10,530 research outputs found
Dimer states in atomic mixtures
A mixture of heavy atoms in a Mott state and light spin-1/2 fermionic atoms
is studied in an optical lattice. Inelastic scattering processes between both
atomic species excite the heavy atoms and renormalize the tunneling rate as
well as the interaction of the light atoms. An effective Hamiltonian for the
latter is derived that describes tunneling of single fermions, tunneling of
fermionic pairs and an exchange of fermionic spins. Low energy states of this
Hamiltonian are a N\'eel state for strong effective repulsion, dimer states for
moderate interaction, and a density wave of paired fermions for strong
effective attraction.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure, extended versio
All Abelian Quotient C.I.-Singularities Admit Projective Crepant Resolutions in All Dimensions
For Gorenstein quotient spaces , a direct generalization of the
classical McKay correspondence in dimensions would primarily demand
the existence of projective, crepant desingularizations. Since this turned out
to be not always possible, Reid asked about special classes of such quotient
spaces which would satisfy the above property. We prove that the underlying
spaces of all Gorenstein abelian quotient singularities, which are embeddable
as complete intersections of hypersurfaces in an affine space, have
torus-equivariant projective crepant resolutions in all dimensions. We use
techniques from toric and discrete geometry.Comment: revised version of MPI-preprint 97/4, 35 pages, 13 figures,
latex2e-file (preprint.tex), macro packages and eps-file
Construction and Analysis of Projected Deformed Products
We introduce a deformed product construction for simple polytopes in terms of
lower-triangular block matrix representations. We further show how Gale duality
can be employed for the construction and for the analysis of deformed products
such that specified faces (e.g. all the k-faces) are ``strictly preserved''
under projection. Thus, starting from an arbitrary neighborly simplicial
(d-2)-polytope Q on n-1 vertices we construct a deformed n-cube, whose
projection to the last dcoordinates yields a neighborly cubical d-polytope. As
an extension of thecubical case, we construct matrix representations of
deformed products of(even) polygons (DPPs), which have a projection to d-space
that retains the complete (\lfloor \tfrac{d}{2} \rfloor - 1)-skeleton. In both
cases the combinatorial structure of the images under projection is completely
determined by the neighborly polytope Q: Our analysis provides explicit
combinatorial descriptions. This yields a multitude of combinatorially
different neighborly cubical polytopes and DPPs. As a special case, we obtain
simplified descriptions of the neighborly cubical polytopes of Joswig & Ziegler
(2000) as well as of the ``projected deformed products of polygons'' that were
announced by Ziegler (2004), a family of 4-polytopes whose ``fatness'' gets
arbitrarily close to 9.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figure
Early-type Galaxies in the Cluster Abell 2390 at z=0.23
To examine the evolution of the early-type galaxy population in the rich
cluster Abell 2390 at z=0.23 we have gained spectroscopic data of 51 elliptical
and lenticular galaxies with MOSCA at the 3.5 m telescope on Calar Alto
Observatory. This investigation spans both a broad range in luminosity
(-19.3>M_B>-22.3) and uses a wide field of view of 10'x10', therefore the
environmental dependence of different formation scenarios can be analysed in
detail as a function of radius from the cluster centre. Here we present results
on the surface brightness modelling of galaxies where morphological and
structural information is available in the F814W filter aboard the Hubble Space
Telescope (HST) and investigate for this subsample the evolution of the
Fundamental Plane.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, to appear in "Carnegie Observatories Astrophysics
Series, Vol. 3: Clusters of Galaxies: Probes of Cosmological Structure and
Galaxy Evolution", ed. J. S. Mulchaey, A. Dressler, and A. Oemler (Pasadena:
Carnegie Observatories,
http://www.ociw.edu/ociw/symposia/series/symposium3/proceedings.html
Very high energy emission from the hard spectrum sources HESS J1641-463, HESS J1741-302 and HESS J1826-130
A recent study of the diffuse -ray emission in the Central Molecular
Zone using very high energy (VHE, E 0.1 TeV) H.E.S.S. data suggests that
the Galactic Center (GC) is the most plausible supplier of Galactic
ultra-relativistic cosmic-rays (CRs) up to the knee at about 10 eV
(PeV). However, the GC might not be the only source capable to accelerate CRs
up to PeV energies in the Galaxy. Here we present H.E.S.S. data analysis
results and interpretation of three H.E.S.S. sources, with spectra extending
beyond 10 TeV and relatively hard spectral indices compared with the average
spectral index of H.E.S.S. sources, namely HESS J1641-463, HESS J1741-302 and
HESS J1826-130. Although the nature of these VHE -ray sources is still
open, their spectra suggest that the astrophysical objects producing such
emission must be capable of accelerating the parental particle population up to
energies of at least several hundreds of TeV. Assuming a hadronic scenario,
dense gas regions can provide rich target material for accelerated particles to
produce VHE -ray emission via proton-proton interactions followed by a
subsequent decay. Thus, detailed investigations of the interstellar
medium along the line of sight to all of these sources have been performed by
using data from available atomic and molecular hydrogen surveys. The results
point out the existence of dense interstellar gas structures coincident with
the best fit positions of these sources. One can find possible hadronic models
with CRs being accelerated close to the PeV energies to explain the
-ray emission from all of these sources, which opens up the possibility
that a population of PeV CR accelerators might be active in the Galaxy.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, in Proceedings of 35th ICRC, Busan (Korea) 201
Several examples of neigbourly polyhedra in co-dimension 4
In the article, a series of neigbourly polyhedra is constructed. They have
vertices and are embedded in . Their (affine) Gale
diagrams in have black points that form a convex polygon.
These Gale diagams can be enumerated using 3-trees (trees with some
additional structure).
Given and , each of the constructed polyhedra in has
a fixed number of faces of dimension that contain a vertex . (This
number depends on and does not depend on the polyhedron and the vertex
).Comment: In russian, 25 pages, 16 figure
Exploring Cluster Ellipticals as Cosmological Standard Rods
We explore the possibility to calibrate massive cluster ellipticals as
cosmological standard rods using the Fundamental Plane relation combined with a
correction for luminosity evolution. Though cluster ellipticals certainly
formed in a complex way, their passive evolution out to redshifts of about 1
indicates that basically all major merging and accretion events took place at
higher redshifts. Therefore, a calibration of their luminosity evolution can be
attempted. We propose to use the Mg relation for that purpose because
it is independent of distance and cosmology. We discuss a variety of possible
caveats, ranging from dynamical evolution to uncertainties in stellar
population models and evolution corrections to the presence of age spread.
Sources of major random and systematic errors are analysed as well. We apply
the described procedure to nine elliptical galaxies in two clusters at
and derive constraints on the cosmological model. For the best
fitting -free cosmological model we obtain: , with
90% confidence limits being (the lower limit being due to the
presence of matter in the Universe). If the inflationary scenario applies (i.e.
the Universe has flat geometry), then, for the best fitting model, matter and
contribute about equally to the critical cosmic density (i.e.
). With 90% confidence
should be smaller than 0.9.Comment: 21 pages, including 5 eps-figures, Latex, uses aasms4.sty, accepted
by ApJ main journa
Epic Human Failure on June 30, 2013
Nineteen Prescott Fire Department, Granite Mountain Hot Shot (GMHS) wildland firefighters and supervisors (WFF), perished on the June 2013 Yarnell Hill Fire (YHF) in Arizona. The firefighters left their Safety Zone during forecast, outflow winds, triggering explosive fire behavior in drought-stressed
chaparral. Why would an experienced WFF Crew, leave ‘good black’ and travel downslope through a brush-filled chimney, contrary to their training and experience? An organized Serious Accident Investigation Team (SAIT) found, “… no indication of negligence, reckless actions, or violations of policy or protocol.” Despite this, many WFF professionals deemed the catastrophe, “… the final, fatal link, in a long chain of bad decisions with good outcomes.” This paper is a theoretical and realistic examination of plausible, faulty, human decisions with prior good outcomes; internal and external impacts, influencing the GMHS; and two explanations for this catastrophe: Individual Blame Logic and Organizational Function Logic, and proposed preventive mitigations
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