1,140 research outputs found
In-the-Gap SU UMa-Type Dwarf Nova, Var73 Dra with a Supercycle of about 60 Days
An intensive photometric-observation campaign of the recently discovered SU
UMa-type dwarf nova, Var73 Dra was conducted from 2002 August to 2003 February.
We caught three superoutbursts in 2002 October, December and 2003 February. The
recurrence cycle of the superoutburst (supercycle) is indicated to be 60
d, the shortest among the values known so far in SU UMa stars and close to
those of ER UMa stars. The superhump periods measured during the first two
superoutbursts were 0.104885(93) d, and 0.10623(16) d, respectively. A
0.10424(3)-d periodicity was detected in quiescence. The change rate of the
superhump period during the second superoutburst was , which
is an order of magnitude larger than the largest value ever known. Outburst
activity has changed from a phase of frequent normal outbursts and infrequent
superoutbursts in 2001 to a phase of infrequent normal outbursts and frequent
superoutbursts in 2002. Our observations are negative to an idea that this star
is an related object to ER UMa stars in terms of the duty cycle of the
superoutburst and the recurrence cycle of the normal outburst. However, to
trace the superhump evolution throughout a superoutburst, and from quiescence
more effectively, may give a fruitful result on this matter.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, submitted to A&
Analytical solution of the dynamical spherical MIT bag
We prove that when the bag surface is allowed to move radially, the equations
of motion derived from the MIT bag Lagrangian with massless quarks and a
spherical boundary admit only one solution, which corresponds to a bag
expanding at the speed of light. This result implies that some new physics
ingredients, such as coupling to meson fields, are needed to make the dynamical
bag a consistent model of hadrons.Comment: Revtex, no figures. Submitted to Journal of Physics
Deconstructing non-dissipative non-Dirac-hermitian relativistic quantum systems
A method to construct non-dissipative non-Dirac-hermitian relativistic
quantum system that is isospectral with a Dirac-hermitian Hamiltonian is
presented. The general technique involves a realization of the basic canonical
(anti-)commutation relations involving the Dirac matrices and the bosonic
degrees of freedom in terms of non-Dirac-hermitian operators, which are
hermitian in a Hilbert space that is endowed with a pre-determined
positive-definite metric. Several examples of exactly solvable non-dissipative
non-Dirac-hermitian relativistic quantum systems are presented by
establishing/employing a connection between Dirac equation and supersymmetryComment: 11 pages, LaTeX, no figure
Nonlinear Conduction by Melting of Stripe-Type Charge Order in Organic Conductors with Triangular Lattices
We theoretically discuss the mechanism for the peculiar nonlinear conduction
in quasi-two-dimensional organic conductors \theta-(BEDT-TTF)2X
[BEDT-TTF=bis(ethylenedithio)tetrathiafulvalene] through the melting of
stripe-type charge order. An extended Peierls-Hubbard model attached to
metallic electrodes is investigated by a nonequilibrium Green's function
technique. A novel current-voltage characteristic appears in a coexistent state
of stripe-type and nonstripe 3-fold charge orders, where the applied bias melts
mainly the stripe-type charge order through the reduction of lattice
distortion, whereas the 3-fold charge order survives. These contrastive
responses of the two different charge orders are consistent with the
experimental observations.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to appear in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
A dynamical chiral bag model
We study a dynamical chiral bag model, in which massless fermions are
confined within an impenetrable but movable bag coupled to meson fields. The
self-consistent motion of the bag is obtained by solving the equations of
motion exactly assuming spherical symmetry. When the bag interacts with an
external meson wave we find three different kinds of resonances: {\it
fermionic}, {\it geometric}, and -resonances. We discuss the
phenomenological implications of our results.Comment: Two columns, 11 pages, 9 figures. Submitted to Physical Review
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