16,268 research outputs found
A Silver Anniversary Observation of the X-ray Emitting SN1978K in NGC 1313
We describe the results of a 2003 Chandra ACIS-I observation of SN1978K. The
spectrum shows little flux below 0.6 keV, in contrast to the 2002 ACIS-S
observation that showed flux to 0.4 keV. Fitting the ACIS-I spectrum alone
leads to two solutions depending upon the value of the column density. A joint
fit using a dual thermal plasma model applied to the ACIS-I and a
contemporaneous XMM spectrum, which if fit alone also leads to a two-column
solution, yields a single column density fit. The fitted temperature of the
joint fit for the soft component remains constant with the errors from previous
Chandra, XMM, and ASCA data. The hard temperature recovers from its 2000-2002
decline and corresponds to an increase in the column density during that time.
The hard (2-10 keV) light curve is confirmed to be declining. The derived
number density represents a lower limit of 1e5 depending upon the adopted
filling factor of the emitting volume, leading to an estimated mass cooling
rate of 0.1-0.15 solar masses per year.Comment: accepted A
Confinement from Instantons or Merons
In contrast to ensembles of singular gauge instantons, which are well known
to fail to produce confinement, it is shown that effective theories based on
ensembles of merons or regular gauge instantons do produce confinement.
Furthermore, when the scale is set by the string tension, the action density,
topological susceptibility, and glueball masses are similar to those arising in
lattice QCD.Comment: 3 pages, 5 figures. Talk given at Lattice2004 (topology and
confinement) Fermilab June 21-26, 200
Signatures of Confinement in Axial Gauge QCD
A comparative dynamical study of axial gauge QED and QCD is presented.
Elementary excitations associated with particular field configurations are
investigated. Gluonic excitations analogous to linearly polarized photons are
shown to acquire infinite energy. Suppression of this class of excitations in
QCD results from quantization of the chromelectric flux and is interpreted as a
dual Meissner effect, i.e. as expulsion from the QCD vacuum of chromo-electric
fields which are constant over significant distances. This interpretation is
supported by a comparative evaluation of the interaction energy of static
charges in the axial gauge representation of QED and QCD.Comment: 22 pages (no figures
The large CP phase in B(s)-anti-B(s) mixing from primary scalar unparticles
In this letter we consider the case of primary scalar unparticle
contributions to B(d,s) mixing. With particular emphasis on the impact of the
recent hint of new physics in the measurement of the B(s) mixing phase, phi(s),
we determine the allowed parameter space and impose bounds on the unparticle
couplings.Comment: 8 pages, 8 jpeg figures, using pdflatex. Typo corrected, reference
adde
Detection of high-degree prograde sectoral mode sequences in the A-star KIC 8054146?
This paper examines the 46 frequencies found in the Delta Sct star KIC
8054146 involving a frequency spacing of exactly 2.814 c/d (32.57 microHz),
which is also a dominant low-frequency peak near or equal to the rotational
frequency. These 46 frequencies range up to 146 c/d. Three years of Kepler data
reveal distinct sequences of these equidistantly spaced frequencies, including
the basic sequence and side lobes associated with other dominant modes (i.e.,
small amplitude modulations). The amplitudes of the basic sequence show a
high-low pattern. The basic sequence follows the equation fm = 2.8519 + m *
2.81421 c/d with m ranging from 25 to 35. The zero-point offset and the lack of
low-order harmonics eliminate an interpretation in terms of a Fourier series of
a non-sinusoidal light curve. The exactness of the spacing eliminates
high-order asymptotic pulsation. The frequency pattern is not compatible with
simple hypotheses involving single or multiple spots, even with differential
rotation. The basic high-frequency sequence is interpreted in terms of prograde
sectoral modes. These can be marginally unstable, while their corresponding
low-degree counterparts are stable due to stronger damping. The measured
projected rotation velocity (300 km/s) indicates that the star rotates with
app. 70% of the Keplerian break-up velocity. This suggests a near equator-on
view. We qualitatively examine the visibility of prograde sectoral high-degree
g-modes in integrated photometric light in such a geometrical configuration and
find that prograde sectoral modes can reproduce the frequencies and the
odd-even amplitude pattern of the high-frequency sequence
Amplitude variability and multiple frequencies in 44 Tau: 2000 - 2006
This study has three principal aims: (i) to increase the number of detected
pulsation modes of 44 Tau, especially outside the previously known frequency
ranges, (ii) to study the amplitude variability and its systematics, and (iii)
to examine the combination frequencies.
During the 2004/5 and 2005/6 observing seasons, high-precision photometry was
obtained with the Vienna Automatic Photoelectric Telescope in Arizona during 52
nights. Together with previous campaigns, a data base from 2000 to 2006 was
available for multifrequency analyses.
Forty-nine pulsation frequencies are detected, of which 15 are independent
pulsation modes and 34 combination frequencies or harmonics. The newly found
gravity mode at 5.30 c/d extends the known frequency range of instability.
Strong amplitude variability from year to year is found for the \ell = 1 modes,
while the two radial modes have essentially constant amplitudes. Possible
origins of the amplitude variability of the \ell = 1 modes, such as precession
of the pulsation axis, beating and resonance effects are considered. The
amplitudes of the combination frequencies, f_i + f_j, mirror the variations in
the parent modes. The combination parameter, which relates the amplitudes of
the combination frequencies to those of the parent modes, is found to be
different for different parents.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in A&
Effects of temporal variability of disturbance on the succession in marine fouling communities in northern-central Chile
We investigated the effects of temporal variability in a disturbance regime on fouling communities at two study sites in a northern-central Chilean bay. Fouling assemblages grown on artificial settlement substrata were disturbed by mechanical removal of biomass at different time intervals. Using one single disturbance frequency (10 disturbance events over 5 months) we applied 7 different temporal disturbance treatments: a constant disturbance regime (identical intervals between disturbance events), and 6 variable treatments where both variableness and sequences of intervals between disturbance events were manipulated. Two levels of temporal variableness (low and high, i.e. disturbance events were either dispersed or highly clumped in time) in the disturbance regime were applied by modifying the time intervals between subsequent disturbance events. To investigate the temporal coupling between disturbance events and other ecological processes (e.g. larval supply and recruitment intensity), three different sequences of disturbance intervals were nested in each of the two levels of temporal variableness. Species richness, evenness, total abundance, and structure of communities that experienced the various disturbance regimes were compared at the end of the experiment (15 days after the last disturbance event). Disturbance strongly influenced the community structure and led to a decrease in evenness and total abundance but not species richness. In undisturbed reference communities, the dominant competitor Pyura chilensis (Tunicata) occupied most available space while this species was suppressed in all disturbed treatments. Surprisingly, neither temporal variableness in the disturbance regime nor the sequence of intervals between disturbance events had an effect on community structure. Temporal variability in high disturbance regimes may be of minor importance for fouling communities, because they are dominated by opportunistic species that are adapted to rapidly exploit available space
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