifted to slightly lower fields. The
correlations of the order parameter for translational long range order of the
vortex positions seem to decay slightly faster than a power law (in agreement
with the theory of Carpentier and Le Doussal) although a simple power law decay
cannot be excluded. The corresponding positional glass correlation function
decays as a power law establishing the existence of a quasi-long range ordered
positional glass formed by the vortices. The correlation function
characterizing a phase coherent vortex glass decays however exponentially
ruling out the possible existence of a phase coherent vortex glass phase.Comment: 12 pages, 21 figures, final version to appear in Phys. Rev.
No Far-Infrared-Spectroscopic Gap in Clean and Dirty High-T Superconductors
We report far infrared transmission measurements on single crystal samples
derived from BiSrCaCuO. The impurity scattering rate of
the samples was varied by electron-beam irradiation, 50MeV O ion
irradiation, heat treatment in vacuum, and Y doping. Although substantial
changes in the infrared spectra were produced, in no case was a feature
observed that could be associated with the superconducting energy gap. These
results all but rule out ``clean limit'' explanations for the absence of the
spectroscopic gap in this material, and provide evidence that the
superconductivity in BiSrCaCuO is gapless.Comment: 4 pages and 3 postscript figures attached. REVTEX v3.0. Accepted for
publication in Phys. Rev. Lett. IRDIRT
Generalised permutation branes
We propose a new class of non-factorising D-branes in the product group GxG
where the fluxes and metrics on the two factors do not necessarily coincide.
They generalise the maximally symmetric permutation branes which are known to
exist when the fluxes agree, but break the symmetry down to the diagonal
current algebra in the generic case. Evidence for the existence of these branes
comes from a Lagrangian description for the open string world-sheet and from
effective Dirac-Born-Infeld theory. We state the geometry, gauge fields and, in
the case of SU(2)xSU(2), tensions and partial results on the open string
spectrum. In the latter case the generalised permutation branes provide a
natural and complete explanation for the charges predicted by K-theory
including their torsion.Comment: 33 pages, 6 figures, v2: Extended discussion of K-theory
interpretation of our branes for products of higher rank groups in the
conclusions; v3: Correction of formula (35) and adjustment of the discussion
below equation (45) (no change of result). Footnote 9 points out a previously
unnoticed subtlety and provides a reference to a more detailed discussio
Smeared phase transition in a three-dimensional Ising model with planar defects: Monte-Carlo simulations
We present results of large-scale Monte Carlo simulations for a
three-dimensional Ising model with short range interactions and planar defects,
i.e., disorder perfectly correlated in two dimensions. We show that the phase
transition in this system is smeared, i.e., there is no single critical
temperature, but different parts of the system order at different temperatures.
This is caused by effects similar to but stronger than Griffiths phenomena. In
an infinite-size sample there is an exponentially small but finite probability
to find an arbitrary large region devoid of impurities. Such a rare region can
develop true long-range order while the bulk system is still in the disordered
phase. We compute the thermodynamic magnetization and its finite-size effects,
the local magnetization, and the probability distribution of the ordering
temperatures for different samples. Our Monte-Carlo results are in good
agreement with a recent theory based on extremal statistics.Comment: 9 pages, 6 eps figures, final version as publishe
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