4,048 research outputs found
Kaehler Manifolds of Quasi-Constant Holomorphic Sectional Curvatures
The Kaehler manifolds of quasi-constant holomorphic sectional curvatures are
introduced as Kaehler manifolds with complex distribution of codimension two,
whose holomorphic sectional curvature only depends on the corresponding point
and the geometric angle, associated with the section. A curvature identity
characterizing such manifolds is found. The biconformal group of
transformations whose elements transform Kaehler metrics into Kaehler ones is
introduced and biconformal tensor invariants are obtained. This makes it
possible to classify the manifolds under consideration locally. The class of
locally biconformal flat Kaehler metrics is shown to be exactly the class of
Kaehler metrics whose potential function is only a function of the distance
from the origin in complex Euclidean space. Finally we show that any rotational
even dimensional hypersurface carries locally a natural Kaehler structure,
which is of quasi-constant holomorphic sectional curvatures.Comment: 36 page
Evidence of non-thermal X-ray emission from radio lobes of Cygnus A
Using deep Chandra ACIS observation data for Cygnus A, we report evidence of
non-thermal X-ray emission from radio lobes surrounded by a rich intra-cluster
medium (ICM). The diffuse X-ray emission, which are associated with the eastern
and western radio lobes, were observed in a 0.7--7 keV Chandra$ ACIS image. The
lobe spectra are reproduced with not only a single-temperature Mekal model,
such as that of the surrounding ICM component, but also an additional power-law
(PL) model. The X-ray flux densities of PL components for the eastern and
western lobes at 1 keV are derived as 77.7^{+28.9}_{-31.9} nJy and
52.4^{+42.9}_{-42.4} nJy, respectively, and the photon indices are
1.69^{+0.07}_{-0.13} and 1.84^{+2.90}_{-0.12}, respectively. The non-thermal
component is considered to be produced via the inverse Compton (IC) process, as
is often seen in the X-ray emission from radio lobes. From a re-analysis of
radio observation data, the multiwavelength spectra strongly suggest that the
seed photon source of the IC X-rays includes both cosmic microwave background
radiation and synchrotron radiation from the lobes. The derived parameters
indicate significant dominance of the electron energy density over the magnetic
field energy density in the Cygnus A lobes under the rich ICM environment.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Nonlinear Evolution of Cosmic Magnetic Fields and Cosmic Microwave Background Anisotropies
In this work we investigate the effects of the primordial magnetic fields on
cosmic microwave background anisotropies (CMB). Based on cosmological
magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations we calculate the CMB anisotropy spectra
and polarization induced by fluid fluctuations (Alfv\'en modes) generated by
primordial magnetic fields. The strongest effect on the CMB spectra comes from
the transition epoch from a turbulent regime to a viscous regime. The balance
between magnetic and kinetic energy until the onset of the viscous regime
provides a one to one relation between the comoving coherence length and
the comoving magnetic field strength , such as . The resulting CMB temperature and polarization anisotropies are
somewhat different from the ones previously obtained by using linear
perturbation theory. Our calculation gives a constraint on the magnetic field
strength in the intermediate scale of CMB observations. Upper limits are set by
WMAP and BOOMERANG results for comoving magnetic field strength of with a comoving coherence length of for the most extreme
case, or for the most conservative case.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
On the Thermal Instability in a Contracting Gas Cloud and Formation of a Bound Cluster
We perform linear analysis of thermal instability in a contracting large
cloud filled with warm HI gas and investigate the effect of metallicity and
radiation flux. When the cloud reaches critical density n_f, the cloud
fragments into cool, dense condensations because of thermal instability. For a
lower metallicity gas cloud, the value of n_f is high. Collision between
condensations will produce self-gravitating clumps and stars thereafter. From
the result of calculation, we suggest that high star formation efficiency and
bound cluster formation are realized in low-metallicity and/or strong-radiation
environments.Comment: 7 pages, including 7 figures, LaTeX2e(emulateapj5.sty) To appear in
ApJ, Jun 10, 200
Uniqueness of static decompositions
We classify static manifolds which admit more than one static decomposition
whenever a condition on the curvature is fullfilled. For this, we take a
standard static vector field and analyze its associated one parameter family of
projections onto the base. We show that the base itself is a static manifold
and the warping function satisfies severe restrictions, leading us to our
classification results. Moreover, we show that certain condition on the
lightlike sectional curvature ensures the uniqueness of static decomposition
for Lorentzian manifolds.Comment: 14 page
COMPARATIVE STUDIES ABOUT KINEMATICS OF MAXIMAL SPRINT RUNNING AND RUNNING UP IN HORSE VAULTING
INTRODUCTION: Effective running up is known as an important factor for successful completion of horse vaulting. Some examined the relationship of mechanical parameters of pre-flight and/or post-flight with gymnasts’ performance. However, running up kinematics and its running velocity have been neglected. So the purposes of present study were 1) to compare the kinematics of running up during horse vaulting with that of sprint running, and 2) to investigated the relationships of running velocities and scores of horse vaulting
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