3,498 research outputs found
Lagrangian modelling of frazil ice in the ocean
A new modelling framework using Lagrangian particle tracking has been developed to assess dynamic and thermodynamic effects of underwater frazil ice. This frazil-ice model treats a Lagrangian particle as a bulk cluster of many frazil crystals, and calculates the thermodynamic growth of each particle and the corresponding budget of latent heat and fresh water. The effective density and viscosity of sea water depend on the mass fraction of underwater frazil ice, and hence affect ocean convection. An idealized experiment using our model successfully reproduces the formation of underwater frazil ice and its transition to grease ice at the surface. Because underwater frazil ice does not reduce the atmosphere/ocean heat exchange, surface heat flux and net sea-ice production in the experiment with frazil ice are relatively high compared with the experiment where surface cooling directly leads to columnar growth of a solid ice cover which effectively insulates the heat flux. These results suggest that large-scale sea-ice models which do not take account of the effects of frazil ice might underestimate atmosphere/ocean heat exchange, particularly at times of active new ice formation
Kodaira-Spencer formality of products of complex manifolds
We shall say that a complex manifold is emph{Kodaira-Spencer formal} if its Kodaira-Spencer differential graded Lie algebra
is formal; if this happen, then the deformation theory of
is completely determined by the graded Lie algebra and the base space of the semiuniversal deformation is a quadratic singularity..
Determine when a complex manifold is Kodaira-Spencer formal is generally difficult and
we actually know only a limited class of cases where this happen. Among such examples we have
Riemann surfaces, projective spaces, holomorphic Poisson manifolds with surjective anchor map
and every compact K"{a}hler manifold with trivial or torsion canonical
bundle.
In this short note we investigate the behavior of this property under finite products. Let be compact complex manifolds; we prove that whenever and are
K"{a}hler, then is Kodaira-Spencer formal if and only if the same
holds for and . A revisit of a classical example by Douady shows that the above result fails if the K"{a}hler assumption is droppe
On higher congruences between cusp forms and Eisenstein series
In this paper we present several finite families of congruences between cusp
forms and Eisenstein series of higher weights at powers of prime ideals. We
formulate a conjecture which describes properties of the prime ideals and their
relation to the weights. We check the validity of the conjecture on several
numerical examples.Comment: 20 page
Magnetic order in the quasi-two-dimensional easy-plane XXZ model
A Green's-function theory of antiferromagnetic short-range and long-range
order (LRO) in the quasi-two-dimensional easy-plane XXZ model is
presented. As the main new result, {\it two} phase transitions due to the
combined influence of spatial and spin anisotropy are found, where below the
higher and lower N\'{e}el temperature there occurs LRO in the transverse and in
both the transverse and longitudinal spin correlators, respectively. Comparing
the theory with neutron-scattering data for the correlation length of , a very good agreement in the whole temperature dependence is
obtained. Moreover, for , , and the second phase with longitudinal LRO is predicted to
appear far below room temperature.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
The Origin of Jovian Planets in Protostellar Disks: The Role of Dead Zones
The final masses of Jovian planets are attained when the tidal torques that
they exert on their surrounding protostellar disks are sufficient to open gaps
in the face of disk viscosity, thereby shutting off any further accretion. In
sufficiently well-ionized disks, the predominant form of disk viscosity
originates from the Magneto-Rotational Instability (MRI) that drives
hydromagnetic disk turbulence. In the region of sufficiently low ionization
rate -- the so-called dead zone -- turbulence is damped and we show that lower
mass planets will be formed. We considered three ionization sources (X-rays,
cosmic rays, and radioactive elements) and determined the size of a dead zone
for the total ionization rate by using a radiative, hydrostatic equilibrium
disk model developed by Chiang et al. (2001). We studied a range of surface
mass density (Sigma_{0}=10^3 - 10^5 g cm^{-2}) and X-ray energy (kT_{x}=1 - 10
keV). We also compared the ionization rate of such a disk by X-rays with cosmic
rays and find that the latter dominate X-rays in ionizing protostellar disks
unless the X-ray energy is very high (5 - 10 keV). Among our major conclusions
are that for typical conditions, dead zones encompass a region extending out to
several AU -- the region in which terrestrial planets are found in our solar
system. Our results suggest that the division between low and high mass planets
in exosolar planetary systems is a consequence of the presence of a dead zone
in their natal protoplanetary disks. We also find that the extent of a dead
zone is mainly dependent on the disk's surface mass density. Our results
provide further support for the idea that Jovian planets in exosolar systems
must have migrated substantially inwards from their points of origin.Comment: 28 pages, 10 figures, accepted by Ap
Numerical Simulations of N=(1,1) SYM{1+1} with Large Supersymmetry Breaking
We consider the SYM theory that is obtained by dimensionally
reducing SYM theory in 2+1 dimensions to 1+1 dimensions and discuss soft
supersymmetry breaking. We discuss the numerical simulation of this theory
using SDLCQ when either the boson or the fermion has a large mass. We compare
our result to the pure adjoint fermion theory and pure adjoint boson DLCQ
calculations of Klebanov, Demeterfi, and Bhanot and of Kutasov. With a large
boson mass we find that it is necessary to add additional operators to the
theory to obtain sensible results. When a large fermion mass is added to the
theory we find that it is not necessary to add operators to obtain a sensible
theory. The theory of the adjoint boson is a theory that has stringy bound
states similar to the full SYM theory. We also discuss another theory of
adjoint bosons with a spectrum similar to that obtained by Klebanov, Demeterfi,
and Bhanot.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Vacuum Structures of Supersymmetric Yang-Mills Theories in Dimensions
Vacuum structures of supersymmetric (SUSY) Yang-Mills theories in
dimensions are studied with the spatial direction compactified. SUSY allows
only periodic boundary conditions for both fermions and bosons. By using the
Born-Oppenheimer approximation for the weak coupling limit, we find that the
vacuum energy vanishes, and hence the SUSY is unbroken. Other boundary
conditions are also studied, especially the antiperiodic boundary condition for
fermions which is related to the system in finite temperatures. In that case we
find for gaugino bilinears a nonvanishing vacuum condensation which indicates
instanton contributions.Comment: LaTeX file, 25 page, 3 eps figure, some references adde
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