42,652 research outputs found
Impulsive cylindrical gravitational wave: one possible radiative form emitted from cosmic strings and corresponding electromagnetic response
The cosmic strings(CSs) may be one important source of gravitational
waves(GWs), and it has been intensively studied due to its special properties
such as the cylindrical symmetry. The CSs would generate not only usual
continuous GW, but also impulsive GW that brings more concentrated energy and
consists of different GW components broadly covering low-, intermediate- and
high-frequency bands simultaneously. These features might underlie interesting
electromagnetic(EM) response to these GWs generated by the CSs. In this paper,
with novel results and effects, we firstly calculate the analytical solutions
of perturbed EM fields caused by interaction between impulsive cylindrical GWs
(would be one of possible forms emitted from CSs) and background celestial high
magnetic fields or widespread cosmological background magnetic fields, by using
rigorous Einstein - Rosen metric. Results show: perturbed EM fields are also in
the impulsive form accordant to the GW pulse, and asymptotic behaviors of the
perturbed EM fields are fully consistent with the asymptotic behaviors of the
energy density, energy flux density and Riemann curvature tensor of
corresponding impulsive cylindrical GWs. The analytical solutions naturally
give rise to the accumulation effect which is proportional to the term of
distance^1/2, and based on it, we for the first time predict potentially
observable effects in region of the Earth caused by the EM response to GWs from
the CSs.Comment: 34 pages, 12 figure
Parity-Violating Nuclear Force as derived from QCD Sum Rules
Parity-violating nuclear force, as may be accessed from parity violation
studies in nuclear systems, represents an area of nonleptonic weak interactions
which has been the subject of experimental investigations for several decades.
In the simple meson-exchange picture, parity-violating nuclear force may be
parameterized as arising from exchange of \pi, \rho, \omega, or other meson(s)
with strong meson-nucleon coupling at one vertex and weak parity-violating
meson-nucleon coupling at the other vertex. The QCD sum rule method allows for
a fairly complicated, but nevertheless straightforward, leading-order
loop-contribution determination of the various parity-violating MNN couplings
starting from QCD (with the nontrivial vacuum) and Glashow-Salam-Weinberg
electroweak theory. We continue our earlier investigation of parity-violating
\pi NN coupling (by Henley, Hwang, and Kisslinger) to other parity-violating
couplings. Our predictions are in reasonable overall agreement with the results
estimated on phenomenological grounds, such as in the now classic paper of
Desplanques, Donoghue, and Holstein (DDH), in the global experimental fit of
Adelberger and Haxton (AH), or the effective field theory (EFT) thinking of
Ramsey-Musolf and Page (RP).Comment: 17 pages, 5 figure
An Ultra-Low-Power Oscillator with Temperature and Process Compensation for UHF RFID Transponder
This paper presents a 1.28MHz ultra-low-power oscillator with temperature and process compensation. It is very suitable for clock generation circuits used in ultra-high-frequency (UHF) radio-frequency identification (RFID) transponders. Detailed analysis of the oscillator design, including process and temperature compensation techniques are discussed. The circuit is designed using TSMC 0.18μm standard CMOS process and simulated with Spectre. Simulation results show that, without post-fabrication calibration or off-chip components, less than ±3% frequency variation is obtained from –40 to 85°C in three different process corners. Monte Carlo simulations have also been performed, and demonstrate a 3σ deviation of about 6%. The power for the proposed circuitry is only 1.18µW at 27°C
Weak coupling d-wave BCS superconductivity and unpaired electrons in overdoped La_{2-x}Sr_{x}CuO_{4} single crystals
The low-temperature specific heat (SH) of overdoped La_{2-x}Sr_{x}CuO_{4}
single crystals (0.178=<x=<0.290) has been measured. For the superconducting
samples (0.178=<x=<0.238), the derived gap values (without any adjusting
parameters) approach closely onto the theoretical prediction
\Delta_{0}=2.14k_{B}T_{c} for the weak-coupling d-wave BCS superconductivity.
In addition, the residual term \gamma(0) of SH at H=0 increases with x
dramatically when beyond x~0.22, and finally evolves into the value of a
complete normal metallic state at higher doping levels, indicating growing
amount of unpaired electrons. We argue that this large \gamma(0) cannot be
simply attributed to the pair breaking induced by the impurity scattering,
instead the phase separation is possible.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures; Contents added; Accepted for publication in Phys.
Rev.
Separation of variables for soliton equations via their binary constrained flows
Binary constrained flows of soliton equations admitting Lax
matrices have 2N degrees of freedom, which is twice as many as degrees of
freedom in the case of mono-constrained flows. For their separation of
variables only N pairs of canonical separated variables can be introduced via
their Lax matrices by using the normal method. A new method to introduce the
other N pairs of canonical separated variables and additional separated
equations is proposed. The Jacobi inversion problems for binary constrained
flows are established. Finally, the factorization of soliton equations by two
commuting binary constrained flows and the separability of binary constrained
flows enable us to construct the Jacobi inversion problems for some soliton
hierarchies.Comment: 39 pages, Amste
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