31,298 research outputs found
Base manifolds for fibrations of projective irreducible symplectic manifolds
Given a projective irreducible symplectic manifold of dimension , a
projective manifold and a surjective holomorphic map with
connected fibers of positive dimension, we prove that is biholomorphic to
the projective space of dimension . The proof is obtained by exploiting two
geometric structures at general points of : the affine structure arising
from the action variables of the Lagrangian fibration and the structure
defined by the variety of minimal rational tangents on the Fano manifold
Form Factors Calculated on the Light-Front
A consistent treatment of decay is given on the
light-front. The to transition form factors are calculated in the
entire physical range of momentum transfer for the first time. The
valence-quark contribution is obtained using relativistic light-front wave
functions. Higher quark-antiquark Fock-state of the -meson bound state is
represented effectively by the configuration, and its effect
is calculated in the chiral perturbation theory. Wave function renormalization
is taken into account consistently. The contribution dominates
near the zero-recoil point ( GeV), and decreases rapidly as
the recoil momentum increases. We find that the calculated form factor
follows approximately a dipole -dependence in the entire range
of momentum transfer.Comment: Revtex, 19 pages, 9 figure
Gauge-invariant gravitational wave modes in pre-big bang cosmology
The t<0 branch of pre-big bang cosmological scenarios is subject to a
gravitational wave instability. The unstable behaviour of tensor perturbations
is derived in a very simple way in Hwang's covariant and gauge-invariant
formalism developed for extended theories of gravity. A simple interpretation
of this instability as the effect of an "antifriction" is given, and it is
argued that a universe must eventually enter the expanding phase.Comment: 4 pages, latex, to appear in Eur. Phys. J.
CO2 removal by solid amine sorbents. 1: Experimental studies of amine resin IR-45 with regard to spacecraft applications. 2: Computer program for predicting the transient performance of solid amine sorbent systems
The sorbent behavior of solid amine resin IR-45 with regard to potential use in regenerative CO2-removal systems for manned spacecraft is considered. Measurements of equilibrium sorption capacity of IR-45 for water and for CO2 are reported, and the dynamic mass transfer behavior of IR-45 beds is studied under conditions representative of those expected in a manned spacecraft. A digital computer program was written for the transient performance prediction of CO2 removal systems comprised of solid amine beds. Also evaluated are systems employing inorganic molecular-sieve sorbents. Tests show that there is definitely an effect of water loading on the absorption rate
Rotation misorientated graphene moire superlattices on Cu(111): classical molecular dynamics simulations and scanning tunneling microscopy studies
Graphene on copper is a system of high technological relevance, as Cu is one
of the most widely used substrates for the CVD growth of graphene. However,
very little is known about the details of their interaction. One approach to
gain such information is studying the superlattices emerging due to the
mismatch of the two crystal lattices. However, graphene on copper is a
low-corrugated system making both their experimental and theoretical study
highly challenging. Here, we report the observation of a new rotational Moire
superlattice of CVD graphene on Cu (111), characterized by a periodicity of
nm and corrugation of , as measured
by Scanning Tunneling Microscopy. To understand the observed superlattice we
have developed a newly parameterized Tersoff-potential for the graphene/Cu
(111) interface fitted to nonlocal van der Waals density functional theory
(DFT) calculations. The interfacial force field with time-lapsed CMD provides
superlattices in good quantitative agreement with the experimental results, for
a misorientation angle of without any further parameter
adjustment. Furthermore, the CMD simulations predict the existence of two
non-equivalent high-symmetry directions of the Moir\'e pattern that could also
be identified in the experimental STM images.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, 2 table
Light bulb heat exchanger for magnetohydrodynamic generator applications - Preliminary evaluation
The light-bulb heat-exchanger concept is investigated as a possible means of using a combustion heat source to supply energy to an inert gas MHD power generator system. In this concept, combustion gases flow through a central passage which consists of a duct with transparent walls through which heat is transferred by radiation to a radiation receiver which in turn heats the inert gas by convection. The effects of combustion-gas emissivity, transparent-wall-transmissivity, radiation-receiver emissivity, and the use of fins in the inert gas coolant passage are studied. The results indicate that inert gas outlet temperatures of 2500 K are possible for combustion temperatures of 3200 K and that sufficient energy can be transferred from the combustion gas to reduce its temperature to approximately 2000 K. At this temperature more conventional heat exchangers can be used
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Tuning magnetic anisotropy of epitaxial Ag/Fe/Fe0.5Co0.5/MgO(001) films
Single crystalline Ag/Fe/Fe0.5Co0.5/MgO(001) films were grown by Molecular Beam Epitaxy and investigated by Magneto-Optic Kerr Effect (MOKE). We find that even though the 4-fold magnetic anisotropies of Ag/Fe/MgO(001) and Ag/Fe0.5Co0.5/MgO(001) films are different from the corresponding bulk values, their opposite signs allow a fine tuning of the 4-fold magnetic anisotropy in Ag/Fe/Fe0.5Co0.5/MgO(001) films by varying the Fe and Fe0.5Co0.5 film thicknesses. In particular, the critical point of zero anisotropy can be achieved in a wide range of film thicknesses. Using Rotational MOKE, we determined and constructed the anisotropy phase diagram in the Fe and Fe0.5Co0.5 thickness plane from which the zero anisotropy exhibits a linear relation between the Fe and Fe0.5Co0.5 thickness
The Origin of Structures in Generalized Gravity
In a class of generalized gravity theories with general couplings between the
scalar field and the scalar curvature in the Lagrangian, we can describe the
quantum generation and the classical evolution of both the scalar and tensor
structures in a simple and unified manner. An accelerated expansion phase based
on the generalized gravity in the early universe drives microscopic quantum
fluctuations inside a causal domain to expand into macroscopic ripples in the
spacetime metric on scales larger than the local horizon. Following their
generation from quantum fluctuations, the ripples in the metric spend a long
period outside the causal domain. During this phase their evolution is
characterized by their conserved amplitudes. The evolution of these
fluctuations may lead to the observed large scale structures of the universe
and anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background radiation.Comment: 5 pages, latex, no figur
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