4,527 research outputs found
Line-of-sight effects on observability of kink and sausage modes in coronal structures with imaging telescopes
Kink modes of solar coronal structures, perturbing the loop in the direction along the line-of-sight (LOS), can be observed as emission intensity disturbances propagating along the loop provided the angle between the LOS and the structure is not ninety degrees. The effect is based upon the change of the column depth of the loop (along the LOS) by the wave. The observed amplitude of the emission intensity variations can be larger than the actual amplitude of the wave by a factor of two and there is an optimal angle maximizing the observed amplitude. For other angles this effect can also attenuate the observed wave amplitude. The observed amplitude depends upon the ratio of the wave length of kink perturbations to the width of the structure and on the angle between the LOS and the axis of the structure. Sausage modes are always affected negatively from the observational point of view, as the observed amplitude is always less than the actual one. This effect should be taken into account in the interpretation of wave phenomena observed in the corona with space-borne and ground-based imaging telescopes
Transverse waves in a post-flare supra-arcade
Observations of propagating transverse waves in an open magnetic field structure with the Transition Region And
Coronal Explorer (TRACE) are presented. Waves associated with dark tadpole-like sunward moving structures in the post-flare supra-arcade of NOAA active region 9906 on the 21st of April 2002 are analysed. They are seen as quasi-periodic transverse displacements of the dark tadpole tails, with periods in the range of 90–220 s. Their phase speeds and displacement amplitudes decrease as they propagate sunwards. At heights of 90 and 60 Mm above the post-flare loop footpoints the phase speeds are in
the ranges 200–700 km s −1 and 90–200 km s
−1 respectively. Furthermore, for consecutive tadpoles the phase speeds decrease and periods increase as a function of time. The waves are interpreted as propagating fast magnetoacoustic kink waves guided by a vertical, evolving, open structure
Draft genome sequence of the naturally competent Bacillus simplex strain WY10
ABSTRACT
We sequenced a naturally competent bacterial isolate, WY10, cultured from a Wyoming soil sample. Sequence analysis revealed that WY10 is a novel strain of
Bacillus simplex
. To our knowledge, WY10 is the first
B. simplex
strain to be characterized as naturally competent for DNA uptake by transformation.
</jats:p
Hadronic and radiative three-body decays of J/psi involving the scalars f0(1370), f0(1500) and f0(1710)
We study the role of the scalar resonances f0(1370), f0(1500) and f0(1710) in
the strong and radiative three-body decays of J/psi with J/psi to V + P P
(gamma gamma) and J/psi to gamma + P P (V V), where P (V) denotes a
pseudoscalar (vector) meson. We assume that the scalars result from a
glueball-quarkonium mixing scheme while the dynamics of the transition process
is described in an effective chiral Lagrangian approach. Present data on J/psi
to V + P P are well reproduced, predictions for the radiative processes serve
as further tests of this scenario.Comment: 15 page
Lepton flavor violating decays of vector mesons
We estimate the rates of lepton flavor violating decays of the vector mesons
. The theoretical tools are based on an effective
Lagrangian approach without referring to any specific realization of the
physics beyond the standard model responsible for lepton flavor violation
(\Lfv). The effective lepton-vector meson couplings are extracted from the
existing experimental bounds on the nuclear conversion. In
particular, we derive an upper limit for the \Lfv branching ratio which is much more stringent than
the recent experimental result
presented by the SND Collaboration. Very tiny limits on \Lfv decays of vector
mesons derived in this letter make direct experimental observation of these
processes unrealistic.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Fast magnetoacoustic waves in curved coronal loops. II, Tunneling modes
Aims. Fast magnetoacoustic waves in curved coronal loops are investigated and the role of lateral leakage in wave damping, which includes the mechanism of wave tunneling, is explored.
Methods. A coronal loop is modeled as a curved, magnetic slab in the zero plasma-β limit. In this model and for an arbitrary piece-wise continuous power law equilibrium density profile, the wave equation governing linear vertically polarised fast magnetoacoustic waves is solved
analytically. An associated dispersion relation is derived and the frequencies and eigenfunctions of the wave modes are characterised.
Results. For some equilibria, the waves are shown to be all damped due to lateral leakage. It is demonstrated that waves either leak straight out into the external medium or have to overcome an evanescent barrier, which is linked to wave tunneling. The wave solutions consist of alternating vertically polarised kink and sausage branches. Fast kink oscillations may have a non-zero density perturbation when
averaged across the loop. The calculated damping rate of fast magnetoacoustic kink oscillations is shown to be consistent with related numerical simulations and show that lateral leakage may explain the observed damping of (vertically polarised) fast magnetoacoustic kink oscillations
Quasi-periodic pulsations in the gamma-ray emission of a solar flare
Quasi-periodic pulsations (QPPs) of gamma-ray emission with a period of about 40 s are found in a single loop X-class solar flare on 2005 January 1 at photon energies up to 2-6 MeV with the SOlar Neutrons and Gamma-rays (SONG) experiment aboard the CORONAS-F mission. The oscillations are also found to be present in the microwave emission detected with the Nobeyama Radioheliograph, and in the hard X-ray and low energy gamma-ray channels of RHESSI. Periodogram and correlation analysis shows that the 40 s QPPs of microwave, hard X-ray, and gamma-ray emission are almost synchronous in all observation bands. Analysis of the spatial structure of hard X-ray and low energy (80-225 keV) gamma-ray QPP with RHESSI reveals synchronous while asymmetric QPP at both footpoints of the flaring loop. The difference between the averaged hard X-ray fluxes coming from the two footpoint sources is found to oscillate with a period of about 13 s for five cycles in the highest emission stage of the flare. The proposed mechanism generating the 40 s QPP is a triggering of magnetic reconnection by a kink oscillation in a nearby loop. The 13 s periodicity could be produced by the second harmonics of the sausage mode of the flaring loop
New bounds on lepton flavor violating decays of vector mesons and the Z0 boson
We give an estimate for the upper bounds on rates of lepton flavor violating
(LFV) decays M to mu(pm) + e(mp) of vector mesons M = rho0, omega, phi, J/psi,
Upsilon and the Z0 boson in a model independent way, analyzing the
corresponding lowest dimension effective operators. These operators also
contribute to nuclear mu-e-conversion. Based on this observation and using the
existing experimental limits on this LFV nuclear process, we show that the
studied two-body LFV decays of vector bosons are strongly suppressed
independent on the explicit realization of new physics. The upper limits on the
rates of some of these decays are significantly more stringent than similar
limits known in the literature. In view of these results experimental
observation of the two-body LFV decays of vector bosons looks presently
unrealistic.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Narrowband spectroscopy by all-optical correlation of broadband pulses
High peak power ultrafast lasers are widely used in nonlinear spectroscopy
but often limit its spectral resolution because of the broad frequency
bandwidth of ultrashort laser pulses. Improving the resolution by achieving
spectrally narrow excitation of, or emission from, the resonant medium by means
of multi-photon interferences has been the focus of many recent developments in
ultrafast spectroscopy. We demonstrate an alternative approach, in which high
resolution is exercised by detecting narrow spectral correlations between
broadband excitation and emission optical fields. All-optical correlation
analysis, easily incorporated into the traditional spectroscopic setup, enables
direct, robust and simultaneous detection of multiple narrow resonances with a
single femtosecond pulse.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PR
- …