120,660 research outputs found
Dust devils on Mars
Large columns of dust have been discovered rising above plains on Mars. The storms are probably analogous to terrestrial dust devils, but their size indicates that they are more similar to tornadoes in intensity. They occur at locations where the soil has been strongly warmed by the Sun, and there the surface is smooth and fine grained. These are the same conditions that favor dust devils on Earth. Warm gas from the lowest atmospheric layer converges and rises in a thin column, with intense swirl developing at the edge of the column. In one area a mosaic of Viking images shows 97 vortices in a three day period. This represents a density of vortices of about one in each 900 square kilometers. Thus, these dust devils may be important in moving dust or starting over dust storms
Memristive switching of MgO based magnetic tunnel junctions
Here we demonstrate that both, tunnel magneto resistance (TMR) and resistive
switching (RS), can be observed simultaneously in nano-scale magnetic tunnel
junctions. The devices show bipolar RS of 6 % and TMR ratios of about 100 %.
For each magnetic state, multiple resistive sates are created depending on the
bias history which provides a method for multi-bit data storage and logic. The
electronic transport measurements are discussed in the framework of a
memristive system. Differently prepared MgO barriers are compared to gain
insight into the switching mechanism
Improving estimates of the number of fake leptons and other mis-reconstructed objects in hadron collider events: BoB's your UNCLE. (Previously "The Matrix Method Reloaded")
We consider current and alternative approaches to setting limits on new
physics signals having backgrounds from misidentified objects; for example jets
misidentified as leptons, b-jets or photons. Many ATLAS and CMS analyses have
used a heuristic matrix method for estimating the background contribution from
such sources. We demonstrate that the matrix method suffers from statistical
shortcomings that can adversely affect its ability to set robust limits. A
rigorous alternative method is discussed, and is seen to produce fake rate
estimates and limits with better qualities, but is found to be too costly to
use. Having investigated the nature of the approximations used to derive the
matrix method, we propose a third strategy that is seen to marry the speed of
the matrix method to the performance and physicality of the more rigorous
approach.Comment: v1 :11 pages, 5 figures. v2: title change requested by referee, and
other corrections/clarifications found during review. v3: final tweaks
suggested during review + move from revtex to jhep styl
Anomalous Hall effect in the Co-based Heusler compounds CoFeSi and CoFeAl
The anomalous Hall effect (AHE) in the Heusler compounds CoFeSi and
CoFeAl is studied in dependence of the annealing temperature to achieve a
general comprehension of its origin. We have demonstrated that the crystal
quality affected by annealing processes is a significant control parameter to
tune the electrical resistivity as well as the anomalous Hall
resistivity . Analyzing the scaling behavior of in
terms of points to a temperature-dependent skew scattering as the
dominant mechanism in both Heusler compounds
Diffusion coefficients for multi-step persistent random walks on lattices
We calculate the diffusion coefficients of persistent random walks on
lattices, where the direction of a walker at a given step depends on the memory
of a certain number of previous steps. In particular, we describe a simple
method which enables us to obtain explicit expressions for the diffusion
coefficients of walks with two-step memory on different classes of one-, two-
and higher-dimensional lattices.Comment: 27 pages, 2 figure
Effective destruction of CO by cosmic rays: implications for tracing H gas in the Universe
We report on the effects of cosmic rays (CRs) on the abundance of CO in clouds under conditions typical for star-forming galaxies in the Universe.
We discover that this most important molecule for tracing H gas is very
effectively destroyed in ISM environments with CR energy densities , a range expected in numerous
star-forming systems throughout the Universe. This density-dependent effect
operates volumetrically rather than only on molecular cloud surfaces (i.e.
unlike FUV radiation that also destroys CO), and is facilitated by: a) the
direct destruction of CO by CRs, and b) a reaction channel activated by
CR-produced He. The effect we uncover is strong enough to render
Milky-Way type Giant Molecular Clouds (GMCs) very CO-poor (and thus
CO-untraceable), even in ISM environments with rather modestly enhanced average
CR energy densities of . We conclude
that the CR-induced destruction of CO in molecular clouds, unhindered by dust
absorption, is perhaps the single most important factor controlling the
CO-visibility of molecular gas in vigorously star-forming galaxies. We
anticipate that a second order effect of this CO destruction mechanism will be
to make the H distribution in the gas-rich disks of such galaxies appear
much clumpier in CO =1--0, 2--1 line emission than it actually is. Finally
we give an analytical approximation of the CO/H abundance ratio as a
function of gas density and CR energy density for use in galaxy-size or
cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, and propose some key observational
tests.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 29 page
High-order, Dispersionless "Fast-Hybrid" Wave Equation Solver. Part I: Sampling Cost via Incident-Field Windowing and Recentering
This paper proposes a frequency/time hybrid integral-equation method for the
time dependent wave equation in two and three-dimensional spatial domains.
Relying on Fourier Transformation in time, the method utilizes a fixed
(time-independent) number of frequency-domain integral-equation solutions to
evaluate, with superalgebraically-small errors, time domain solutions for
arbitrarily long times. The approach relies on two main elements, namely, 1) A
smooth time-windowing methodology that enables accurate band-limited
representations for arbitrarily-long time signals, and 2) A novel Fourier
transform approach which, in a time-parallel manner and without causing
spurious periodicity effects, delivers numerically dispersionless
spectrally-accurate solutions. A similar hybrid technique can be obtained on
the basis of Laplace transforms instead of Fourier transforms, but we do not
consider the Laplace-based method in the present contribution. The algorithm
can handle dispersive media, it can tackle complex physical structures, it
enables parallelization in time in a straightforward manner, and it allows for
time leaping---that is, solution sampling at any given time at
-bounded sampling cost, for arbitrarily large values of ,
and without requirement of evaluation of the solution at intermediate times.
The proposed frequency-time hybridization strategy, which generalizes to any
linear partial differential equation in the time domain for which
frequency-domain solutions can be obtained (including e.g. the time-domain
Maxwell equations), and which is applicable in a wide range of scientific and
engineering contexts, provides significant advantages over other available
alternatives such as volumetric discretization, time-domain integral equations,
and convolution-quadrature approaches.Comment: 33 pages, 8 figures, revised and extended manuscript (and now
including direct comparisons to existing CQ and TDIE solver implementations)
(Part I of II
Phase ambiguity of the threshold amplitude in pp -> pp\pi^0
Measurements of spin observables in pp -> {\vec p}{\vec p}\pi^0 are suggested
to remove the phase ambiguity of the threshold amplitude. The suggested
measurements complement the IUCF data on {\vec p}{\vec p} -> pp\pi^0 to
completely determine all the twelve partial wave amplitudes, taken into
consideration by Mayer et.al. [15] and Deepak, Haidenbauer and Hanhart [20].Comment: 4 pages, 1 table
- …