3,153 research outputs found
Representations of first order function types as terminal coalgebras
Cosmic rays provide an important source for free electrons in Earth's atmosphere and also in dense interstellar regions where they produce a prevailing background ionization. We utilize a Monte Carlo cosmic ray transport model for particle energies of 10(6) eV <E <10(9) eV, and an analytic cosmic ray transport model for particle energies of 10(9) eV <E <10(12) eV in order to investigate the cosmic ray enhancement of free electrons in substellar atmospheres of free-floating objects. The cosmic ray calculations are applied to Drift-Phoenix model atmospheres of an example brown dwarf with effective temperature T-eff = 1500 K, and two example giant gas planets (T-eff = 1000 K, 1500 K). For the model brown dwarf atmosphere, the electron fraction is enhanced significantly by cosmic rays when the pressure p(gas) <10(-2) bar. Our example giant gas planet atmosphere suggests that the cosmic ray enhancement extends to 10(-4)-10(-2) bar, depending on the effective temperature. For the model atmosphere of the example giant gas planet considered here (T-eff = 1000 K), cosmic rays bring the degree of ionization to f(e) greater than or similar to 10(-8) when p(gas) <10(-8) bar, suggesting that this part of the atmosphere may behave as a weakly ionized plasma. Although cosmic rays enhance the degree of ionization by over three orders of magnitude in the upper atmosphere, the effect is not likely to be significant enough for sustained coupling of the magnetic field to the gas.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Observing the Dimensionality of Our Parent Vacuum
It seems generic to have vacua with lower dimensionality than ours. We
consider the possibility that the observable universe originated in a
transition from one of these vacua. Such a universe has anisotropic spatial
curvature. This may be directly observable through its late-time effects on the
CMB if the last period of slow-roll inflation was not too long. These affect
the entire sky, leading to correlations which persist up to the highest CMB
multipoles, thus allowing a conclusive detection above cosmic variance.
Further, this anisotropic curvature causes different dimensions to expand at
different rates. This leads to other potentially observable signals including a
quadrupolar anisotropy in the CMB which limits the size of the curvature.
Conversely, if isotropic curvature is observed it may be evidence that our
parent vacuum was at least 3+1 dimensional. Such signals could reveal our
history of decompactification, providing evidence for the existence of vastly
different vacua.Comment: 30 pages, 2 figures. v2: minor changes to agree with published
versio
Directed percolation with incubation times
We introduce a model for directed percolation with a long-range temporal
diffusion, while the spatial diffusion is kept short ranged. In an
interpretation of directed percolation as an epidemic process, this
non-Markovian modification can be understood as incubation times, which are
distributed accordingly to a Levy distribution. We argue that the best approach
to find the effective action for this problem is through a generalization of
the Cardy-Sugar method, adding the non-Markovian features into the geometrical
properties of the lattice. We formulate a field theory for this problem and
renormalize it up to one loop in a perturbative expansion. We solve the various
technical difficulties that the integrations possess by means of an asymptotic
analysis of the divergences. We show the absence of field renormalization at
one-loop order, and we argue that this would be the case to all orders in
perturbation theory. Consequently, in addition to the characteristic scaling
relations of directed percolation, we find a scaling relation valid for the
critical exponents of this theory. In this universality class, the critical
exponents vary continuously with the Levy parameter.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures. v.2: minor correction
Long-range epidemic spreading with immunization
We study the phase transition between survival and extinction in an epidemic
process with long-range interactions and immunization. This model can be viewed
as the well-known general epidemic process (GEP) in which nearest-neighbor
interactions are replaced by Levy flights over distances r which are
distributed as P(r) ~ r^(-d-sigma). By extensive numerical simulations we
confirm previous field-theoretical results obtained by Janssen et al. [Eur.
Phys. J. B7, 137 (1999)].Comment: LaTeX, 14 pages, 4 eps figure
Scrape-off layer width of parallel heat flux on tokamak COMPASS
Edge plasmas in the divertor configuration were studied on the COMPASS tokamak. The dependence of the decay length of the parallel heat flux q|| was measured at different values of plasma current and line-averaged density. We have found that q|| decreases with both the plasma current and the line-averaged density, which is in agreement with previous results achieved on the JET tokamak
Social Work Should Be More Proactive in Addressing the Need to Plan for End of Life
Few people engage in planning for life’s end and the prevalence of preparedness is particularly low in ethnic communities. As a profession, social work is well equipped to help increase planning for life’s end and the care people wish to receive. However, the profession cannot simply defer to those in hospice and palliative care settings to address this issue. There is a need for earlier and equitable access to death preparation, and social workers can be instrumental in helping to insure equal opportunities for proactive planning for death. The ways social work may become more proactive in assisting individuals and families to prepare for the end-of-life are discussed
Contact processes with long-range interactions
A class of non-local contact processes is introduced and studied using
mean-field approximation and numerical simulations. In these processes
particles are created at a rate which decays algebraically with the distance
from the nearest particle. It is found that the transition into the absorbing
state is continuous and is characterized by continuously varying critical
exponents. This model differs from the previously studied non-local directed
percolation model, where particles are created by unrestricted Levy flights. It
is motivated by recent studies of non-equilibrium wetting indicating that this
type of non-local processes play a role in the unbinding transition. Other
non-local processes which have been suggested to exist within the context of
wetting are considered as well.Comment: Accepted with minor revisions by Journal of Statistical Mechanics:
Theory and experiment
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