14,800 research outputs found
Assessing electron heat flux dropouts as signatures of magnetic field line disconnection from the Sun
Suprathermal electrons focused along magnetic field lines, called the strahl, carry heat flux away from the Sun. Various factors can cause heat flux dropouts (HFDs), including times when the strahl almost vanishes. HFDs are a necessary but insufficient condition for detecting magnetic flux disconnected from the Sun. To quantitatively assess the fraction of HFDs which might be due to disconnected fields, we use four years of suprathermal electron data from the Wind spacecraft to perform a comprehensive survey of heat flux dropouts with durations greater than an hour. Eliminating periods within interplanetary coronal mass ejections or containing counterstreaming electrons, we find that only ∼10% of HFDs have signatures consistent with disconnected flux
The quantum ground state of self-organized atomic crystals in optical resonators
Cold atoms, driven by a laser and simultaneously coupled to the quantum field
of an optical resonator, can self-organize in periodic structures. These
structures are supported by the optical lattice, which emerges from the laser
light they scatter into the cavity mode, and form when the laser intensity
exceeds a threshold value. We study theoretically the quantum ground state of
these structures above the pump threshold of self-organization, by mapping the
atomic dynamics of the self-organized crystal to a Bose-Hubbard model. We find
that the quantum ground state of the self-organized structure can be the one of
a Mott-insulator or a superfluid, depending on the pump strength of the driving
laser. For very large pump strengths, where the intracavity intensity is
maximum and one would expect a Mott-insulator state, we find intervals of
parameters where the system is superfluid. These states could be realized in
existing experimental setups.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Stability of parallel/perpendicular domain boundaries in lamellar block copolymers under oscillatory shear
We introduce a model constitutive law for the dissipative stress tensor of
lamellar phases to account for low frequency and long wavelength flows. Given
the uniaxial symmetry of these phases, we argue that the stress tensor must be
the same as that of a nematic but with the local order parameter being the
slowly varying lamellar wavevector. This assumption leads to a dependence of
the effective dynamic viscosity on orientation of the lamellar phase. We then
consider a model configuration comprising a domain boundary separating
laterally unbounded domains of so called parallel and perpendicularly oriented
lamellae in a uniform, oscillatory, shear flow, and show that the configuration
can be hydrodynamically unstable for the constitutive law chosen. It is argued
that this instability and the secondary flows it creates can be used to infer a
possible mechanism for orientation selection in shear experiments.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figure
Orientation selection in lamellar phases by oscillatory shears
In order to address the selection mechanism that is responsible for the
unique lamellar orientation observed in block copolymers under oscillatory
shears, we use a constitutive law for the dissipative part of the stress tensor
that respects the uniaxial symmetry of a lamellar phase. An interface
separating two domains oriented parallel and perpendicular to the shear is
shown to be hydrodynamically unstable, a situation analogous to the thin layer
instability of stratified fluids under shear. The resulting secondary flows
break the degeneracy between parallel and perpendicular lamellar orientation,
leading to a preferred perpendicular orientation in certain ranges of
parameters of the polymer and of the shear.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Star Formation in Dwarf Galaxies
We explore mechanisms for the regulation of star formation in dwarf galaxies.
We concentrate primarily on a sample in the Virgo cluster, which has HI and
blue total photometry, for which we collected H data at the Wise
Observatory. We find that dwarf galaxies do not show the tight correlation of
the surface brightness of H (a star formation indicator) with the HI
surface density, or with the ratio of this density to a dynamical timescale, as
found for large disk or starburst galaxies. On the other hand, we find the
strongest correlation to be with the average blue surface brightness,
indicating the presence of a mechanism regulating the star formation by the
older (up to 1 Gyr) stellar population if present, or by the stellar population
already formed in the present burst.Comment: 15 pages (LATEX aasms4 style) and three postscript figures, accepted
for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
Low surface brightness galaxies mass profiles as a consequence of galactic evolution
This paper presents a principal components analysis of rotation curves from a
sample of low surface brightness galaxies. The physical meaning of the
principal components is investigated, and related to the intrinsic properties
of the galaxies. The rotation curves are re-scaled using the optical disk
scale, the resulting principal component decomposition demonstrates that the
whole sample is properly approximated using two components. The ratio of the
second to the first component is related to the halo steepness in the central
region, is correlated to the gas fraction in the galaxy, and is un-correlated
to other parameters. As a consequence the gas fraction appear as a fundamental
variable with respect to the galaxies rotation curves, and its correlation with
the halo steepness is especially important. Since the gas fraction is related
to the degree of galaxy evolution, it is very likely that the steepness of the
halo at the center is a consequence of galaxy evolution. More evolved galaxies
have shallower central profile and statistically less gas, most likely as a
consequence of more star formation and supernovae. The differences in
evolution, gas fractions and halo central steepness of the galaxies could be
due to the influence of different environments.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Using term clouds to represent segment-level semantic content of podcasts
Spoken audio, like any time-continuous medium, is notoriously difficult to browse or skim without support of an interface providing semantically annotated jump points to signal the user where to listen in. Creation of time-aligned metadata by human annotators is prohibitively expensive, motivating the investigation of representations of segment-level semantic content based on transcripts
generated by automatic speech recognition (ASR). This paper
examines the feasibility of using term clouds to provide users with a structured representation of the semantic content of podcast episodes. Podcast episodes are visualized as a series of sub-episode segments, each represented by a term cloud derived from a transcript
generated by automatic speech recognition (ASR). Quality of
segment-level term clouds is measured quantitatively and their utility is investigated using a small-scale user study based on human labeled segment boundaries. Since the segment-level clouds generated from ASR-transcripts prove useful, we examine an adaptation of text tiling techniques to speech in order to be able to generate segments as part of a completely automated indexing and structuring system for browsing of spoken audio. Results demonstrate that the segments generated are comparable with human selected segment boundaries
Rapid dynamical mass segregation and properties of fractal star clusters
We investigate the evolution of young star clusters using N-body simulations.
We confirm that subvirial and fractal-structured clusters will dynamically mass
segregate on a short timescale (within 0.5 Myr). We adopt a modified
minimum-spanning-tree (MST) method to measure the degree of mass segregation,
demonstrating that the stars escaping from a cluster's potential are important
for the temporal dependence of mass segregation in the cluster. The form of the
initial velocity distribution will also affect the degree of mass segregation.
If it depends on radius, the outer parts of the cluster would expand without
undergoing collapse. In velocity space, we find 'inverse mass segregation,'
which indicates that massive stars have higher velocity dispersions than their
lower-mass counterparts.Comment: 13 pages and 6 figures based on 14 .eps file
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