765 research outputs found
Confronting Neutron Star Cooling Theories with New Observations
With the successful launch of Chandra and XMM/Newton X-ray space missions
combined with the lower-energy band observations, we are in the position where
careful comparison of neutron star cooling theories with observations will make
it possible to distinguish among various competing theories. For instance, the
latest theoretical and observational developments already exclude both nucleon
and kaon direct URCA cooling. In this way we can now have realistic hope for
determining various important properties, such as the composition, degree of
superfluidity, the equation of state and steller radius. These developments
should help us obtain better insight into the properties of dense matter.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur
Phase diagram at finite temperature and quark density in the strong coupling limit of lattice QCD for color SU(3)
We study the phase diagram of quark matter at finite temperature (T) and
finite chemical potential (mu) in the strong coupling limit of lattice QCD for
color SU(3). We derive an analytical expression of the effective free energy as
a function of T and mu, including baryon effects. The finite temperature
effects are evaluated by integrating over the temporal link variable exactly in
the Polyakov gauge with anti-periodic boundary condition for fermions. The
obtained phase diagram shows the first order phase transition at low
temperatures and the second order phase transition at high temperatures
separated by the tri-critical point in the chiral limit. Baryon has effects to
reduce the effective free energy and to extend the hadron phase to a larger mu
direction at low temperatures.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figure
An accretion model for the growth of the central black hole associated with ionization instability in quasars
A possible accretion model associated with the ionization instability of
quasar disks is proposed to address the growth of the central black hole
harbored in the host galaxy.The mass ratio between black hole and its host
galactic bulge is a nature consequence of our model.Comment: submitted to ApJ, 15 page
Isothermal Shock Formation in Non-Equatorial Accretion Flows around Kerr Black Holes
We explore isothermal shock formation in non-equatorial, adiabatic accretion
flows onto a rotating black hole, with possible application to some active
galactic nuclei (AGNs). The isothermal shock jump conditions as well as the
regularity condition, previously developed for one-dimensional (1D) flows in
the equatorial plane, are extended to two-dimensional (2D), non-equatorial
flows, to explore possible geometrical effects. The basic hydrodynamic
equations with these conditions are self-consistently solved in the context of
general relativity to explore the formation of stable isothermal shocks. We
find that strong shocks are formed in various locations above the equatorial
plane, especially around a rapidly-rotating black hole with the prograde flows
(rather than a Schwarzschild black hole). The retrograde flows are generally
found to develop weaker shocks. The energy dissipation across the shock in the
hot non-equatorial flows above the cooler accretion disk may offer an
attractive illuminating source for the reprocessed features, such as the iron
fluorescence lines, which are often observed in some AGNs.Comment: 22 pages with 11 figures, presented at 5th international conference
on high energy density laboratory astrophysics in Tucson, Arizona. accepted
to Ap
Superfluid Friction and Late-time Thermal Evolution of Neutron Stars
The recent temperature measurements of the two older isolated neutron stars
PSR 1929+10 and PSR 0950+08 (ages of and yr,
respectively) indicate that these objects are heated. A promising candidate
heat source is friction between the neutron star crust and the superfluid it is
thought to contain. We study the effects of superfluid friction on the
long-term thermal and rotational evolution of a neutron star. Differential
rotation velocities between the superfluid and the crust (averaged over the
inner crust moment of inertia) of rad s for PSR
1929+10 and rad s for PSR 0950+08 would account for their
observed temperatures. These differential velocities could be sustained by
pinning of superfluid vortices to the inner crust lattice with strengths of
1 MeV per nucleus. Pinned vortices can creep outward through thermal
fluctuations or quantum tunneling. For thermally-activated creep, the coupling
between the superfluid and crust is highly sensitive to temperature. If pinning
maintains large differential rotation ( rad s), a feedback
instability could occur in stars younger than yr causing
oscillations of the temperature and spin-down rate over a period of . For stars older than yr, however, vortex creep occurs
through quantum tunneling, and the creep velocity is too insensitive to
temperature for a thermal-rotational instability to occur. These older stars
could be heated through a steady process of superfluid friction.Comment: 26 pages, 1 figure, submitted to Ap
Molecular Acoustic Angiography: A New Technique for High-resolution Superharmonic Ultrasound Molecular Imaging
Ultrasound molecular imaging utilizes targeted microbubbles to bind to vascular targets such as integrins, selectins, and other extracellular binding domains. After binding, these microbubbles are typically imaged using low pressures and multi-pulse imaging sequences. In this article, we present an alternative approach for molecular imaging using ultrasound which relies on superharmonic signals produced by microbubble contrast agents. Bound bubbles were insonified near resonance using a low frequency (4 MHz) and superharmonic echoes were received at high frequencies (25â30 MHz). While this approach was observed to produce declining image intensity during repeated imaging in both in vitro and in vivo experiments due to bubble destruction, the feasibility of superharmonic molecular imaging was demonstrated for transmit pressures which are sufficiently high to induce shell disruption in bound microbubbles. This approach was validated using microbubbles targeted to the αvÎČ3 integrin in a rat fibrosarcoma model (n=5), and combined with superharmonic images of free microbubbles to produce high contrast, high resolution 3D volumes of both microvascular anatomy and molecular targeting. Image intensity over repeated scans and the effect of microbubble diameter were also assessed in vivo, indicating that larger microbubbles yield increased persistence in image intensity. Using ultrasound-based acoustic angiography images rather than conventional B-mode ultrasound to provide the underlying anatomical information facilitates anatomical localization of molecular markers. Quantitative analysis of relationships between microvasculature and targeting information indicated that most targeting occurred within 50 ”m of a resolvable vessel (>100 ”m diameter). The combined information provided by these scans may present new opportunities for analyzing relationships between microvascular anatomy and vascular targets, subject only to limitations of the current mechanically-scanned system and microbubble persistence to repeated imaging at moderate mechanical indices
Quadrupole Susceptibility and Elastic Softening due to a Vacancy in Silicon Crystal
We investigate the electronic states around a single vacancy in silicon
crystal by using the Green's function approach. The triply degenerate vacancy
states within the band gap are found to be extended over a large distance
from the vacancy site and contribute to the reciprocal
temperature dependence of the quadrupole susceptibility resulting in the
elastic softening at low temperture. The Curie constant of the quadrupole
susceptibility for the trigonal mode () is largely
enhanced as compared to that for the tetragonal mode ().
The obtained results are consistent with the recent ultrasonic experiments in
silicon crystal down to 20 mK. We also calculate the dipole and octupole
susceptibilities and find that the octupole susceptibilities are extremely
enhannced for a specific mode.Comment: 6 pages, with 5 figure
XMM-Newton observations of the Vela pulsar
We present spectral analysis from XMM-Newton observations of the Vela pulsar.
We analyzed thermal emission from the pulsar dominating below ~ 1 keV since
extracted spectra are heavily contaminated by nebular emission at higher
energy. Featureless high-resolution spectra of the Reflection Grating
Spectrometer aboard XMM-Newton suggest the presence of a hydrogen atmosphere,
as previously indicated by Chandra results. Both the temperature and radius are
consistent with those values deduced from Chandra. The derived Chandra and
XMM-Newton temperature of T^{\infty} ~ (6.4-7.1)*10^5 K at its age of ~10^4
years is below the standard cooling curve.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Adv Sp Res:
Proceedings of the 34th COSPAR Scientific Assembl
VICA, a visual counseling agent for emotional distress
We present VICA, a Visual Counseling Agent designed to create an engaging multimedia face-to-face interaction. VICA is a human-friendly agent equipped with high-performance voice conversation designed to help psychologically stressed users, to offload their emotional burden. Such users specifically include non-computer-savvy elderly persons or clients. Our agent builds replies exploiting interlocutor\u2019s utterances expressing such as wishes, obstacles, emotions, etc. Statements asking for confirmation, details, emotional summary, or relations among such expressions are added to the utterances. We claim that VICA is suitable for positive counseling scenarios where multimedia specifically high-performance voice communication is instrumental for even the old or digital divided users to continue dialogue towards their self-awareness. To prove this claim, VICA\u2019s effect is evaluated with respect to a previous text-based counseling agent CRECA and ELIZA including its successors. An experiment involving 14 subjects shows VICA effects as follows: (i) the dialogue continuation (CPS: Conversation-turns Per Session) of VICA for the older half (age > 40) substantially improved 53% to CRECA and 71% to ELIZA. (ii) VICA\u2019s capability to foster peace of mind and other positive feelings was assessed with a very high score of 5 or 6 mostly, out of 7 stages of the Likert scale, again by the older. Compared on average, such capability of VICA for the older is 5.14 while CRECA (all subjects are young students, age < 25) is 4.50, ELIZA is 3.50, and the best of ELIZA\u2019s successors for the older (> 25) is 4.41
Effects of Uniaxial Stress on Antiferromagnetic Moment in the Heavy Electron Compound URu_2Si_2
We have performed the elastic neutron scattering experiments under uniaxial
stress \sigma along the tetragonal [100], [110] and [001] directions for
URu2Si2. For \sigma // [100] and [110], the antiferromagnetic moment \mu_o is
strongly enhanced from 0.02 \mu_B (\sigma=0) to 0.22 \mu_B (\sigma=2.5 kbar) at
1.5 K. The rate of increase d\mu_o/d\sigma is roughly estimated to be ~ 0.1
\mu_B/kbar, which is much larger than that for the hydrostatic pressure (~
0.025 \mu_B/kbar). Above 2.5 kbar, \mu_o shows a tendency to saturate similar
to the behavior in the hydrostatic pressure. For \sigma // [001], on the other
hand, \mu_o shows only a slight increase to 0.028 \mu_B (\sigma = 4.6 kbar)
with a rate of ~ 0.002 \mu_B/kbar. The observed anisotropy suggests that the
competition between the hidden order and the antiferromagnetic state in URu2Si2
is strongly coupled with the tetragonal four-fold symmetry and the c/a ratio,
or both.Comment: 3 pages, 3 eps figures, Proceedings of Int. Conf. on Strongly
Correlated Electrons with Orbital Degrees of Freedom (Sendai, Japan,
September 11-14, 2001
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