6,344 research outputs found
On the Detectability of Oxygen X-ray Fluorescence and its Use as a Solar Photospheric Abundance Diagnostic
Monte Carlo calculations of the O Kalpha line fluoresced by coronal X-rays
and emitted just above the temperature minimum region of the solar atmosphere
have been employed to investigate the use of this feature as an abundance
diagnostic. While quite weak, we estimate line equivalent widths in the range
0.02-0.2 AA, depending on the X-ray plasma temperature. The line remains
essentially uncontaminated by blends for coronal temperatures T =< 3e6 K and
should be quite observable, with a flux >~ 2 ph/s/arcmin^2. Model calculations
for solar chemical mixtures with an O abundance adjusted up and down by a
factor of 2 indicate 35-60% changes in O Kalpha line equivalent width,
providing a potentially useful O abundance diagnostic. Sensitivity of
equivalent width to differences between recently recommended chemical
compositions with ``high'' and ``low'' complements of the CNO trio important
for interpreting helioseismological observations is less accute, amounting to
20-26% at coronal temperatures T ~< 2e6 K. While still feasible for
discriminating between these two mixtures, uncertainties in measured line
equivalent widths and in the models used for interpretation would need to be
significantly less than 20%. Provided a sensitive X-ray spectrometer with
resolving power >= 1000 and suitably well-behaved instrumental profile can be
built, X-ray fluorescence presents a viable means for resolving the solar
``oxygen crisis''.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journa
Complete One-Loop Renormalization of the Higgs-Electroweak Chiral Lagrangian
Employing background-field method and super-heat-kernel expansion, we compute
the complete one-loop renormalization of the electroweak chiral Lagrangian with
a light Higgs boson. Earlier results from purely scalar fluctuations are
confirmed as a special case. We also recover the one-loop renormalization of
the conventional Standard Model in the appropriate limit.Comment: 15 pages, no figures; v2: reference and comments added, typos fixed,
matches published versio
Absorptive part of meson--baryon scattering amplitude and baryon polarization in chiral perturbation theory
We compute the spin asymmetry and polarization of the final-state baryon in
its rest frame in two-body meson--baryon low-energy scattering with unpolarized
initial state, to lowest non-trivial order in BChPT. The required absorptive
amplitudes are obtained analytically at one-loop level. We discuss the
polarization results numerically for several meson--baryon processes. Even at
low energies above threshold, where BChPT can reasonably be expected to be
applicable, sizable values of polarization are found for some processes
K-Shell Auger Spectrum Of Atomic Oxygen
We have observed the K-shell Auger spectrum in atomic oxygen. A total of ten transitions originating from the decay of the 4P and 2P states of the O+(1s-1) ion are identified and assigned to final states of the O2+ ion. Relative intensities for each of these transitions are obtained, allowing the extraction of the dependence of the Auger decay on the multiplet structure in both the initial and final states of this basic open-shell atom
Vacancy complexes in nonequilibrium germanium-tin semiconductors
Understanding the nature and behavior of vacancy-like defects in epitaxial
GeSn metastable alloys is crucial to elucidate the structural and
optoelectronic properties of these emerging semiconductors. The formation of
vacancies and their complexes is expected to be promoted by the relatively low
substrate temperature required for the epitaxial growth of GeSn layers with Sn
contents significantly above the equilibrium solubility of 1 at.%. These
defects can impact both the microstructure and charge carrier lifetime. Herein,
to identify the vacancy-related complexes and probe their evolution as a
function of Sn content, depth-profiled pulsed low-energy positron annihilation
lifetime spectroscopy and Doppler broadening spectroscopy were combined to
investigate GeSn epitaxial layers with Sn content in the 6.5-13.0 at.% range.
The samples were grown by chemical vapor deposition method at temperatures
between 300 and 330 {\deg}C. Regardless of the Sn content, all GeSn samples
showed the same depth-dependent increase in the positron annihilation line
broadening parameters, which confirmed the presence of open volume defects. The
measured average positron lifetimes were the highest (380-395 ps) in the region
near the surface and monotonically decrease across the analyzed thickness, but
remain above 350 ps. All GeSn layers exhibit lifetimes that are 85 to 110 ps
higher than the Ge reference layers. Surprisingly, these lifetimes were found
to decrease as Sn content increases in GeSn layers. These measurements indicate
that divacancies are the dominant defect in the as-grown GeSn layers. However,
their corresponding lifetime was found to be shorter than in epitaxial Ge thus
suggesting that the presence of Sn may alter the structure of divacancies.
Additionally, GeSn layers were found to also contain a small fraction of
vacancy clusters, which become less important as Sn content increases
The Earliest Phases of Star formation (EPoS): Temperature, density, and kinematic structure of the star-forming core CB 17
Context: The initial conditions for the gravitational collapse of molecular
cloud cores and the subsequent birth of stars are still not well constrained.
The characteristic cold temperatures (about 10 K) in such regions require
observations at sub-millimetre and longer wavelengths. The Herschel Space
Observatory and complementary ground-based observations presented in this paper
have the unprecedented potential to reveal the structure and kinematics of a
prototypical core region at the onset of stellar birth.
Aims: This paper aims to determine the density, temperature, and velocity
structure of the star-forming Bok globule CB 17. This isolated region is known
to host (at least) two sources at different evolutionary stages: a dense core,
SMM1, and a Class I protostar, IRS.
Methods: We modeled the cold dust emission maps from 100 micron to 1.2 mm
with both a modified blackbody technique to determine the optical
depth-weighted line-of-sight temperature and column density and a ray-tracing
technique to determine the core temperature and volume density structure.
Furthermore, we analysed the kinematics of CB17 using the high-density gas
tracer N2H+.
Results: From the ray-tracing analysis, we find a temperature in the centre
of SMM1 of 10.6 K, a flat density profile with radius 9500 au, and a central
volume density of n(H) = 2.3x10^5 cm-3. The velocity structure of the N2H+
observations reveal global rotation with a velocity gradient of 4.3 km/s/pc.
Superposed on this rotation signature we find a more complex velocity field,
which may be indicative of differential motions within the dense core.
Conclusions: SMM is a core in an early evolutionary stage at the verge of
being bound, but the question of whether it is a starless or a protostellar
core remains unanswered.Comment: published in A&
Dynamo effect in parity-invariant flow with large and moderate separation of scales
It is shown that non-helical (more precisely, parity-invariant) flows capable
of sustaining a large-scale dynamo by the negative magnetic eddy diffusivity
effect are quite common. This conclusion is based on numerical examination of a
large number of randomly selected flows. Few outliers with strongly negative
eddy diffusivities are also found, and they are interpreted in terms of the
closeness of the control parameter to a critical value for generation of a
small-scale magnetic field. Furthermore, it is shown that, for parity-invariant
flows, a moderate separation of scales between the basic flow and the magnetic
field often significantly reduces the critical magnetic Reynolds number for the
onset of dynamo action.Comment: 44 pages,11 figures, significantly revised versio
Magnetic Excitations in La2CuO4 probed by Indirect Resonant Inelastic X-ray Scattering
Recent experiments on LaCuO suggest that indirect resonant inelastic
X-ray scattering (RIXS) might provide a probe for transversal spin dynamics. We
present in detail a systematic expansion of the relevant magnetic RIXS cross
section by using the ultrashort core-hole lifetime (UCL) approximation. We
compute the scattering intensity and its momentum dependence in leading order
of the UCL expansion. The scattering is due to two-magnon processes and is
calculated within a linear spin-wave expansion of the Heisenberg spin model for
this compound, including longer range and cyclic spin interactions. We observe
that the latter terms in the Hamiltonian enhance the first moment of the
spectrum if they strengthen the antiferromagnetic ordering. The theoretical
spectra agree very well with experimental data, including the observation that
scattering intensity vanishes for the transferred momenta and
. We show that at finite temperature there is an
additional single-magnon contribution to the scattering with a spectral weight
proportional to . We also compute the leading corrections to the UCL
approximation and find them to be small, putting the UCL results on a solid
basis. All this univocally points to the conclusion that the observed low
temperature RIXS intensity in LaCuO is due to two-magnon scattering.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, Phys. Rev. B 77, 134428 (2008) (v4: corrected
figs 7
Rapid Profiling of Marine Notches Using a Handheld Laser Distance Meter
A rapid, single-user profiling method for rocky shores is described. The Leica Disto D8 handheld laser distance meter
measures distance up to 100 m and inclination in 360 degrees. It automatically calculates horizontal distance and vertical elevation. Memory storage accommodates data for 30 measurement points, allowing easy plotting of shore profiles. This technique allows even inaccessible, dangerous, and overhanging cliff faces to be evaluated faithfully and within minutes. It is a major improvement over standard methods that often involve risky coasteering and climbing. Examples are given from marine notches in Thailand
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