8,195 research outputs found
Evidence, Mechanisms and Improved Understanding of Controlled Salinity Waterflooding Part 1 : Sandstones
Acknowledgements TOTAL are thanked for partial supporting Jackson through the TOTAL Chairs programme at Imperial College London, for supporting Vinogradov through the TOTAL Laboratory for Reservoir Physics at Imperial College London, and for granting permission to publish this work.Peer reviewedPostprin
Belinfante Tensors Induced by Matter-Gravity Couplings
We show that any generally covariant coupling of matter fields to gravity
gives rise to a conserved, on-shell symmetric energy-momentum tensor equivalent
to the canonical energy-momentum tensor of the flat-space theory. For matter
fields minimally coupled to gravity our algorithm gives the conventional
Belinfante tensor. We establish that different matter-gravity couplings give
metric energy-momentum tensors differing by identically conserved tensors. We
prove that the metric energy-momentum tensor obtained from an arbitrary gravity
theory is on-shell equivalent to the canonical energy-momentum tensor of the
flat-space theory.Comment: 10 pages, LaTex; misprints corrected, references added; to appear in
Physical Review
Self-Stimulated Undulator Radiation and its Possible Applications
We investigated the phenomena of self-stimulation of incoherent emission from
an undulator installed in the linear accelerator or quasi-isochronous storage
ring. We discuss possible applications of these phenomena for the beam physics
also.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Differences in the trophic ecology of micronekton driven by diel vertical migration.
Many species of micronekton perform diel vertical migrations (DVMs), which ultimately contributes to carbon export to the deep sea. However, not all micronekton species perform DVM, and the nonmigrators, which are often understudied, have different energetic requirements that might be reflected in their trophic ecology. We analyze bulk tissue and whole animal stable nitrogen isotopic compositions (δ 15N values) of micronekton species collected seasonally between 0 and 1250 m depth to explore differences in the trophic ecology of vertically migrating and nonmigrating micronekton in the central North Pacific. Nonmigrating species exhibit depth-related increases in δ 15N values mirroring their main prey, zooplankton. Higher variance in δ 15N values of bathypelagic species points to the increasing reliance of deeper dwelling micronekton on microbially reworked, very small suspended particles. Migrators have higher δ 15N values than nonmigrators inhabiting the epipelagic zone, suggesting the consumption of material during the day at depth, not only at night when they migrate closer to the surface. Migrating species also appear to eat larger prey and exhibit a higher range of variation in δ 15N values seasonally than nonmigrators, likely because of their higher energy needs. The dependence on material at depth enriched in 15N relative to surface particles is higher in migratory fish that ascend only to the lower epipelagic zone. Our results confirm that stark differences in the food habits and dietary sources of micronekton species are driven by vertical migrations
Low-temperature specific heat of real crystals: Possibility of leading contribution of optical and short-wavelength acoustical vibrations
We point out that the repeatedly reported glass-like properties of
crystalline materials are not necessarily associated with localized (or
quasilocalized) excitations. In real crystals, optical and short-wavelength
acoustical vibrations remain damped due to defects down to zero temperature. If
such a damping is frequency-independent, e.g. due to planar defects or charged
defects, these optical and short-wavelength acoustical vibrations yield a
linear-in- contribution to the low-temperature specific heat of the crystal
lattices. At low enough temperatures such a contribution will prevail over that
of the long-wavelength acoustical vibrations (Debye contribution). The
crossover between the linear and the Debye regime takes place at , where is the concentration of the defects responsible for the
damping. Estimates show that this crossover could be observable.Comment: 5 pages. v4: Error in Appendix corrected, which does not change the
main results of the pape
Characteristic cohomology of -form gauge theories
The characteristic cohomology for an arbitrary set of free
-form gauge fields is explicitly worked out in all form degrees ,
where is the spacetime dimension. It is shown that this cohomology is
finite-dimensional and completely generated by the forms dual to the field
strengths. The gauge invariant characteristic cohomology is also computed. The
results are extended to interacting -form gauge theories with gauge
invariant interactions. Implications for the BRST cohomology are mentioned.Comment: Latex file, no figures, 44 page
Inverse Borrmann effect in photonic crystals
The Borrmann effect, which is related to the microscopic distribution of the
electromagnetic field inside the primitive cell, is studied in photonic and
magnetophotonic crystals. This effect, well-known in x-ray spectroscopy, is
responsible for the enhancement or suppression of various linear and nonlinear
optical effects when the incidence angle and/or the frequency change. It is
shown that by design of the primitive cell this effect can be suppressed and
even inverted
Results on the Wess-Zumino consistency condition for arbitrary Lie algebras
The so-called covariant Poincare lemma on the induced cohomology of the
spacetime exterior derivative in the cohomology of the gauge part of the BRST
differential is extended to cover the case of arbitrary, non reductive Lie
algebras. As a consequence, the general solution of the Wess-Zumino consistency
condition with a non trivial descent can, for arbitrary (super) Lie algebras,
be computed in the small algebra of the 1 form potentials, the ghosts and their
exterior derivatives. For particular Lie algebras that are the semidirect sum
of a semisimple Lie subalgebra with an ideal, a theorem by Hochschild and Serre
is used to characterize more precisely the cohomology of the gauge part of the
BRST differential in the small algebra. In the case of an abelian ideal, this
leads to a complete solution of the Wess-Zumino consistency condition in this
space. As an application, the consistent deformations of 2+1 dimensional
Chern-Simons theory based on iso(2,1) are rediscussed.Comment: 39 pages Latex file, 1 eps figure, typos and proof of lemma 5
correcte
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