1,727 research outputs found
Combined effect of coherent Z exchange and the hyperfine interaction in atomic PNC
The nuclear spin-dependent parity nonconserving (PNC) interaction arising
from a combination of the hyperfine interaction and the coherent,
spin-independent, PNC interaction from Z exchange is evaluated using many-body
perturbation theory. For the 6s-7s transition in 133Cs, we obtain a result that
is about 40% smaller than that found previously by Bouchiat and Piketty [Phys.
Lett. B 269, 195 (1991)]. Applying this result to 133Cs, leads to an increase
in the experimental value of nuclear anapole moment and exacerbates differences
between constraints on PNC meson coupling constants obtained from the Cs
anapole moment and those obtained from other nuclear parity violating
experiments. Nuclear spin-dependent PNC dipole matrix elements, including
contributions from the combined weak-hyperfine interaction, are also given for
the 7s-8s transition in 211Fr and for transitions between ground-state
hyperfine levels in K, Rb, Cs, Ba+, Au, Tl, Fr, and Ra+.Comment: Revtex4 preprint 19 pages 4 table
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Geothermal aquaculture: a guide to freshwater prawn culture
Biological data of the Malaysian prawn, Macrobrachium rosenbergii, are summarized. A history on its rearing techniques is given, but through the use of geothermal water or industrial warm water effluent, its range can be expanded. The use of wasted geothermal water at the Oregon Institute of Technology for prawn ponds is noted. Pond management and design; the hatchery design and function for larval culture; and geothermal applications (legal aspects and constraints) are discussed. (MCW
Uncertainties in the Solar Neutrino Flux
I discuss three issues relevant to solar neutrino flux measurements: cross
section uncertainties in pp chain reactions, uncertainties in the GALLEX/SAGE
response to 7Be and 51Cr neutrinos, and the implications of helioseismology for
nonstandard suns with mixed cores. A few comments are also offered on electron
neutrino to tauon neutrino oscillations, cosmologically interesting neutrino
masses, and recent proposals for supernova neutrino observatories.Comment: Neutrino 98 Talk; 8 pages, 5 figure
Binary Collisions and the Slingshot Effect
We derive the equations for the gravity assist manoeuvre in the general 2D
case without the constraints of circular planetary orbits or widely different
masses as assumed by Broucke, and obtain the slingshot conditions and maximum
energy gain for arbitrary mass ratios of two colliding rigid bodies. Using the
geometric view developed in an earlier paper by the authors the possible
trajectories are computed for both attractive or repulsive interactions
yielding a further insight on the slingshot mechanics and its parametrization.
The general slingshot manoeuvre for arbitrary masses is explained as a
particular case of the possible outcomes of attractive or repulsive binary
collisions, and the correlation between asymptotic information and orbital
parameters is obtained in general.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication Dec'07, Celestial
Mechanics and Dynamical Astronom
Order parameter model for unstable multilane traffic flow
We discuss a phenomenological approach to the description of unstable vehicle
motion on multilane highways that explains in a simple way the observed
sequence of the phase transitions "free flow -> synchronized motion -> jam" as
well as the hysteresis in the transition "free flow synchronized motion".
We introduce a new variable called order parameter that accounts for possible
correlations in the vehicle motion at different lanes. So, it is principally
due to the "many-body" effects in the car interaction, which enables us to
regard it as an additional independent state variable of traffic flow. Basing
on the latest experimental data (cond-mat/9905216) we assume that these
correlations are due to a small group of "fast" drivers. Taking into account
the general properties of the driver behavior we write the governing equation
for the order parameter. In this context we analyze the instability of
homogeneous traffic flow manifesting itself in both of the mentioned above
phase transitions where, in addition, the transition "synchronized motion ->
jam" also exhibits a similar hysteresis. Besides, the jam is characterized by
the vehicle flows at different lanes being independent of one another. We
specify a certain simplified model in order to study the general features of
the car cluster self-formation under the phase transition "free flow
synchronized motion". In particular, we show that the main local parameters of
the developed cluster are determined by the state characteristics of vehicle
motion only.Comment: REVTeX 3.1, 10 pages with 10 PostScript figure
A Far-Ultraviolet View of Starburst Galaxies
Recent observational and theoretical results on starburst galaxies related to
the wavelength regime below 1200 A are discussed. The review covers stars,
dust, as well as hot and cold gas. This wavelength region follows trends
similar to those seen at longer wavelengths, with several notable exceptions.
Even the youngest stellar populations show a turn-over in their spectral energy
distributions, and line-blanketing is much more pronounced. Furthermore, the O
VI line allows one to probe gas at higher temperatures than possible with lines
at longer wavelengths. Molecular hydrogen lines (if detected) provide a glimpse
of the cold phase. I cover the crucial wavelength regime below 912 A and the
implications of recent attempts to detect the escaping ionizing radiation.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, Invited Talk, Starbursts--From 30 Doradus to
Lyman-Break Galaxies, ed. R. de Grijs & R. M. Gonzalez Delgado (Dordrecht:
Kluwer
Louse (Insecta : Phthiraptera) mitochondrial 12S rRNA secondary structure is highly variable
Lice are ectoparasitic insects hosted by birds and mammals. Mitochondrial 12S rRNA sequences obtained from lice show considerable length variation and are very difficult to align. We show that the louse 12S rRNA domain III secondary structure displays considerable variation compared to other insects, in both the shape and number of stems and loops. Phylogenetic trees constructed from tree edit distances between louse 12S rRNA structures do not closely resemble trees constructed from sequence data, suggesting that at least some of this structural variation has arisen independently in different louse lineages. Taken together with previous work on mitochondrial gene order and elevated rates of substitution in louse mitochondrial sequences, the structural variation in louse 12S rRNA confirms the highly distinctive nature of molecular evolution in these insects
Limited diversity in natal origins of immature anadromous fish during ocean residency
Author Posting. © The Authors, 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of NRC Research Press for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 67 (2010): 1699-1707, doi:10.1139/F10-086.Variable migration patterns can play a significant role in promoting diverse life history traits among populations. However, population and stage specific movement patterns are generally unknown yet crucial aspects of life history strategies in many highly migratory species. We used a natural tag approach using geochemical signatures in otoliths to identify natal origins of one-year-old anadromous American shad (Alosa sapidissima) during ocean residency. Otolith signatures of migrants were compared to a database of baseline signatures from 20 source populations throughout their spawning range. Samples were dominated by fish from only two rivers, while all other potential source populations were nearly or completely absent. These data support the hypothesis that American shad exhibit diverse migratory behaviors and immature individuals from populations throughout the native range do not all mix on northern summer feeding grounds. Rather, our results suggest populations of anadromous fish are distributed heterogeneously at sea in the first year of life and thus may encounter different ocean conditions at a critical early life history stage.This work was funded by National Science Foundation grants OCE-0215905 and OCE-0134998 to SRT and by a WHOI Ocean Life Institute grant to BDW
A new type of carbon resistance thermometer with excellent thermal contact at millikelvin temperatures
Using a new brand of commercially available carbon resistor we built a
cryogenic thermometer with an extremely good thermal contact to its thermal
environment. Because of its superior thermal contact the thermometer is
insensitive to low levels of spurious radio frequency heating. We calibrated
our thermometer down to 5mK using a quartz tuning fork He-3 viscometer and
measured its thermal resistance and thermal response time.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Nuclear Physics without High-Momentum Potentials: Constructing the Nuclear Effective Interaction Directly from Scattering Observables
The traditional approach to nuclear physics encodes phase shift information
in a nucleon-nucleon (NN) potential, producing a nucleon-level interaction that
captures the sub-GeV consequences of QCD. A further reduction to the nuclear
scale is needed to produce an effective interaction for soft Hilbert spaces,
such as those employed in the shell model. Here we describe an alternative
construction of this effective interaction, from QCD directly to the nuclear
scale, that is direct and precise. This eliminates the need for constructing
and renormalizing the high-momentum NN potential. Instead, continuum phase
shifts and mixing angles are used directly at the nuclear scale. The method
exploits the analytic continuity in energy of HOBET (Harmonic-Oscillator-Based
Effective Theory) to connect bound states to continuum solutions at specific
energies. The procedure is systematic, cutoff independent, and convergent,
yielding keV accuracy at NNLO or NLO, depending on the channel. Lepage
plots are provided.Comment: 9 page
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