3,340 research outputs found

    Effective Lagrangian for a Technicolor Model without Exact Custodial Symmetry

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    Effective Lagrangian including technimesons is constructed for a realistic one-family Technicolor model without exact custodial symmetry. Tree level contribution to oblique correction parameters SS and UU due to spin 1 technimesons are computed with the effective Lagrangian. An isospin breaking term which is associated with technilepton vector mesons gives a negative contribution to the electroweak radiative correction parameter SS due to mixing between I=0I=0 and I=1I=1 vector mesons. UU receives non-zero contribution due to exotic left-handed charged vector mesons and its sign can be both negative and positive.Comment: 30 pages plus 1 table and 4 figures (7 postscript files append.), Latex, (HUPD-9406

    Impact cratering calculations

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    In the course of carrying out finite difference calculations, it was discovered that for large craters, a previously unrecognized type of crater (diameter) growth occurred which was called lip wave propagation. This type of growth is illustrated for an impact of a 1000 km (2a) silicate bolide at 12 km/sec (U) onto a silicate half-space at earth gravity (1 g). The von Misses crustal strength is 2.4 kbar. The motion at the crater lip associated with this wave type phenomena is up, outward, and then down, similar to the particle motion of a surface wave. It is shown that the crater diameter has grown d/a of approximately 25 to d/a of approximately 4 via lip propagation from Ut/a = 5.56 to 17.0 during the time when rebound occurs. A new code is being used to study partitioning of energy and momentum and cratering efficiency with self gravity for finite-sized objects rather than the previously discussed planetary half-space problems. These are important and fundamental subjects which can be addressed with smoothed particle hydrodynamic (SPH) codes. The SPH method was used to model various problems in astrophysics and planetary physics. The initial work demonstrates that the energy budget for normal and oblique impacts are distinctly different than earlier calculations for silicate projectile impact on a silicate half space. Motivated by the first striking radar images of Venus obtained by Magellan, the effect of the atmosphere on impact cratering was studied. In order the further quantify the processes of meteor break-up and trajectory scattering upon break-up, the reentry physics of meteors striking Venus' atmosphere versus that of the Earth were studied

    Roles of two successive phase transitions in new spin-Peierls system TiOBr

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    In this sturdy, we determine the roles of two successive phase transitions in the new spin-Peierls system TiOBr by electron and synchrotron X-ray diffraction analyses. Results show an incommensurate superstructure along the h- and k-directions between Tc1=27K and Tc2=47K, and a twofold superstructure which is related to a spin-Peierls lattice distortion below Tc1. The diffuse scattering observed above Tc2 indicates that a structural correlation develops at a high temperature. We conclude that Tc2 is a second-order lock-in temperature, which is related to the spin-Peierls lattice distortion with the incommensurate structure, and that Tc1 is from incommensurate to commensurate phase transition temperature accompanying the first-order spin-Peierls lattice distortion.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure

    Atmospheric effects on cratering on Venus

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    A paraboloidal bow shock model is developed in order to estimate the surface distribution of gas shock-induced modifications surrounding Venusian impact craters. We apply two-dimensional oblique shock dynamics to describe a three-dimensional paraboloidal-shaped bow shock impinging upon an assumed incompressible Venusian surface. The effects of the hypersonic atmospheric shock acting on the Venusian surface are considered in terms of induced maximum gas pressure, density, particle velocity, and temperature, for varying angles and velocities of impact. The maximum boulder size that can be saltated by the shock wave induced gas flow and the degree of mutual collision of the surface materials are also considered. The present calculations quantitatively predict the areal extent of the gas shock perturbed surface for normal and oblique impact as a function of impact angle and velocity, and radii of impactors. For a 1-km radius stony meteorite impacting normally at 20 km/s, the radius of the disturbed area extends ∼10–17 times the 3–5 km crater radius. The perturbed surface affects the surface radar properties, and the present results can provide an explanation of the wide “dark/bright halos” surrounding some of the Venusian impact craters observed via Magellan imagery. For example, a ∼50-km radius bright halo surrounding a ∼20-km dark halo is observed around the 3.1-km radius crater located at 16.5° north latitude and 334.4° longitude. The average value of the radar backscatter cross section of the ∼20-km radius dark halo indicates that ∼50-cm-thick layer of porous lithologic material is superimposed upon an assumed undisturbed basement rock surface. The bright halo indicates that the surface roughness in this region is ∼30 % greater than that of the surrounding original surface. These features can be induced by atmospheric shock waves. The present model can relate the observed crater halo radii to the impact parameters, such as projectile radius and density, and the impact velocity and angle
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