12,895 research outputs found
A decades-long fast-rise-exponential-decay flare in low-luminosity AGN NGC 7213
We analysed the four-decades-long X-ray light curve of the low-luminosity
active galactic nucleus (LLAGN) NGC 7213 and discovered a
fast-rise-exponential-decay (FRED) pattern, i.e. the X-ray luminosity increased
by a factor of within 200d, and then decreased exponentially with
an -folding time d ( yr). For the theoretical
understanding of the observations, we examined three variability models
proposed in the literature: the thermal-viscous disc instability model, the
radiation pressure instability model, and the tidal disruption event (TDE)
model. We find that a delayed tidal disruption of a main-sequence star is most
favourable; either the thermal-viscous disk instability model or radiation
pressure instability model fails to explain some key properties observed, thus
we argue them unlikely.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, updated version after proof
correction
Localized direct CP violation in
We study the localized direct CP violation in the hadronic decays
,
including the effect caused by an interesting mechanism involving the charge
symmetry violating mixing between and . We calculate the
localized integrated direct CP violation when the low invariant mass of
[] is near . For five models of
form factors investigated, we find that the localized integrated direct CP
violation varies from -0.0170 to -0.0860 in the ranges of parameters in our
model when \,GeV. This result, especially the
sign, agrees with the experimental data and is independent of form factor
models. The new experimental data shows that the signs of the localized
integrated CP asymmetries in the regions \,GeV
and \,GeV are positive and negative,
respectively. We find that - mixing makes the localized
integrated CP asymmetry move towards the negative direction, and therefore
contributes to the sign change in those two regions. This behavior is also
model independent. We also calculate the localized integrated direct CP
violating asymmetries in the regions \,GeV and
\,GeV and find that they agree with the
experimental data in some models of form factors.Comment: 22 pages, 2 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:hep-ph/0602043, arXiv:hep-ph/0302156 by other author
Coil-to-globule transition by dissipative particle dynamics simulation
The dynamics of a collapsing polymer under a temperature quench in dilute solution is investigated by dissipative particles dynamics. Hydrodynamic interactions and many-body interaction are preserved naturally by incorporating explicit solvent particles in this approach. Our simulation suggests a four-stage collapse pathway: localized clusters formation, cluster coarsening in situ, coarsening involving global backbone conformation change into a crumpled globule, and compaction of the globule. For all the quench depths and chain lengths used in our study, collapse proceeds without the chain getting trapped in a metastable “sausage” configuration, as reported in some earlier studies. We obtain the time scales for each of the first three stages, as well as its scaling with the quench depths ξ and chain lengths N. The total collapse time scales as τ_c ~ ξ^(−0.46 ± 0.04)N^(0.98 ± 0.09), with the quench depth and degree of polymerization
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