8,236 research outputs found

    Comparison of phase-coherent and non-phase- coherent coded communications

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    Word-error probability versus signal-to-noise ratio evaluation for five communications system

    Digital voltage-controlled oscillator

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    Digital voltage-controlled oscillator generates a variable frequency signal controlled linearly about a center frequency with high stability and is phase controlled by an applied voltage. Integration ahead of the digital circuitry provides linear operation with control voltage having appreciable noise components

    Diffuse continuum gamma rays from the Galaxy

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    A new study of the diffuse Galactic gamma-ray continuum radiation is presented, using a cosmic-ray propagation model which includes nucleons, antiprotons, electrons, positrons, and synchrotron radiation. Our treatment of the inverse Compton (IC) scattering includes the effect of anisotropic scattering in the Galactic interstellar radiation field (ISRF) and a new evaluation of the ISRF itself. Models based on locally measured electron and nucleon spectra and synchrotron constraints are consistent with gamma-ray measurements in the 30-500 MeV range, but outside this range excesses are apparent. A harder nucleon spectrum is considered but fitting to gamma rays causes it to violate limits from positrons and antiprotons. A harder interstellar electron spectrum allows the gamma-ray spectrum to be fitted above 1 GeV as well, and this can be further improved when combined with a modified nucleon spectrum which still respects the limits imposed by antiprotons and positrons. A large electron/IC halo is proposed which reproduces well the high-latitude variation of gamma-ray emission. The halo contribution of Galactic emission to the high-latitude gamma-ray intensity is large, with implications for the study of the diffuse extragalactic component and signatures of dark matter. The constraints provided by the radio synchrotron spectral index do not allow all of the <30 MeV gamma-ray emission to be explained in terms of a steep electron spectrum unless this takes the form of a sharp upturn below 200 MeV. This leads us to prefer a source population as the origin of the excess low-energy gamma rays.Comment: Final version accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal (vol. 537, July 10, 2000 issue); Many Updates; 20 pages including 49 ps-figures, uses emulateapj.sty. More details can be found at http://www.gamma.mpe-garching.mpg.de/~aws/aws.htm

    The Transition Between Quantum Coherence and Incoherence

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    We show that a transformed Caldeira-Leggett Hamltonian has two distinct families of fixed points, rather than a single unique fixed point as often conjectured based on its connection to the anisotropic Kondo model. The two families are distinguished by a sharp qualitative difference in their quantum coherence properties and we argue that this distinction is best understood as the result of a transition in the model between degeneracy and non-degeneracy in the spectral function of the ``spin-flip'' operator.Comment: some typos corrected and a reference adde

    The Distance to the Soft Gamma Repeater SGR 1627-41

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    We report millimeter observations of the line of sight to the recently discovered Soft Gamma Repeater, SGR 1627-41, which has been tentatively associated with the supernova remnant SNR G337.0-0.1 Among the eight molecular clouds along the line of sight to SGR 1627-41, we show that SNR G337.0-0.1 is probably interacting with one of the most massive giant molecular clouds (GMC) in the Galaxy, at a distance of 11 kpc from the sun. Based on the high extinction to the persistent X-ray counterpart of SGR 1627-41, we present evidence for an association of this new SGR with the SNR G337.0-0.1; they both appear to be located on the near side of the GMC. This is the second SGR located near an extraordinarily massive GMC. We suggest that SGR 1627-41 is a neutron star with a high transverse velocity (~ 1,000 \kms) escaping the young (~ 5,000 years) supernova remnant G337.0-0.1Comment: 17 pages, including 2 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Letter

    Evidence for the Galactic X-ray Bulge II

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    A mosaic of 5 \ros~PSPC pointed observations in the Galactic plane (l25l\sim25^{\circ}) reveals X-ray shadows in the 0.52.00.5-2.0 keV band cast by distant molecular clouds. The observed on-cloud and off-cloud X-ray fluxes indicate that 15\sim15% and 37\sim37% of the diffuse X-ray background in this direction in the \tq~keV and 1.5 keV bands, respectively, originates behind the molecular gas which is located at \sim3 kpc from the Sun. The implication of the derived background X-ray flux beyond the absorbing molecular cloud is consistent with, and lends further support to recent observations of a Galactic X-ray bulge.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, 2 table

    Effective chiral-spin Hamiltonian for odd-numbered coupled Heisenberg chains

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    An L×L \times \infty system of odd number of coupled Heisenberg spin chains is studied using a degenerate perturbation theory, where LL is the number of coupled chains. An effective chain Hamiltonian is derived explicitly in terms of two spin half degrees of freedom of a closed chain of LL sites, valid in the regime the inter-chain coupling is stronger than the intra-chain coupling. The spin gap has been calculated numerically using the effective Hamiltonian for L=3,5,7,9L=3,5,7,9 for a finite chain up to ten sites. It is suggested that the ground state of the effective Hamiltonian is correlated, by examining variational states for the effective chiral-spin chain Hamiltonian.Comment: 9 Pages, Latex, report ICTP-94-28

    Multi-wavelength constraints on cosmic-ray leptons in the Galaxy

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    Cosmic rays (CRs) interact with the gas, the radiation field and the magnetic field in the Milky Way, producing diffuse emission from radio to gamma rays. Observations of this diffuse emission and comparison with detailed predictions are powerful tools to unveil the CR properties and to study CR propagation. We present various GALPROP CR propagation scenarios based on current CR measurements. The predicted synchrotron emission is compared to radio surveys, and synchrotron temperature maps from WMAP and Planck, while the predicted interstellar gamma-ray emission is compared to Fermi-LAT observations. We show how multi-wavelength observations of the Galactic diffuse emission can be used to help constrain the CR lepton spectrum and propagation. Finally we discuss how radio and microwave data could be used in understanding the diffuse Galactic gamma-ray emission observed with Fermi-LAT, especially at low energies.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures; in Proceedings of the 34th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC 2015), The Hague (The Netherlands); Oral contributio

    Propagation of cosmic-ray nucleons in the Galaxy

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    We describe a method for the numerical computation of the propagation of primary and secondary nucleons, primary electrons, and secondary positrons and electrons. Fragmentation and energy losses are computed using realistic distributions for the interstellar gas and radiation fields, and diffusive reacceleration is also incorporated. The models are adjusted to agree with the observed cosmic-ray B/C and 10Be/9Be ratios. Models with diffusion and convection do not account well for the observed energy dependence of B/C, while models with reacceleration reproduce this easily. The height of the halo propagation region is determined, using recent 10Be/9Be measurements, as >4 kpc for diffusion/convection models and 4-12 kpc for reacceleration models. For convection models we set an upper limit on the velocity gradient of dV/dz < 7 km/s/kpc. The radial distribution of cosmic-ray sources required is broader than current estimates of the SNR distribution for all halo sizes. Full details of the numerical method used to solve the cosmic-ray propagation equation are given.Comment: 15 pages including 23 ps-figures and 3 tables, latex2e, uses emulateapj.sty (ver. of 11 May 1998, enclosed), apjfonts.sty, timesfonts.sty. To be published in ApJ 1998, v.509 (December 10 issue). More details can be found at http://www.gamma.mpe-garching.mpg.de/~aws/aws.html Some references are correcte

    Density Matrix Renormalization Group Study of the Spin 1/2 Heisenberg Ladder with Antiferromagnetic Legs and Ferromagnetic Rungs

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    The ground state and low lying excitation of the spin 1/2 Heisenberg ladder with antiferromagnetic leg (JJ) and ferromagnetic rung (λJ,λ>0-\lambda J, \lambda >0) interaction is studied by means of the density matrix renormalization group method. It is found that the state remains in the Haldane phase even for small λ0.02\lambda \sim 0.02 suggesting the continuous transition to the gapless phase at λ=0\lambda = 0. The critical behavior for small λ\lambda is studied by the finite size scaling analysis. The result is consistent with the recent field theoretical prediction.Comment: 11 pages, revtex, figures upon reques
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