11,788 research outputs found
Integrability of a Generalized Ito System: the Painleve Test
It is shown that a generalized Ito system of four coupled nonlinear evolution
equations passes the Painleve test for integrability in five distinct cases, of
which two were introduced recently by Tam, Hu and Wang. A conjecture is
formulated on integrability of a vector generalization of the Ito system.Comment: LaTeX, 5 page
Coronal heating in multiple magnetic threads
Context. Heating the solar corona to several million degrees requires the
conversion of magnetic energy into thermal energy. In this paper, we
investigate whether an unstable magnetic thread within a coronal loop can
destabilise a neighbouring magnetic thread. Aims. By running a series of
simulations, we aim to understand under what conditions the destabilisation of
a single magnetic thread can also trigger a release of energy in a nearby
thread. Methods. The 3D magnetohydrodynamics code, Lare3d, is used to simulate
the temporal evolution of coronal magnetic fields during a kink instability and
the subsequent relaxation process. We assume that a coronal magnetic loop
consists of non-potential magnetic threads that are initially in an equilibrium
state. Results. The non-linear kink instability in one magnetic thread forms a
helical current sheet and initiates magnetic reconnection. The current sheet
fragments, and magnetic energy is released throughout that thread. We find
that, under certain conditions, this event can destabilise a nearby thread,
which is a necessary requirement for starting an avalanche of energy release in
magnetic threads. Conclusions. It is possible to initiate an energy release in
a nearby, non-potential magnetic thread, because the energy released from one
unstable magnetic thread can trigger energy release in nearby threads, provided
that the nearby structures are close to marginal stability
Tone-excited jet: Theory and experiments
A detailed study to understand the phenomenon of broadband jet-noise amplification produced by upstream discrete-tone sound excitation has been carried out. This has been achieved by simultaneous acquisition of the acoustic, mean velocity, turbulence intensities, and instability-wave pressure data. A 5.08 cm diameter jet has been tested for this purpose under static and also flight-simulation conditions. An open-jet wind tunnel has been used to simulate the flight effects. Limited data on heated jets have also been obtained. To improve the physical understanding of the flow modifications brought about by the upstream discrete-tone excitation, ensemble-averaged schlieren photographs of the jets have also been taken. Parallel to the experimental study, a mathematical model of the processes that lead to broadband-noise amplification by upstream tones has been developed. Excitation of large-scale turbulence by upstream tones is first calculated. A model to predict the changes in small-scale turbulence is then developed. By numerically integrating the resultant set of equations, the enhanced small-scale turbulence distribution in a jet under various excitation conditions is obtained. The resulting changes in small-scale turbulence have been attributed to broadband amplification of jet noise. Excellent agreement has been found between the theory and the experiments. It has also shown that the relative velocity effects are the same for the excited and the unexcited jets
Noise characteristics of upper surface blown configurations: Analytical Studies
Noise and flow results of upper surface blown configurations were analyzed. The dominant noise source mechanisms were identified from experimental data. From far-field noise data for various geometric and operational parameters, an empirical noise prediction program was developed and evaluated by comparing predicted results with experimental data from other tests. USB aircraft compatibility studies were conducted using the described noise prediction and a cruise performance data base. A final design aircraft was selected and theory was developed for the noise from the trailing edge wake assuming it as a highly sheared layer
On the Validity of the Tomonaga Luttinger Liquid Relations for the One-dimensional Holstein Model
For the one-dimensional Holstein model, we show that the relations among the
scaling exponents of various correlation functions of the Tomonaga Luttinger
liquid (LL), while valid in the thermodynamic limit, are significantly modified
by finite size corrections. We obtain analytical expressions for these
corrections and find that they decrease very slowly with increasing system
size. The interpretation of numerical data on finite size lattices in terms of
LL theory must therefore take these corrections into account. As an important
example, we re-examine the proposed metallic phase of the zero-temperature,
half-filled one-dimensional Holstein model without employing the LL relations.
In particular, using quantum Monte Carlo calculations, we study the competition
between the singlet pairing and charge ordering. Our results do not support the
existence of a dominant singlet pairing state.Comment: 7 page
Cluster Persistence: a Discriminating Probe of Soap Froth Dynamics
The persistent decay of bubble clusters in coarsening two-dimensional soap
froths is measured experimentally as a function of cluster volume fraction.
Dramatically stronger decay is observed in comparison to soap froth models and
to measurements and calculations of persistence in other systems. The fraction
of individual bubbles that contain any persistent area also decays, implying
significant bubble motion and suggesting that T1 processes play an important
role in froth persistence.Comment: 5 pages, revtex, 4 eps figures. To appear in Europhys. Let
A Survey of 56 Mid-latitude EGRET Error Boxes for Radio Pulsars
We have conducted a radio pulsar survey of 56 unidentified gamma-ray sources
from the 3rd EGRET catalog which are at intermediate Galactic latitudes (5 deg.
< |b| < 73 deg.). For each source, four interleaved 35-minute pointings were
made with the 13-beam, 1400-MHz multibeam receiver on the Parkes 64-m radio
telescope. This covered the 95% error box of each source at a limiting
sensitivity of about 0.2 mJy to pulsed radio emission for periods P > 10 ms and
dispersion measures < 50 pc cm-3. Roughly half of the unidentified gamma-ray
sources at |b| > 5 deg. with no proposed active galactic nucleus counterpart
were covered in this survey. We detected nine isolated pulsars and four
recycled binary pulsars, with three from each class being new. Timing
observations suggest that only one of the pulsars has a spin-down luminosity
which is even marginally consistent with the inferred luminosity of its
coincident EGRET source. Our results suggest that population models, which
include the Gould belt as a component, overestimate the number of isolated
pulsars among the mid-latitude Galactic gamma-ray sources and that it is
unlikely that Gould belt pulsars make up the majority of these sources.
However, the possibility of steep pulsar radio spectra and the confusion of
terrestrial radio interference with long-period pulsars (P > 200 ms) having
very low dispersion measures (< 10 pc cm-3, expected for sources at a distance
of less than about 1 kpc) prevent us from strongly ruling out this hypothesis.
Our results also do not support the hypothesis that millisecond pulsars make up
the majority of these sources. Non-pulsar source classes should therefore be
further investigated as possible counterparts to the unidentified EGRET sources
at intermediate Galactic latitudes.Comment: 24 pages, including 4 figures and 3 tables. Accepted for publication
in Ap
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