4,142 research outputs found
High-Altitude Emission from Pulsar Slot Gaps: The Crab Pulsar
We present results of a 3D model of optical to gamma-ray emission from the
slot gap accelerator of a rotation-powered pulsar. Primary electrons
accelerating to high-altitudes in the unscreened electric field of the slot gap
reach radiation-reaction limited Lorentz factors of 2 x 10^7, while
electron-positron pairs from lower-altitude cascades flow along field lines
interior to the slot gap. The curvature, synchrotron and inverse Compton
radiation of both primary electrons and pairs produce a broad spectrum of
emission from infra-red to GeV energies. Both primaries and pairs undergo
cyclotron resonant absorption of radio photons, allowing them to maintain
significant pitch angles. Synchrotron radiation from pairs with a power-law
energy spectrum with Lorentz factors 10^2 - 10^5, dominate the spectrum up to
10 MeV. Synchrotron and curvature radiation of primaries dominates from 10 MeV
up to a few GeV. We examine the energy-dependent pulse profiles and
phase-resolved spectra for parameters of the Crab pulsar as a function of
magnetic inclination and viewing angle, comparing to broad-band data. In most
cases, the pulse profiles are dominated by caustics on trailing field lines. We
also explore the relation of the high-energy and the radio profiles, as well as
the possibility of caustic formation in the radio cone emission. We find that
the Crab pulsar profiles and spectrum can be reasonably well reproduced by a
model with viewing angle 45 degrees and inclination angle 100 or 80 degrees.
This model predicts that the slot gap emission below 200 MeV will exhibit
correlations in time and phase with the radio emission.Comment: 35 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journa
The future of human cerebral cartography: a novel approach.
Cerebral cartography can be understood in a limited, static, neuroanatomical sense. Temporal information from electrical recordings contributes information on regional interactions adding a functional dimension. Selective tagging and imaging of molecules adds biochemical contributions. Cartographic detail can also be correlated with normal or abnormal psychological or behavioural data. Modern cerebral cartography is assimilating all these elements. Cartographers continue to collect ever more precise data in the hope that general principles of organization will emerge. However, even detailed cartographic data cannot generate knowledge without a multi-scale framework making it possible to relate individual observations and discoveries. We propose that, in the next quarter century, advances in cartography will result in progressively more accurate drafts of a data-led, multi-scale model of human brain structure and function. These blueprints will result from analysis of large volumes of neuroscientific and clinical data, by a process of reconstruction, modelling and simulation. This strategy will capitalize on remarkable recent developments in informatics and computer science and on the existence of much existing, addressable data and prior, though fragmented, knowledge. The models will instantiate principles that govern how the brain is organized at different levels and how different spatio-temporal scales relate to each other in an organ-centred context
Influence of surface chemistry on the electronic properties of graphene related carbon materials
A theoretical study on the influence of organic functional groups on the
electronic properties of graphene related carbon materials was carried out.
Here we report, using density functional theory and tight-binding approach,
that the best candidates for conducting supramolecular devices can be obtained
by engineering the surface chemistry and stacking conformation of these
materials
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