1,288 research outputs found
Strong CP Violation in External Magnetic Fields
We study the response of the QCD vacuum to an external magnetic field, in the
presence of strong CP violation. Using chiral perturbation theory and large N_c
expansion, we show that the external field would polarize quantum fluctuations
and induce an electric dipole moment of the vacuum, along the direction of the
magnetic field. We estimate the magnitude of this effect in different physical
scenarios. In particular, we find that the polarization induced by the magnetic
field of a magnetar could accelerate electric charges up to energies of the
order \theta 10^3 TeV. We also suggest a connection with the possible existence
of "hot-spots" on the surface of neutron stars.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure. Major revision. Phenomenological analysis extende
Smearing of the 2D Kohn anomaly in a nonquantizing magnetic field: Implications for the interaction effects
Thermodynamic and transport characteristics of a clean two-dimensional
interacting electron gas are shown to be sensitive to the weak perpendicular
magnetic field even at temperatures much higher than the cyclotron energy, when
the quantum oscillations are completely washed out. We demonstrate this
sensitivity for two interaction-related characteristics: electron lifetime and
the tunnel density of states. The origin of the sensitivity is traced to the
field-induced smearing of the Kohn anomaly; this smearing is the result of
curving of the semiclassical electron trajectories in magnetic field.Comment: 4.5 pages, 3 figures, published versio
Temperature dependence of polarization relaxation in semiconductor quantum dots
The decay time of the linear polarization degree of the luminescence in
strongly confined semiconductor quantum dots with asymmetrical shape is
calculated in the frame of second-order quasielastic interaction between
quantum dot charge carriers and LO phonons. The phonon bottleneck does not
prevent significantly the relaxation processes and the calculated decay times
can be of the order of a few tens picoseconds at temperature K,
consistent with recent experiments by Paillard et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett.
{\bf86}, 1634 (2001)].Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
The enormous outer Galaxy HII region CTB 102
We present new radio recombination line observations of the previously
unstudied HII region CTB 102. Line parameters are extracted and physical
parameters describing the gas are calculated. We estimate the distance to CTB
102 to be 4.3 kpc. Through comparisons with HI and 1.42 GHz radio continuum
data, we estimate the size of CTB 102 to be 100-130 pc, making it one of the
largest HII regions known, comparable to the W4 complex. A stellar wind blown
bubble model is presented as the best explanation for the observed morphology,
size and velocities.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication by The Astrophysical
Journa
Effect of Primordial Magnetic Field on Seeds for Large Scale Structure
Magnetic field plays a very important role in many astronomical phenomena at
various scales of the universe. It is no exception in the early universe.
Since the energy density, pressure, and tension of the primordial magnetic
field affect gravitational collapses of plasma, the formation of seeds for
large scale structures should be influenced by them. Here we numerically
investigate the effects of stochastic primordial magnetic field on the seeds of
large scale structures in the universe in detail. We found that the amplitude
ratio between the density spectra with and without PMF ( at
Mpc) lies between 75% and 130% at present for the range of PMF
strengths 0.5 nG nG, depending on the spectral index of PMF
and the correlation between the matter density and the PMF distributions.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PRD 23 Jan 2006, Revised 02 Oct
2006, accepted for publication in PR
On the Detection of Magnetic Helicity
Magnetic fields in various astrophysical settings may be helical and, in the
cosmological context, may provide a measure of primordial CP violation during
baryogenesis. Yet it is difficult, even in principle, to devise a scheme by
which magnetic helicity may be detected, except in some very special systems.
We propose that charged cosmic rays originating from known sources may be
useful for this purpose. We show that the correlator of the arrival momenta of
the cosmic rays is sensitive to the helicity of an intervening magnetic field.
If the sources themselves are not known, the method may still be useful
provided we have some knowledge of their spatial distribution.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, discussions and references added, submited to
Phys. Rev.
A Reduced Nonlinear Model for the Simulation of Two Phase Flow in a Horizontal Pipe.
In the last 10 years many 3D numerical schemes have been developed for the study the flow of a mixture of liquid and gas in a pipeline (Frank, Numerical simulation of slug flow regime for an air-water two-phase flow in horizontal pipes. In: The 11th international topical meeting on nuclear reactor thermal-hydraulics (NURETH-11), Avignon, 2005; Vallée et al., Nucl Eng Des 238(3):637–646, 2008; Höhne, Experiments and numerical simulations of horizontal two-phase flow regimes. In: Proceeding of the seventh international conference on CFD in the minerals and process industries, Melbourne, 2009; Bartosiewicz et al., Nucl Eng Des 240(9):2375–2381, 2010) but although they offer a very good accuracy, they are rarely fit for modelling a long pipe, due to the high computational costs. Then one is usually led to consider 1D models, see e.g. the works of Issa and his group (Issa and Kempf, Int J Multiphase Flow 29(1):69–95, 2003). Such models offer much faster simulations than 3D schemes, on the other hand they almost completely miss the dynamics in the transversal direction. Here we present a model able of representing the full 3D dynamics, but with the computational cost typical of 1D simulation. The main feature of our model consists in describing the dynamical variables in the direction transversal to the pipe by means of a family of functions depending on a set of parameters. The model is then solved by a standard finite volume scheme
The optical depth of the Universe to ultrahigh energy cosmic ray scattering in the magnetized large scale structure
This paper provides an analytical description of the transport of ultrahigh
energy cosmic rays in an inhomogeneously magnetized intergalactic medium. This
latter is modeled as a collection of magnetized scattering centers such as
radio cocoons, magnetized galactic winds, clusters or magnetized filaments of
large scale structure, with negligible magnetic fields in between. Magnetic
deflection is no longer a continuous process, it is rather dominated by
scattering events. We study the interaction between high energy cosmic rays and
the scattering agents. We then compute the optical depth of the Universe to
cosmic ray scattering and discuss the phenomological consequences for various
source scenarios. For typical parameters of the scattering centers, the optical
depth is greater than unity at 5x10^{19}eV, but the total angular deflection is
smaller than unity. One important consequence of this scenario is the
possibility that the last scattering center encountered by a cosmic ray be
mistaken with the source of this cosmic ray. In particular, we suggest that
part of the correlation recently reported by the Pierre Auger Observatory may
be affected by such delusion: this experiment may be observing in part the last
scattering surface of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays rather than their source
population. Since the optical depth falls rapidly with increasing energy, one
should probe the arrival directions of the highest energy events beyond
10^{20}eV on an event by event basis to circumvent this effect.Comment: version to appear in PRD; substantial improvements: extended
introduction, sections added on angular images and on direction dependent
effects with sky maps of optical depth, enlarged discussion of Auger results
(conclusions unchanged); 27 pages, 9 figure
One-Dimensional Directed Sandpile Models and the Area under a Brownian Curve
We derive the steady state properties of a general directed ``sandpile''
model in one dimension. Using a central limit theorem for dependent random
variables we find the precise conditions for the model to belong to the
universality class of the Totally Asymmetric Oslo model, thereby identifying a
large universality class of directed sandpiles. We map the avalanche size to
the area under a Brownian curve with an absorbing boundary at the origin,
motivating us to solve this Brownian curve problem. Thus, we are able to
determine the moment generating function for the avalanche-size probability in
this universality class, explicitly calculating amplitudes of the leading order
terms.Comment: 24 pages, 5 figure
Optimal time switching from tayloristic to holistic workplace organization
The introduction of information and communication technologies over the past decades has fostered a process of internal workplace reorganization of firms who have tried to maximize their performance. Using a two stage optimal control technique, this paper provides analytical solutions to the conditions under which an economy decides to adopt a new organizational regime characterized by multitasking and an horizontal hierarchical structure (holistic organization). We consider two flexibility options: a) the possibility that only a part of the labor force is shifted to the modern workplace organization and, b) the possibility that the loss of productivity is not permanent. In all cases we conclude that the modern organization is adopted if and only if the productivity gains in the capital-goods sector compensate both the loss of expertise suffered by workers and the drop in consumption
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