216 research outputs found
The Hanle Effect in 1D, 2D and 3D
This paper addresses the problem of scattering line polarization and the
Hanle effect in one-dimensional (1D), two-dimensional (2D) and
three-dimensional (3D) media for the case of a two-level model atom without
lower-level polarization and assuming complete frequency redistribution. The
theoretical framework chosen for its formulation is the QED theory of Landi
Degl'Innocenti (1983), which specifies the excitation state of the atoms in
terms of the irreducible tensor components of the atomic density matrix. The
self-consistent values of these density-matrix elements is to be determined by
solving jointly the kinetic and radiative transfer equations for the Stokes
parameters. We show how to achieve this by generalizing to Non-LTE polarization
transfer the Jacobi-based ALI method of Olson et al. (1986) and the iterative
schemes based on Gauss-Seidel iteration of Trujillo Bueno and Fabiani Bendicho
(1995). These methods essentially maintain the simplicity of the
Lambda-iteration method, but their convergence rate is extremely high. Finally,
some 1D and 2D model calculations are presented that illustrate the effect of
horizontal atmospheric inhomogeneities on magnetic and non-magnetic resonance
line polarization signals.Comment: 14 pages and 5 figure
Mixed Quantum/Classical Calculations of Total and Differential Elastic and Rotationally Inelastic Scattering Cross Sections for Light and Heavy Reduced Masses in a Broad Range of Collision Energies
The mixed quantum/classical theory (MQCT) for rotationally inelastic scattering developed recently [A. Semenov and D. Babikov, J. Chem. Phys.139, 174108 (2013)] is benchmarked against the full quantum calculations for two molecular systems: He + H2 and Na + N2. This allows testing new method in the cases of light and reasonably heavy reduced masses, for small and large rotational quanta, in a broad range of collision energies and rotational excitations. The resultant collision cross sections vary through ten-orders of magnitude range of values. Both inelastic and elastic channels are considered, as well as differential (over scattering angle) cross sections. In many cases results of the mixed quantum/classical method are hard to distinguish from the full quantum results. In less favorable cases (light masses, larger quanta, and small collision energies) some deviations are observed but, even in the worst cases, they are within 25% or so. The method is computationally cheap and particularly accurate at higher energies, heavier masses, and larger densities of states. At these conditions MQCT represents a useful alternative to the standard full-quantum scattering theory
Magnetic Field Measurement with Ground State Alignment
Observational studies of magnetic fields are crucial. We introduce a process
"ground state alignment" as a new way to determine the magnetic field direction
in diffuse medium. The alignment is due to anisotropic radiation impinging on
the atom/ion. The consequence of the process is the polarization of spectral
lines resulting from scattering and absorption from aligned atomic/ionic
species with fine or hyperfine structure. The magnetic field induces precession
and realign the atom/ion and therefore the polarization of the emitted or
absorbed radiation reflects the direction of the magnetic field. The atoms get
aligned at their low levels and, as the life-time of the atoms/ions we deal
with is long, the alignment induced by anisotropic radiation is susceptible to
extremely weak magnetic fields (G). In fact,
the effects of atomic/ionic alignment were studied in the laboratory decades
ago, mostly in relation to the maser research. Recently, the atomic effect has
been already detected in observations from circumstellar medium and this is a
harbinger of future extensive magnetic field studies. A unique feature of the
atomic realignment is that they can reveal the 3D orientation of magnetic
field. In this article, we shall review the basic physical processes involved
in atomic realignment. We shall also discuss its applications to
interplanetary, circumstellar and interstellar magnetic fields. In addition,
our research reveals that the polarization of the radiation arising from the
transitions between fine and hyperfine states of the ground level can provide a
unique diagnostics of magnetic fields in the Epoch of Reionization.Comment: 30 pages, 12 figures, chapter in Lecture Notes in Physics "Magnetic
Fields in Diffuse Media". arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1203.557
Fusion rate enhancement due to energy spread of colliding nuclei
Experimental results for sub-barrier nuclear fusion reactions show cross
section enhancements with respect to bare nuclei which are generally larger
than those expected according to electron screening calculations. We point out
that energy spread of target or projectile nuclei is a mechanism which
generally provides fusion enhancement. We present a general formula for
calculating the enhancement factor and we provide quantitative estimate for
effects due to thermal motion, vibrations inside atomic, molecular or crystal
system, and due to finite beam energy width. All these effects are marginal at
the energies which are presently measurable, however they have to be considered
in future experiments at still lower energies. This study allows to exclude
several effects as possible explanation of the observed anomalous fusion
enhancements, which remain a mistery.Comment: 17 pages with 3 ps figure included. Revtex styl
Cosmological Challenges in Theories with Extra Dimensions and Remarks on the Horizon Problem
We consider the cosmology that results if our observable universe is a
3-brane in a higher dimensional universe. In particular, we focus on the case
where our 3-brane is located at the symmetry fixed plane of a
symmetric five-dimensional spacetime, as in the Ho\v{r}ava-Witten model
compactified on a Calabi-Yau manifold. As our first result, we find that there
can be substantial modifications to the standard Friedmann-Robertson-Walker
(FRW) cosmology; as a consequence, a large class of such models is
observationally inconsistent. In particular, any relationship between the
Hubble constant and the energy density on our brane is possible, including (but
not only) FRW. Generically, due to the existence of the bulk and the boundary
conditions on the orbifold fixed plane, the relationship is not FRW, and hence
cosmological constraints coming from big bang nucleosynthesis, structure
formation, and the age of the universe difficult to satisfy. We do wish to
point out, however, that some specific choices for the bulk stress-energy
tensor components do reproduce normal FRW cosmology on our brane, and we have
constructed an explicit example. As our second result, for a broad class of
models, we find a somewhat surprising fact: the stabilization of the radius of
the extra dimension and hence the four dimensional Planck mass requires
unrealistic fine-tuning of the equation of state on our 3-brane. In the last
third of the paper, we make remarks about causality and the horizon problem
that apply to {\it any} theory in which the volume of the extra dimension
determines the four-dimensional gravitational coupling. We point out that some
of the assumptions that lead to the usual inflationary requirements are
modified.Comment: 15 page REVTeX file; to appear in Phys. Rev. D; clarified the
statement of being able to obtain any power dependence of the Hubble
expansion rate on the energy density; added reference
Restrictions on dilatonic brane-world models
We consider dilatonic brane-world models with a non-minimal coupling between
a dilaton and usual matter on a brane. We demonstrate that variation of the
fundamental constants on the brane due to such interaction leads to strong
restrictions on parameters of models. In particular, the experimental bounds on
variation of the fine structure constant rule out non-minimal dilatonic models
with a Liouville-type coupling potential f(varphi) = exp (b varphi) where b is
order of 1.Comment: MiKTeX2-LaTeX2e, 10 pages, minor changes, improved references, to
appear in IJMP
Lepton number violating interactions and their effects on neutrino oscillation experiments
Mixing between bosons that transform differently under the standard model
gauge group, but identically under its unbroken subgroup, can induce
interactions that violate the total lepton number. We discuss four-fermion
operators that mediate lepton number violating neutrino interactions both in a
model-independent framework and within supersymmetry (SUSY) without R-parity.
The effective couplings of such operators are constrained by: i) the upper
bounds on the relevant elementary couplings between the bosons and the
fermions, ii) by the limit on universality violation in pion decays, iii) by
the data on neutrinoless double beta decay and, iv) by loop-induced neutrino
masses. We find that the present bounds imply that lepton number violating
neutrino interactions are not relevant for the solar and atmospheric neutrino
problems. Within SUSY without R-parity also the LSND anomaly cannot be
explained by such interactions, but one cannot rule out an effect
model-independently. Possible consequences for future terrestrial neutrino
oscillation experiments and for neutrinos from a supernova are discussed.Comment: 28 pages, 2 figures, Late
Prompt, early, and afterglow optical observations of five gamma-ray bursts (GRBs 100901A, 100902A, 100905A, 100906A, and 101020A)
We present results of the prompt, early, and afterglow optical observations
of five gamma-ray bursts, GRBs 100901A, 100902A, 100905A, 100906A, and 101020A,
made with the Mobile Astronomical System of TElescope-Robots in Russia
(MASTER-II net), the 1.5-m telescope of Sierra-Nevada Observatory, and the
2.56-m Nordic Optical Telescope. For two sources, GRB 100901A and GRB 100906A,
we detected optical counterparts and obtained light curves starting before
cessation of gamma-ray emission, at 113 s and 48 s after the trigger,
respectively. Observations of GRB 100906A were conducted with two polarizing
filters. Observations of the other three bursts gave the upper limits on the
optical flux; their properties are briefly discussed. More detailed analysis of
GRB 100901A and GRB 100906A supplemented by Swift data provides the following
results and indicates different origins of the prompt optical radiation in the
two bursts. The light curves patterns and spectral distributions suggest a
common production site of the prompt optical and high-energy emission in GRB
100901A. Results of spectral fits for GRB 100901A in the range from the optical
to X-rays favor power-law energy distributions with similar values of the
optical extinction in the host galaxy. GRB 100906A produced a smoothly peaking
optical light curve suggesting that the prompt optical radiation in this GRB
originated in a front shock. This is supported by a spectral analysis. We have
found that the Amati and Ghirlanda relations are satisfied for GRB 100906A. An
upper limit on the value of the optical extinction on the host of GRB 100906A
is obtained.Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures, 14 tables, 5 machine readable tables; accepted
for publication in MNRA
Does Solar Physics Provide Constraints to Weakly Interacting Massive Particles?
We investigate whether present data on helioseismology and solar neutrino
fluxes may constrain WIMP--matter interactions in the range of WIMP parameters
under current exploration in WIMP searches. We find that, for a WIMP mass of 30
GeV, once the effect of the presence of WIMPs in the Sun's interior is
maximized, the squared isothermal sound speed is modified, with respect to the
standard solar model, by at most 0.4% at the Sun's center. The maximal effect
on the Boron-8 solar neutrino flux is a reduction of 4.5%. Larger masses lead
to smaller effects. These results imply that present sensitivities in the
measurements of solar properties, though greatly improved in recent years, do
not provide information or constraints on WIMP properties of relevance for dark
matter. Furthermore, we show that, when current bounds from direct WIMP
searches are taken into account, the effect induced by WIMPs with dominant
coherent interactions are drastically reduced as compared to the values quoted
above. The case of neutralinos in the minimal supersymmetric standard model is
also discussed.Comment: 31 pages, 2 tables and 9 figures, typeset with ReVTeX4. The paper may
also be found at http://www.to.infn.it/~fornengo/papers/helio.ps.gz or
through http://www.to.infn.it/astropart/index.htm
The Carina Project. V. The impact of NLTE effects on the iron content
We have performed accurate iron abundance measurements for 44 red giants
(RGs) in the Carina dwarf spheroidal (dSph) galaxy. We used archival,
high-resolution spectra (R~38,000) collected with UVES at ESO/VLT either in
slit mode (5) or in fiber mode (39, FLAMES/GIRAFFE-UVES). The sample is more
than a factor of four larger than any previous spectroscopic investigation of
stars in dSphs based on high-resolution (R>38,000) spectra. We did not impose
the ionization equilibrium between neutral and singly-ionized iron lines. The
effective temperatures and the surface gravities were estimated by fitting
stellar isochrones in the V, B-V color-magnitude diagram. To measure the iron
abundance of individual lines we applied the LTE spectrum synthesis fitting
method using MARCS model atmospheres of appropriate metallicity. We found
evidence of NLTE effects between neutral and singly-ionized iron abundances.
Assuming that the FeII abundances are minimally affected by NLTE effects, we
corrected the FeI stellar abundances using a linear fit between FeI and FeII
stellar abundance determinations.
We found that the Carina metallicity distribution based on the corrected FeI
abundances (44 RGs) has a weighted mean metallicity of [Fe/H]=-1.80 and a
weighted standard deviation of sigma=0.24 dex. The Carina metallicity
distribution based on the FeII abundances (27 RGs) gives similar estimates
([Fe/H]=-1.72, sigma=0.24 dex). The current weighted mean metallicities are
slightly more metal poor when compared with similar estimates available in the
literature. Furthermore, if we restrict our analysis to stars with the most
accurate iron abundances, ~20 FeI and at least three FeII measurements (15
stars), we found that the range in iron abundances covered by Carina RGs (~1
dex) agrees quite well with similar estimates based on high-resolution spectra.Comment: Accepted for publication in PASP, 16 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables, 1 MR
table Note: the electronic version of Table1 is included, but commented, in
the tex fil
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