1,688 research outputs found

    High Order QED Corrections in Physics of Positronium

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    High-order perturbative corrections to positronium decays and hyperfine splitting are briefly reviewed. Theoretical predictions are compared to the most recent experimental data. Perspectives of future calculations are discussed.Comment: 8 pages, LaTeX, talk given at Workshop on Positronium Physics, ETH Honggerberg, Zurich, May 30-31, 2003, a misprint in Eq. (1) correcte

    VLA Observations of the "Eye of the Tornado"- the High Velocity \HII Region G357.63-0.06

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    The unusual supernova remnant candidate G357.7-0.1 and the compact source G357.63-0.06 have been observed with the Very Large Array at 1.4 and 8.3 GHz. The H92α\alpha line (8.3 GHz) was detected from the compact source with a surprising velocity of about -210 km/s indicating that this source is an \HII region, is most likely located at the Galactic center, and is unrelated to the SNR. The \HI absorption line (1.4 GHz) data toward these sources supports this picture and suggests that G357.7-0.1 lies farther away than the Galactic center.Comment: Latex, 14 pages including 4 figures. Accepted to A

    Value of cost accounting in commercial laboratories

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    The basic elements of cost are three in number: prime cost, direct expense, and indirect expense. I have found it a great help in any cost system to keep these three great divisions clearly in mind. They of course can be subdivided in various ways, but we should never lose sight of the main divisions. The prime cost is made up of raw materials and direct labor only. Now in a commercial laboratory we have no raw material to deal with; therefore, let us eliminate it from the cost system, which leaves for the prime cost only direct labor; chemicals and apparatus form the direct expense, and overhead or burden the indirect expense. Now certainly with these three elements of prime cost, direct expense and indirect expense, we have something upon which to work, and we can build from this firm foundation a cost system which can be applied directly to any individual laboratory, no matter how large nor how small. In a commercial laboratory where the work is being done for outside clients, what you are really seeking is the cost of your services, that is, the cost of the salaries of the chemists who are working in the laboratory. Thus the prime cost, or the man\u27s time, plus the direct expense of chemicals and apparatus is the direct cost of the work. To this direct cost must be added indirect expense, such as rent, depreciation, taxes, insurance, light, heat, etc., and also the indirect cost of management and supervision, which may be classed as overhead, in order to arrive at the total cost. Once the total cost of the work is ascertained, the next step is the percentage of profit which is reasonable for the work done, and the final figure is the charge to the client, or selling price

    Revealing the obscured supernova remnant Kes 32 with Chandra

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    I report here on the analysis and interpretation of a Chandra observation of the supernova remnant Kes 32. Kes 32 is rather weak in X-rays due to a large interstellar absorption, which is found to be ~4E22 cm^-2, larger than previously reported. Spectral analysis indicates that the ionization age of this object is very young, with n_e t ~ 4E9 cm^-3s, and a temperature of kT_e ~ 1 keV. The X-ray emission peaks at a smaller radius than in the radio. The low ionization age suggests that Kes 32 is a young remnant. However, a young age is in contradiction with the relatively large apparent size, which indicates an age of several thousand years, instead of a few hundred years. This problem is discussed in connection with Kes 32's unknown distance and its possible association with the Norma galactic arm.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 7 pages, 7 figure

    What could be learnt from Positronium for Quarkonium?

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    In order to fulfill Low's theorem requirements, a new lowest order basis for bound state decay computations is proposed, in which the binding energy is treated non-perturbatively. The properties of the method are sketched by reviewing standard positronium decay processes. Then, it is shown how applying the method to quarkonia sheds new light on some longstanding puzzles.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures. Talk given at the ETH Workshop on Positronium Physics, May 30-31, 2003, Zurich, Switzerlan

    The Arecibo Methanol Maser Galactic Plane Survey - II: Statistical and Multi-wavelength Counterpart Analysis

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    We present an analysis of the properties of the 6.7 GHz methanol maser sample detected in the Arecibo Methanol Maser Galactic Plane Survey. The distribution of the masers in the Galaxy, and statistics of their multi-wavelength counterparts is consistent with the hypothesis of 6.7 GHz maser emission being associated with massive young stellar objects. Using the detection statistics of our survey, we estimate the minimum number of methanol masers in the Galaxy to be 1275. The l-v diagram of the sample shows the tangent point of the Carina-Sagittarius spiral arm to be around 49.6 degrees, and suggests occurrence of massive star formation along the extension of the Crux-Scutum arm. A Gaussian component analysis of the maser spectra shows the mean line-width to be 0.38 km/s which is more than a factor of two larger than what has been reported in the literature. We also find no evidence that faint methanol masers have different properties than those of their bright counterparts.Comment: Accepted by ApJ; Revised footnote number 3 on page 8 based on private communicatio

    Quantum Hall Effect in Quantum Electrodynamics

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    We consider the quantum Hall effect in quantum electrodynamics and find a deviation from the quantum mechanical prediction for the Hall conductivity due to radiative antiscreening of electric charge in an external magnetic field. A weak universal dependence of the von Klitzing constant on the magnetic field strength, which can possibly be observed in a dedicated experiment, is predicted.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, LaTeX, perturbative result correcte

    The Distances of SNR W41 and overlapping HII regions

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    New HI images from the VLA Galactic Plane Survey show prominent absorption features associated with the supernovae remnant G23.3-0.3 (SNR W41). We highlight the HI absorption spectra and the 13^{13}CO emission spectra of eight small regions on the face of W41, including four HII regions, three non-thermal emission regions and one unclassified region. The maximum velocity of absorption for W41 is 78±\pm2 km/s and the CO cloud at radial velocity 95±\pm5 km/s is behind W41. Because an extended TeV source, a diffuse X-ray enhancement and a large molecular cloud at radial velocity 77±\pm5 km/s are also projected at the center of W41, these yield the kinematic distance of 3.9 to 4.5 kpc for W41. For HII regions, our analyses reveal that both G23.42-0.21 and G23.07+0.25 are at the far kinematic distances (\sim9.9 kpc and \sim 10.6 kpc respectively) of their recombination-line velocities (103±\pm0.5 km/s and 89.6±\pm2.1 km/s respectively), G23.07-0.37 is at the near kinematic distance (4.4±\pm0.3 kpc) of its recombination-line velocity (82.7±\pm2.0 km/s), and G23.27-0.27 is probably at the near kinematic distance (4.1±\pm0.3 kpc) of its recombination-line velocity (76.1±\pm0.6 km/s).Comment: 11 pages, 3 figs., 2 tables, accepted by A

    Effects of correlated turbulent velocity fields on the formation of maser lines

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    The microturbulent approximation of turbulent motions is widely used in radiative transfer calculations. Mainly motivated by its simple computational application it is probably in many cases an oversimplified treatment of the dynamical processes involved. This aspect is in particular important in the analysis of maser lines, since the strong amplification of radiation leads to a sensitive dependence of the radiation field on the overall velocity structure. To demonstrate the influence of large scale motions on the formation of maser lines we present a simple stochastic model which takes velocity correlations into account. For a quantitative analysis of correlation effects, we generate in a Monte Carlo simulation individual realizations of a turbulent velocity field along a line of sight. Depending on the size of the velocity correlation length we find huge deviations between the resulting random profiles in respect of line shape, intensity and position of single spectral components. Finally, we simulate the emission of extended maser sources. A qualitative comparison with observed masers associated with star forming regions shows that our model can reproduce the observed general spectral characteristics. We also investigate shortly, how the spectra are effected when a systematic velocity field (simulating expansion) is superposed on the fluctuations. Our results convincingly demonstrate that hydrodynamical motions are of great importance for the understanding of cosmic masers.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 8 pages, 8 figure
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