4,576 research outputs found
Constraints on primordial magnetic fields from CMB distortions in the axiverse
Measuring spectral distortions of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) is
attracting considerable attention as a probe of high energy particle physics in
the cosmological context, since PIXIE and PRISM have recently been proposed. In
this paper, CMB distortions due to resonant conversions between CMB photons and
light axion like particles (ALPs) are investigated, motivated by the string
axiverse scenario which suggests the presence of a plenitude of light axion
particles. Since these resonant conversions depend on the strength of
primordial magnetic fields, constraints on CMB distortions can provide an upper
limit on the product of the photon-ALP coupling constant g and the comoving
strength of primordial magnetic fields B. Potentially feasible constraints from
PIXIE/PRISM can set a limit g B < 10^{-16} GeV^{-1} nG for ALP mass, m_\phi <
10^{-14} eV. Although this result is not a direct constraint on g and B, it is
significantly tighter than the product of the current upper limits on g and B.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
On Spectral and Temporal Variability in Blazars and Gamma Ray Bursts
A simple model for variability in relativistic plasma outflows is studied, in
which nonthermal electrons are continuously and uniformly injected in the
comoving frame over a time interval dt. The evolution of the electron
distribution is assumed to be dominated by synchrotron losses, and the energy-
and time-dependence of the synchrotron and synchrotron self-Compton (SSC)
fluxes are calculated for a power-law electron injection function with index s
= 2. The mean time of a flare or pulse measured at photon energy E with respect
to the onset of the injection event varies as E^{-1/2} and E^{-1/4} for
synchrotron and SSC processes, respectively, until the time approaches the
limiting intrinsic mean time (1+z)dt/(2 D), where z is the redshift and D is
the Doppler factor. This dependence is in accord with recent analyses of blazar
and GRB emissions, and suggests a method to discriminate between external
Compton and SSC models of high-energy gamma radiation from blazars and GRBs.
The qualititative behavior of the X-ray spectral index/flux relation observed
from BL Lac objects can be explained with this model. This demonstrates that
synchrotron losses are primarily responsible for the X-ray variability behavior
and strengthens a new test for beaming from correlated hard X-ray/TeV
observations.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journal Letters; uses aaspp4.sty, epsf.st
R-matrix calculation of electron collisions with electronically excited O2 molecules
Low-energy electron collisions with O molecules are studied using the
fixed-bond R-matrix method. In addition to the O ground
state, integrated cross sections are calculated for elecron collisions with the
and excited states of O molecules. 13
target electronic states of O are included in the model within a valence
configuration interaction representations of the target states. Elastic cross
sections for the and excited states are
similar to the cross sections for the ground state. As in
case of excitation from the state, the O
resonance makes the dominant contribution to excitation cross sections from the
and states. The magnitude of excitation
cross sections from the state to the
state is about 10 time larger than the corresponding cross sections from the
to the state. For this
transition, our cross section at
4.5 eV agrees well with the available experimental value. These results should
be important for models of plasma discharge chemistry which often requires
cross sections between the excited electronic states of O.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figure
Leading Effects in Hadroproductions of Lambda_c and D From Constituent Quark-Diquark Cascade Picture
We discuss the hadroproductions of Lambda_c, Lambda_c bar, D and D bar in the
framework of the constituent quark-diquark cascade model taking into account
the valence quark annihilation. The spectra of Lambda_c and Lambda_c bar in pA,
Sigma^-A and pi^-A collisions are well explained by the model using the values
of parameters used in hadroproductions of D and D bar. It is shown that the
role of valence diquark in the incident baryon is important for D bar
productions as well as for Lambda_c production.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, v2:some explanations added, references added,
typos corrected, v3: top margin change
The unusual thickness dependence of superconductivity in -MoGe thin films
Thin films of -MoGe show progressively reduced 's as the
thickness is decreased below 30 nm and the sheet resistance exceeds 100
. We have performed far-infrared transmission and reflection
measurements for a set of -MoGe films to characterize this weakened
superconducting state. Our results show the presence of an energy gap with
ratio in all films studied, slightly higher
than the BCS value, even though the transition temperatures decrease
significantly as film thickness is reduced. The material properties follow
BCS-Eliashberg theory with a large residual scattering rate except that the
coherence peak seen in the optical scattering rate is found to be strongly
smeared out in the thinner superconducting samples. A peak in the optical mass
renormalization at is predicted and observed for the first time
Measurement of redshift dependent cross correlation of HSC clusters and Fermi rays
The cross-correlation study of the unresolved -ray background (UGRB)
with galaxy clusters has a potential to reveal the nature of the UGRB. In this
paper, we perform a cross-correlation analysis between -ray data by the
Fermi Large Area Telescope (Fermi-LAT) and a galaxy cluster catalogue from the
Subaru Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) survey. The Subaru HSC cluster catalogue
provides a wide and homogeneous large-scale structure distribution out to the
high redshift at , which has not been accessible in previous
cross-correlation studies. We conduct the cross-correlation analysis not only
for clusters in the all redshift range () of the survey, but
also for subsamples of clusters divided into redshift bins, the low redshift
bin () and the high redshift bin (), to utilize
the wide redshift coverage of the cluster catalogue. We find the evidence of
the cross-correlation signals with the significance of 2.0-2.3 for all
redshift and low-redshift cluster samples. On the other hand, for high-redshift
clusters, we find the signal with weaker significance level (1.6-1.9).
We also compare the observed cross-correlation functions with predictions of a
theoretical model in which the UGRB originates from -ray emitters such
as blazars, star-forming galaxies and radio galaxies. We find that the detected
signal is consistent with the model prediction.Comment: 11 pages, 24 figures, accepted by MNRA
Self-Regulation of Star Formation in Low Metallicity Clouds
We investigate the process of self-regulated star formation via
photodissociation of hydrogen molecules in low metallicity clouds. We evaluate
the influence region's scale of a massive star in low metallicity gas clouds
whose temperatures are between 100 and 10000 Kelvin. A single O star can
photodissociate hydrogen molecules in the whole of the host cloud. If
metallicity is smaller than about 10^{-2.5} of the solar metallicity, the
depletion of coolant of the the host cloud is very serious so that the cloud
cannot cool in a free-fall time, and subsequent star formation is almost
quenched. On the contrary, if metallicity is larger than about 10^{-1.5} of the
solar metallicity, star formation regulation via photodissociation is not
efficient. The typical metallicity when this transition occurs is about 1/100
of the solar metallicity. This indicates that stars do not form efficiently
before the metallicity becomes larger than about 1/100 of the solar metallicity
and we considered that this value becomes the lower limit of the metallicity of
luminous objects such as galaxies.Comment: 14 pages, including 5 figures, To appear in ApJ, Vol. 53
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