1,653 research outputs found

    Identification of Very Red Counterparts of SiO Maser and OH/IR Objects in the GLIMPSE Survey

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    Using the 3.6/4.5/5.8/8.0 micron images with 1.2 arcsec pixel resolution from the Spitzer/GLIMPSE survey, we investigated 23 masing and 18 very red objects that were not identified in the 2MASS survey. Counterparts for all selected objects were found in the GLIMPSE images. Color indices in these IR bands suggest the presence of a high-extinction layer of more than a few tenths of a solar mass in front of the central star. Furthermore, radio observations in the SiO and H2O maser lines found characteristic maser-line spectra of the embedded objects, e.g., the SiO J=1-0 line intensity in the v=2 state stronger than that of the v=1 state, or very widespread H2O maser emission spectra. This indicates that these objects are actually enshrouded by very thick circumstellar matter, some of which cannot be ascribed to the AGB wind of the central star. Individually interesting objects are discussed, including two newly found water fountains and an SiO source with nebulosity.Comment: High resolution figures available at ftp://ftp.nro.nao.ac.jp/nroreport/no653.pdf.gz. ApJ No. 655 no.1 issue in pres

    Second quantized formulation of geometric phases

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    The level crossing problem and associated geometric terms are neatly formulated by the second quantized formulation. This formulation exhibits a hidden local gauge symmetry related to the arbitrariness of the phase choice of the complete orthonormal basis set. By using this second quantized formulation, which does not assume adiabatic approximation, a convenient exact formula for the geometric terms including off-diagonal geometric terms is derived. The analysis of geometric phases is then reduced to a simple diagonalization of the Hamiltonian, and it is analyzed both in the operator and path integral formulations. If one diagonalizes the geometric terms in the infinitesimal neighborhood of level crossing, the geometric phases become trivial (and thus no monopole singularity) for arbitrarily large but finite time interval TT. The integrability of Schr\"{o}dinger equation and the appearance of the seemingly non-integrable phases are thus consistent. The topological proof of the Longuet-Higgins' phase-change rule, for example, fails in the practical Born-Oppenheimer approximation where a large but finite ratio of two time scales is involved and TT is identified with the period of the slower system. The difference and similarity between the geometric phases associated with level crossing and the exact topological object such as the Aharonov-Bohm phase become clear in the present formulation. A crucial difference between the quantum anomaly and the geometric phases is also noted.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figures. The analysis in the manuscript has been made more precise by including a brief account of the hidden local gauge symmetry and by adding several new equations. This revised version is to be published in Phys. Rev.

    Mechanisms for the circular polarization of astrophysical OH masers in star-forming regions and the inferred magnetic fields

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    Results of further calculations to explore the cause for the circular polarization of astrophysical OH masers in regions of star formation are presented. Calculations are given for both the nonlinear, Zeeman overlap mechanishm, and the Cook mechanism. The previous result that magnetic field strengths of a few milligauss or greater are required, still survives

    XXZ Bethe states as highest weight vectors of the sl2sl_2 loop algebra at roots of unity

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    We show that every regular Bethe ansatz eigenvector of the XXZ spin chain at roots of unity is a highest weight vector of the sl2sl_2 loop algebra, for some restricted sectors with respect to eigenvalues of the total spin operator SZS^Z, and evaluate explicitly the highest weight in terms of the Bethe roots. We also discuss whether a given regular Bethe state in the sectors generates an irreducible representation or not. In fact, we present such a regular Bethe state in the inhomogeneous case that generates a reducible Weyl module. Here, we call a solution of the Bethe ansatz equations which is given by a set of distinct and finite rapidities {\it regular Bethe roots}. We call a nonzero Bethe ansatz eigenvector with regular Bethe roots a {\it regular Bethe state}.Comment: 40pages; revised versio

    Colored Vertex Models, Colored IRF Models and Invariants of Trivalent Colored Graphs

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    We present formulas for the Clebsch-Gordan coefficients and the Racah coefficients for the root of unity representations (NN-dimensional representations with q2N=1q^{2N}=1) of Uq(sl(2))U_q(sl(2)). We discuss colored vertex models and colored IRF (Interaction Round a Face) models from the color representations of Uq(sl(2))U_q(sl(2)). We construct invariants of trivalent colored oriented framed graphs from color representations of Uq(sl(2))U_q(sl(2)).Comment: 39 pages, January 199

    Gravitational microlensing of gamma-ray blazars

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    We present a detailed study of the effects of gravitational microlensing on compact and distant γ\gamma-ray blazars. These objects have γ\gamma-ray emitting regions which are small enough as to be affected by microlensing effects produced by stars lying in intermediate galaxies. We analyze the temporal evolution of the gamma-ray magnification for sources moving in a caustic pattern field, where the combined effects of thousands of stars are taken into account using a numerical technique. We propose that some of the unidentified γ\gamma-ray sources (particularly some of those lying at high galactic latitude whose gamma-ray statistical properties are very similar to detected γ\gamma-ray blazars) are indeed the result of gravitational lensing magnification of background undetected Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs).Comment: 30 pages, 27 figures. Four figures are being submitted only as .gif files, and should be printed separately. The abstract below has been shortened from the actual version appearing in the pape

    Topological entropy of a stiff ring polymer and its connection to DNA knots

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    We discuss the entropy of a circular polymer under a topological constraint. We call it the {\it topological entropy} of the polymer, in short. A ring polymer does not change its topology (knot type) under any thermal fluctuations. Through numerical simulations using some knot invariants, we show that the topological entropy of a stiff ring polymer with a fixed knot is described by a scaling formula as a function of the thickness and length of the circular chain. The result is consistent with the viewpoint that for stiff polymers such as DNAs, the length and diameter of the chains should play a central role in their statistical and dynamical properties. Furthermore, we show that the new formula extends a known theoretical formula for DNA knots.Comment: 14pages,11figure

    Level statistics of XXZ spin chains with a random magnetic field

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    The level-spacing distribution of a spin 1/2 XXZ chain is numerically studied under random magnetic field. We show explicitly how the level statistics depends on the lattice size L, the anisotropy parameter Δ\Delta, and the mean amplitude of the random magnetic field h. In the energy spectrum, quantum integrability competes with nonintegrability derived from the randomness, where the XXZ interaction is modified by the parameter Δ\Delta. When Δ0\Delta \ne 0, the level-spacing distribution mostly shows Wigner-like behavior, while when Δ\Delta=0, Poisson-like behavior appears although the system is nonintegrable due to randomness. Poisson-like behavior also appears for Δ0\Delta \ne 0 in the large h limit. Furthermore, the level-spacing distribution depends on the lattice size L, particularly when the random field is weak.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.

    On the Dominance of Trivial Knots among SAPs on a Cubic Lattice

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    The knotting probability is defined by the probability with which an NN-step self-avoiding polygon (SAP) with a fixed type of knot appears in the configuration space. We evaluate these probabilities for some knot types on a simple cubic lattice. For the trivial knot, we find that the knotting probability decays much slower for the SAP on the cubic lattice than for continuum models of the SAP as a function of NN. In particular the characteristic length of the trivial knot that corresponds to a `half-life' of the knotting probability is estimated to be 2.5×1052.5 \times 10^5 on the cubic lattice.Comment: LaTeX2e, 21 pages, 8 figur

    Unexpected non-Wigner behavior in level-spacing distributions of next-nearest-neighbor coupled XXZ spin chains

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    The level-spacing distributions of XXZ spin chains with next-nearest-neighbor couplings are studied under periodic boundary conditions. We confirm that integrable XXZ spin chains mostly have the Poisson distribution as expected. On the contrary, the level-spacing distributions of next-nearest-neighbor coupled XXZ chains are given by non-Wigner distributions. It is against the expectations, since the models are nonintegrable.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Physical Review
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