8,876 research outputs found
The shape of a photon
The purpose of this research is to use quantum operators, known as ‘Dimensional Gate Operator’ (DGO) as a means of investigating the properties of quantum wave functions; in this case the shape of the wave function of light
Limit curve theorems in Lorentzian geometry
The subject of limit curve theorems in Lorentzian geometry is reviewed. A
general limit curve theorem is formulated which includes the case of converging
curves with endpoints and the case in which the limit points assigned since the
beginning are one, two or at most denumerable. Some applications are
considered. It is proved that in chronological spacetimes, strong causality is
either everywhere verified or everywhere violated on maximizing lightlike
segments with open domain. As a consequence, if in a chronological spacetime
two distinct lightlike lines intersect each other then strong causality holds
at their points. Finally, it is proved that two distinct components of the
chronology violating set have disjoint closures or there is a lightlike line
passing through each point of the intersection of the corresponding boundaries.Comment: 25 pages, 1 figure. v2: Misprints fixed, matches published versio
The random phase approximation applied to ice
Standard density functionals without van der Waals interactions yield an
unsatisfactory description of ice phases, specifically, high density phases
occurring under pressure are too unstable compared to the common low density
phase I observed at ambient conditions. Although the description is
improved by using functionals that include van der Waals interactions, the
errors in relative volumes remain sizable. Here we assess the random phase
approximation (RPA) for the correlation energy and compare our results to
experimental data as well as diffusion Monte Carlo data for ice. The RPA yields
a very balanced description for all considered phases, approaching the accuracy
of diffusion Monte Carlo in relative energies and volumes. This opens a route
towards a concise description of molecular water phases on surfaces and in
cavities
Characterisation of dendritic cells arising from progenitors endogenous to murine spleen
Heterogeneity amongst dendritic cell (DC) subsets leads to a spectrum of immune response capacity against pathogens. Several DC subsets in spleen have been described which differ in terms of phenotype and function. We have previously reported a distinct population of CD11c(lo)CD11b(hi)MHC-II(-)CD8(-) dendritic-like "L-DC" in murine spleen, which can also be generated in splenic stromal longterm cultures. Here, the ontogeny of L-DC development in perinatal mice has been compared with other known splenic DC subsets. Flow cytometric analysis has revealed the presence of L-DC at embryonic age (E)18.5 spleen, while plasmacytoid (p)DC and conventional (c)DC appear at 2 and 4 days following birth. Co-cultures of E18.5 spleen above splenic stroma also showed production of only L-DC, while spleen cells from D0 through D5 neonates showed production of both L-DC and cDC-like cells. Addition of an M-CSFR inhibitor to co-cultures revealed that while the development of cDC-like cells depended on M-CSF, many L-DC developed independently of M-CSF. Furthermore, purified hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) and multipotential progenitors (MPP) isolated from neonatal D1 spleen are capable of developing into L-DC in co-cultures. These studies reveal a lineage of dendritic-like cells developing in the spleen microenvironment, and which appear to arise from endogenous progenitors laid down in spleen during embryogenesis.This work was supported by project grant #585443 to H.C.O. from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia. S.P. was supported
by a graduate scholarship from the Royal Thai Government.
Band gap control via tuning of inversion degree in CdInS spinel
Based on theoretical arguments we propose a possible route for controlling
the band-gap in the promising photovoltaic material CdInS. Our
\textit{ab initio} calculations show that the experimental degree of inversion
in this spinel (fraction of tetrahedral sites occupied by In) corresponds
approximately to the equilibrium value given by the minimum of the theoretical
inversion free energy at a typical synthesis temperature. Modification of this
temperature, or of the cooling rate after synthesis, is then expected to change
the inversion degree, which in turn sensitively tunes the electronic band-gap
of the solid, as shown here by accurate screened hybrid functional
calculations.Comment: In press in Applied Physics Letters (2012); 4 pages, 2 figures, 1
tabl
Mean curvature flow and quasilocal mass for two-surfaces in Hamiltonian General Relativity
A family of quasilocal mass definitions that includes as special cases the
Hawking mass and the Brown-York ``rest mass'' energy is derived for spacelike
2-surfaces in spacetime. The definitions involve an integral of powers of the
norm of the spacetime mean curvature vector of the 2-surface, whose properties
are connected with apparent horizons. In particular, for any spacelike
2-surface, the direction of mean curvature is orthogonal (dual in the normal
space) to a unique normal direction in which the 2-surface has vanishing
expansion in spacetime. The quasilocal mass definitions are obtained by an
analysis of boundary terms arising in the gravitational ADM Hamiltonian on
hypersurfaces with a spacelike 2-surface boundary, using a geometric time-flow
chosen proportional to the dualized mean curvature vector field at the boundary
surface. A similar analysis is made choosing a geometric rotational flow given
in terms of the twist covector of the dual pair of mean curvature vector
fields, which leads to a family of quasilocal angular momentum definitions
involving the squared norm of the twist. The large sphere limit of these
definitions is shown to yield the ADM mass and angular momentum in
asymptotically flat spacetimes, while at apparent horizons a quasilocal version
of the Gibbons-Penrose inequality is derived. Finally, some results concerning
positivity are proved for the quasilocal masses, motivated by consideration of
spacelike mean curvature flow of 2-surfaces in spacetime.Comment: Revised version, includes an analysis of null flows with applications
to mass and angular momentum for apparent horizon
Unsteady flow around a Rectangular Cylinder
This paper describes an investigation into the unsteady flow behaviour around a rectangular cylinder using particle image velocimetry (PIV). Instantaneous and average velocity fields were obtained from PIV images. Analysis of the structures observed in the instantaneous velocity fields reveals the presence of small scale (Kelvin-Helmholtz) vortex structures in the shear layer that separates at the leading edge of the rectangular cylinder, and evidence of von Karman vortex shedding was observed in the wake region
Magnification relations for Kerr lensing and testing Cosmic Censorship
A Kerr black hole with mass parameter m and angular momentum parameter a
acting as a gravitational lens gives rise to two images in the weak field
limit. We study the corresponding magnification relations, namely the signed
and absolute magnification sums and the centroid up to post-Newtonian order. We
show that there are post-Newtonian corrections to the total absolute
magnification and centroid proportional to a/m, which is in contrast to the
spherically symmetric case where such corrections vanish. Hence we also propose
a new set of lensing observables for the two images involving these
corrections, which should allow measuring a/m with gravitational lensing. In
fact, the resolution capabilities needed to observe this for the Galactic black
hole should in principle be accessible to current and near-future
instrumentation. Since a/m >1 indicates a naked singularity, a most interesting
application would be a test of the Cosmic Censorship conjecture. The technique
used to derive the image properties is based on the degeneracy of the Kerr lens
and a suitably displaced Schwarzschild lens at post-Newtonian order. A simple
physical explanation for this degeneracy is also given.Comment: 13 pages, version 2: references added, minor changes. To appear in
Phys. Rev.
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