11,544 research outputs found
Detection of H-alpha emission from the Magellanic Stream: evidence for an extended gaseous Galactic halo
We have detected faint, diffuse H\alpha emission of surface brightness Rayleighs, R, and R respectively,
corresponding to emission measures of 1.0 to 0.5 \cmsixpc. We have observed
several positions near the MS IV concentration, and find that the strongest
emission is on the sharp leading-edge density gradient. There is less emission
at points away from the gradient, and halfway between MS III and MS IV the
H< 0.04\alpha emission at cloud leading edges to heating of the
Stream clouds by ram pressure from ionized gas in the halo of the Galaxy. These
observations suggest that ram pressure from halo gas plays a large role in
stripping the Stream out of the Magellanic Clouds. They also suggest the
presence of a relatively large density of gas, , in the Galactic halo at kpc radius, and far above the
Galactic plane, . This implies that the Galaxy has a very large
baryonic, gaseous extent, and supports models of Lyman-$\alpha and metal-line
QSO absorption lines in which the absorption systems reside in extended
galactic halos.Comment: 15 pages, aaspp latex, + 1 table & 3 figures. Accepted in A.J. Also
available from http://www.physics.rutgers.edu/~bweiner/astro/papers
A Supersymmetric Twin Higgs
We present a supersymmetric realization of the twin Higgs mechanism, which
cancels off all contributions to the Higgs mass generated above a scale f.
Radiative corrections induced by the top quark sector lead to a breaking of the
twin sector electroweak symmetry at a scale f ~ TeV. In our sector, below the
scale f, these radiative corrections from the top quark are present but greatly
weakened, naturally allowing a Z boson mass an order of magnitude below f, even
with a top squark mass of order 1 TeV and a messenger scale near the Planck
mass. A sufficient quartic interaction for our Higgs boson arises from the
usual gauge contribution together with a radiative contribution from a heavy
top squark. The mechanism requires the presence of an SU(2)-adjoint superfield,
and can be simply unified. Naturalness in these theories is usually associated
with light winos and sleptons, and is largely independent of the scale of the
colored particles. The assumption of unification naturally predicts the
existence of many exotic fields. The theory often has particles which may be
stable on collider timescales, including an additional color octet superfield.
In the limit that m_SUSY >> f, the mechanism yields a UV completion of the
non-supersymmetric twin Higgs, but with the notable improvement of a tree-level
quartic for the standard model Higgs. In this framework, a successful UV
completion requires the existence of new charged fields well below the scale f.Comment: 20 page
Study of high voltage solar array configurations with integrated power control electronics
Solar array electrical configurations for voltage regulatio
Controlling Condensate Collapse and Expansion with an Optical Feshbach Resonance
We demonstrate control of the collapse and expansion of an 88Sr Bose-Einstein
condensate using an optical Feshbach resonance (OFR) near the 1S0-3P1
intercombination transition at 689 nm. Significant changes in dynamics are
caused by modifications of scattering length by up to +- ?10a_bg, where the
background scattering length of 88Sr is a_bg = -2a0 (1a0 = 0.053 nm). Changes
in scattering length are monitored through changes in the size of the
condensate after a time-of-flight measurement. Because the background
scattering length is close to zero, blue detuning of the OFR laser with respect
to a photoassociative resonance leads to increased interaction energy and a
faster condensate expansion, whereas red detuning triggers a collapse of the
condensate. The results are modeled with the time-dependent nonlinear
Gross-Pitaevskii equation.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
The Bose-Einstein correlation function from a Quantum Field Theory point of view
We show that a recently proposed derivation of Bose-Einstein correlations
(BEC) by means of a specific version of thermal Quantum Field Theory (QFT),
supplemented by operator-field evolution of the Langevin type, allows for a
deeper understanding of the possible coherent behaviour of the emitting source
and a clear identification of the origin of the observed shape of the BEC
function . Previous conjectures in this matter obtained by other
approaches are confirmed and have received complementary explanation.Comment: Some misprints corrected. To be publishe in Phys. Rev.
Second order equation of motion for electromagnetic radiation back-reaction
We take the viewpoint that the physically acceptable solutions of the
Lorentz--Dirac equation for radiation back-reaction are actually determined by
a second order equation of motion, the self-force being given as a function of
spacetime location and velocity. We propose three different methods to obtain
this self-force function. For two example systems, we determine the second
order equation of motion exactly in the nonrelativistic regime via each of
these three methods, the three methods leading to the same result. We reveal
that, for both systems considered, back-reaction induces a damping proportional
to velocity and, in addition, it decreases the effect of the external force.Comment: 13 page
The molecular and dusty composition of Betelgeuse's inner circumstellar environment
The study of the atmosphere of red supergiant stars in general and of
Betelgeuse (alpha Orionis) in particular is of prime importance to understand
dust formation and how mass is lost to the interstellar medium in evolved
massive stars. A molecular shell, the MOLsphere (Tsuji, 2000a), in the
atmosphere of Betelgeuse has been proposed to account for the near- and
mid-infrared spectroscopic observations of Betelgeuse. The goal is to further
test this hypothesis and to identify some of the molecules in this MOLsphere.
We report on measurements taken with the mid-infrared two-telescope beam
combiner of the VLTI, MIDI, operated between 7.5 and 13.5 m. The data are
compared to a simple geometric model of a photosphere surrounded by a warm
absorbing and emitting shell. Physical characteristics of the shell are
derived: size, temperature and optical depth. The chemical constituents are
determined with an analysis consistent with available infrared spectra and
interferometric data. We are able to account for the measured optical depth of
the shell in the N band, the ISO-SWS spectrum and K and L band interferometric
data with a shell whose inner and outer radii are given by the above range and
with the following species: H2O, SiO and Al2O3. These results confirm the
MOLsphere model. We bring evidence for more constituents and for the presence
of species participating in the formation of dust grains in the atmosphere of
the star, i.e. well below the distance at which the dust shell is detected. We
believe these results bring key elements to the understanding of mass loss in
Betelgeuse and red supergiants in general and bring support to the dust-driven
scenario.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&
- …