667 research outputs found
Ammonium inhibition of nitrate uptake by phytoplankton: A new relation based on similarity and hyperbolicity
A theoretical formulation based on the properties of similarity and hyperbolicity is given for ammonium inhibition of nitrate uptake by phytoplankton. It leads to a new kinetic relation for ammonium inhibition, which is found to represent the data of nitrogen kinetics experiments of McCarthy et al. in the northwest Indian Ocean more accurately than the earlier relations of Wroblewski and O'Neill et al. Analysis of the ƒ-ratio (new production/the sum of new and regenerated production) implied by the three relations shows that there is a qualitative difference among the three. The relation of Wroblewski tends to underestimate the new production, while that of O'Neill et al. tends to overestimate it
Leptogenesis with Left-Right domain walls
The presence of domain walls separating regions of unbroken and
is shown to provide necessary conditions for leptogenesis which
converts later to the observed Baryon aymmetry. The strength of lepton number
violation is related to the majorana neutrino mass and hence related to current
bounds on light neutrino masses. Thus the observed neutrino masses and the
Baryon asymmetry can be used to constrain the scale of Left-Right symmetry
breaking.Comment: References added, To appear in Praman
Tunneling decay of false vortices
We consider the decay of vortices trapped in the false vacuum of a theory of
scalar electrodynamics in 2+1 dimensions. The potential is inspired by models
with intermediate symmetry breaking to a metastable vacuum that completely
breaks a U(1) symmetry, while in the true vacuum the symmetry is unbroken. The
false vacuum is unstable through the formation of true vacuum bubbles; however,
the rate of decay can be extremely long. On the other hand, the false vacuum
can contain metastable vortex solutions. These vortices contain the true vacuum
inside in addition to a unit of magnetic flux and the appropriate topologically
nontrivial false vacuum outside. We numerically establish the existence of
vortex solutions which are classically stable; however, they can decay via
tunneling. In general terms, they tunnel to a configuration which is a large,
thin-walled vortex configuration that is now classically unstable to the
expansion of its radius. We compute an estimate for the tunneling amplitude in
the semi-classical approximation. We believe our analysis would be relevant to
superconducting thin films or superfluids.Comment: 27 pages, 9 figure
The Battle of the Bulge: Decay of the Thin, False Cosmic String
We consider the decay of cosmic strings that are trapped in the false vacuum
in a theory of scalar electrodynamics in 3+1 dimensions. We restrict our
analysis to the case of thin-walled cosmic strings which occur when large
magnetic flux trapped inside the string. Thus the string looks like a tube of
fixed radius, at which it is classically stable. The core of the string
contains magnetic flux in the true vacuum, while outside the string, separated
by a thin wall, is the false vacuum. The string decays by tunnelling to a
configuration which is represented by a bulge, where the region of true vacuum
within, is ostensibly enlarged. The bulge can be described as the meeting, of a
kink soliton anti-soliton pair, along the length of the string. It can be
described as a bulge appearing in the initial string, starting from the string
of small, classically stable radius, expanding to a fat string of large,
classically unstable (to expansion) radius and then returning back to the
string of small radius along its length. This configuration is the bounce point
of a corresponding O(2) symmetric instanton, which we can determine
numerically. Once the bulge appears it explodes in real time. The kink soliton
anti-soliton pair recede from each other along the length of the string with a
velocity that quickly approaches the speed of light, leaving behind a fat tube.
At the same time the radius of the fat tube that is being formed, expands
(transversely) as it is no longer classically stable, converting false vacuum
to the true vacuum with ever diluting magnetic field within. The rate of this
expansion is determined by the energy difference between the true vacuum and
the false vacuum. Our analysis could be applied to a network, of cosmic strings
formed in the very early universe or vortex lines in a superheated
superconductor.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Gauge mediated supersymmetry breaking and the cosmology of Left-Right symmetric model
Left-Right symmetry including supersymmetry presents an important class of
gauge models which may possess natural solutions to many issues of
phenomenology. Cosmology of such models indicates a phase transition
accompanied by domain walls. Such walls must be unstable in order to not
conflict with standard cosmology, and can further be shown to assist with open
issues of cosmology such as dilution of unwanted relic densities and
leptogenesis. In this paper we construct a model of gauge mediated
supersymmetry breaking in which parity breaking is also signalled along with
supersymmetry breaking and so as to be consistent with cosmological
requirements. It is shown that addressing all the stated cosmological issues
requires an extent of fine tuning, while in the absence of fine tuning,
leptogenesis accompanying successful completion of the phase transition is
still viable
A coupled physical-biological-chemical model for the Indian Ocean
A coupled physical-biological-chemical model has been developed at C-MMACS. for studying the time-variation of primary productivity and air-sea carbon-dioxide exchange in the Indian Ocean. The physical model is based on the Modular Ocean Model, Version 2 (MOM2) and the biological model describes the nonlinear dynamics of a 7-component marine ecosystem. The chemical model includes dynamical equation for the evolution of dissolved inorganic carbon and total alkalinity. The interaction between the biological and chemical model is through the Redfield ratio. The partial pressure of carbon dioxide (pCO2) of the surface layer is obtained from the chemical equilibrium equations of Penget al 1987. Transfer coefficients for air-sea exchange of CO2 are computed dynamically based on the wind speeds. The coupled model reproduces the high productivity observed in the Arabian Sea off the Somali and Omani coasts during the Southwest (SW) monsoon. The entire Arabian Sea is an outgassing region for CO2 in spite of high productivity with transfer rates as high as 80 m-mol C/m2 /day during SW monsoon near the Somali Coast on account of strong winds
Fate of the false monopoles: induced vacuum decay
We study a gauge theory model where there is an intermediate symmetry
breaking to a meta- stable vacuum that breaks a simple gauge group to a U (1)
factor. Such models admit the existence of meta-stable magnetic monopoles,
which we dub false monopoles. We prove the existence of these monopoles in the
thin wall approximation. We determine the instantons for the collective
coordinate that corresponds to the radius of the monopole wall and we calculate
the semi-classical tunneling rate for the decay of these monopoles. The
monopole decay consequently triggers the decay of the false vacuum. As the
monopole mass is increased, we find an enhanced rate of decay of the false
vacuum relative to the celebrated homogeneous tunneling rate due to Coleman
[1].Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
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