30,286 research outputs found
Long-term X-ray emission from Swift J1644+57
The X-ray emission from Swift J1644+57 is not steadily decreasing instead it
shows multiple pulses with declining amplitudes. We model the pulses as reverse
shocks from collisions between the late ejected shells and the externally
shocked material, which is decelerated while sweeping the ambient medium. The
peak of each pulse is taken as the maximum emission of each reverse shock. With
a proper set of parameters, the envelope of peaks in the light curve as well as
the spectrum can be modelled nicely.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Impurity scattering and Friedel oscillations in mono-layer black phosphorus
We study the effect of impurity scattering effect in black phosphorurene (BP)
in this work. For single impurity, we calculate impurity induced local density
of states (LDOS) in momentum space numerically based on tight-binding
Hamiltonian. In real space, we calculate LDOS and Friedel oscillation
analytically. LDOS shows strong anisotropy in BP. Many impurities in BP are
investigated using -matrix approximation when the density is low. Midgap
states appear in band gap with peaks in DOS. The peaks of midgap states are
dependent on impurity potential. For finite positive potential, the impurity
tends to bind negative charge carriers and vise versa. The infinite impurity
potential problem is related to chiral symmetry in BP
A rapid cosmic-ray increase in BC 3372-3371 from ancient buried tree rings in China
Cosmic rays interact with the Earth's atmosphere to produce C, which
can be absorbed by trees. Therefore, rapid increases of C in tree rings
can be used to probe previous cosmic-ray events. By this method, three C
rapidly increasing events have been found. Plausible causes of these events
include large solar proton events, supernovae or short gamma-ray bursts.
However, due to the lack of measurements of C by year, the occurrence
frequency of such C rapidly increasing events is poorly known. In
addition, rapid increases may be hidden in the IntCal13 data with five-year
resolution. Here we report the result of C measurements using an ancient
buried tree during the period between BC 3388 and 3358. We find a rapid
increase of about 9\textperthousand~ in the C content from BC 3372 to BC
3371. We suggest that this event could originate from a large solar proton
event.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, published in Nature Communication
Spin correlated interferometry for polarized and unpolarized photons on a beam splitter
Spin interferometry of the 4th order for independent polarized as well as
unpolarized photons arriving simultaneously at a beam splitter and exhibiting
spin correlation while leaving it, is formulated and discussed in the quantum
approach. Beam splitter is recognized as a source of genuine singlet photon
states. Also, typical nonclassical beating between photons taking part in the
interference of the 4th order is given a polarization dependent explanation.Comment: RevTeX, 19 pages, 1 ps figure, author web page at
http://m3k.grad.hr/pavici
Nonleptonic two-body charmless B decays involving a tensor meson in the Perturbative QCD Approach
Two-body charmless hadronic B decays involving a light tensor meson in the
final states are studied in the perturbative QCD approach based on
factorization. From our calculations, we find that the decay branching ratios
for color allowed tree-dominated decays and modes are of order and , respectively.
While other color suppressed tree-dominated decays have very small branching
ratios. In general, the branching ratios of most decays are in the range of
to , which are bigger by one or two orders of magnitude than
those predictions obtained in Isgur-Scora-Grinstein-Wise II model and in the
covariant light-front approach, but consistent with the recent experimental
measurements and the QCD factorization calculations. Since the decays with a
tensor meson emitted from vacuum are prohibited in naive factorization, the
contributions of nonfactorizable and annihilation diagrams are very important
to these decays, which are calculable in our perturbative QCD approach. We also
give predictions to the direct CP asymmetries, some of which are large enough
for the future experiments to measure. Because we considered the mixing between
and , the decay rates are enhanced significantly for some
decays involving meson, even with a small mixing angle.Comment: 26 pages, 2 figure
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