1,093 research outputs found
Effects of magnetohydrodynamics matter density fluctuations on the solar neutrino resonant spin-flavor precession
Taking into account the stringent limits from helioseismology observations on
possible matter density fluctuations described by magnetohydrodynamics theory,
we find the corresponding time variations of solar neutrino survival
probability due to the resonant spin-flavor precession phenomenon with
amplitude of order O(10%). We discuss the physics potential of high statistics
real time experiments, like as Superkamiokande, to observe the effects of such
magnetohydrodynamics fluctuations on their data. We conclude that these
observations could be thought as a test of the resonant spin-flavor precession
solution to the solar neutrino anomaly.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figure
Stationary Regime of Random Resistor Networks Under Biased Percolation
The state of a 2-D random resistor network, resulting from the simultaneous
evolutions of two competing biased percolations, is studied in a wide range of
bias values. Monte Carlo simulations show that when the external current is
below the threshold value for electrical breakdown, the network reaches a
steady state with a nonlinear current-voltage characteristic. The properties of
this nonlinear regime are investigated as a function of different model
parameters. A scaling relation is found between and , where
is the average resistance, the linear regime resistance and
the threshold value for the onset of nonlinearity. The scaling exponent is
found to be independent of the model parameters. A similar scaling behavior is
also found for the relative variance of resistance fluctuations. These results
compare well with resistance measurements in composite materials performed in
the Joule regime up to breakdown.Comment: 9 pages, revtex, proceedings of the Merida Satellite Conference
STATPHYS2
Anomalous crossover between thermal and shot noise in macroscopic diffusive conductors
We predict the existence of an anomalous crossover between thermal and shot
noise in macroscopic diffusive conductors. We first show that, besides thermal
noise, these systems may also exhibit shot noise due to fluctuations of the
total number of carriers in the system. Then we show that at increasing
currents the crossover between the two noise behaviors is anomalous, in the
sense that the low frequency current spectral density displays a region with a
superlinear dependence on the current up to a cubic law. The anomaly is due to
the non-trivial coupling in the presence of the long range Coulomb interaction
among the three time scales relevant to the phenomenon, namely, diffusion,
transit and dielectric relaxation time.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Regionalisation for lake level simulation – the case of Lake Tana in the Upper Blue Nile, Ethiopia
In this study lake levels of Lake Tana are simulated at daily time step by solving the water balance for all inflow and outflow processes. Since nearly 62% of the Lake Tana basin area is ungauged a regionalisation procedure is applied to estimate lake inflows from ungauged catchments. The procedure combines automated multi-objective calibration of a simple conceptual model and multiple regression analyses to establish relations between model parameters and catchment characteristics. <br><br> A relatively small number of studies are presented on Lake Tana's water balance. In most studies the water balance is solved at monthly time step and the water balance is simply closed by runoff contributions from ungauged catchments. Studies partly relied on simple <i>ad-hoc</i> procedures of area comparison to estimate runoff from ungauged catchments. In this study a regional model is developed that relies on principles of similarity of catchments characteristics. For runoff modelling the HBV-96 model is selected while multi-objective model calibration is by a Monte Carlo procedure. We aim to assess the closure term of Lake Tana's water balance, to assess model parameter uncertainty and to evaluate effectiveness of a multi-objective model calibration approach to make hydrological modeling results more plausible. <br><br> For the gauged catchments, model performance is assessed by the Nash-Sutcliffe coefficient and Relative Volumetric Error and resulted in satisfactory to good performance for six, large catchments. The regional model is validated and indicated satisfactory to good performance in most cases. Results show that runoff from ungauged catchments is as large as 527 mm per year for the simulation period and amounts to approximately 30% of Lake Tana stream inflow. Results of daily lake level simulation over the simulation period 1994–2003 show a water balance closure term of 85 mm per year that accounts to 2.7% of the total lake inflow. Lake level simulations are assessed by Nash Sutcliffe (0.91) and Relative Volume Error (2.71%) performance measures
A network model to investigate structural and electrical properties of proteins
One of the main trend in to date research and development is the
miniaturization of electronic devices. In this perspective, integrated
nanodevices based on proteins or biomolecules are attracting a major interest.
In fact, it has been shown that proteins like bacteriorhodopsin and azurin,
manifest electrical properties which are promising for the development of
active components in the field of molecular electronics. Here we focus on two
relevant kinds of proteins: The bovine rhodopsin, prototype of GPCR protein,
and the enzyme acetylcholinesterase (AChE), whose inhibition is one of the most
qualified treatments of Alzheimer disease. Both these proteins exert their
functioning starting with a conformational change of their native structure.
Our guess is that such a change should be accompanied with a detectable
variation of their electrical properties. To investigate this conjecture, we
present an impedance network model of proteins, able to estimate the different
electrical response associated with the different configurations. The model
resolution of the electrical response is found able to monitor the structure
and the conformational change of the given protein. In this respect, rhodopsin
exhibits a better differential response than AChE. This result gives room to
different interpretations of the degree of conformational change and in
particular supports a recent hypothesis on the existence of a mixed state
already in the native configuration of the protein.Comment: 25 pages, 12 figure
Probing the field-induced variation of the chemical potential in Bi(2)Sr(2)CaCu(2)O(y) via the magneto-thermopower measurements
Approximating the shape of the measured in
magneto-thermopower (TEP) by asymmetric linear triangle of the
form with positive and defined below and above , we observe that . In order to account for this asymmetry, we
explicitly introduce the field-dependent chemical potential of holes
into the Ginzburg-Landau theory and calculate both an average and fluctuation contributions to the total
magneto-TEP . As a result, we find a rather simple relationship
between the field-induced variation of the chemical potential in this material
and the above-mentioned magneto-TEP data around , viz. .Comment: REVTEX (epsf), 4 pages, 2 PS figures; to be published in JET
Effect of long-range Coulomb interaction on shot-noise suppression in ballistic transport
We present a microscopic analysis of shot-noise suppression due to long-range
Coulomb interaction in semiconductor devices under ballistic transport
conditions. An ensemble Monte Carlo simulator self-consistently coupled with a
Poisson solver is used for the calculations. A wide range of injection-rate
densities leading to different degrees of suppression is investigated. A sharp
tendency of noise suppression at increasing injection densities is found to
scale with a dimensionless Debye length related to the importance of
space-charge effects in the structure.Comment: RevTex, 4 pages, 4 figures, minor correction
Discovery of a Companion Candidate in the HD169142 Transition Disk and the Possibility of Multiple Planet Formation
We present L' and J-band high-contrast observations of HD169142, obtained
with the VLT/NACO AGPM vector vortex coronagraph and the Gemini Planet Imager,
respectively. A source located at 0".156+/-0".032 north of the host star
(PA=7.4+/-11.3 degrees) appears in the final reduced L' image. At the distance
of the star (~145 pc), this angular separation corresponds to a physical
separation of 22.7+/-4.7 AU, locating the source within the recently resolved
inner cavity of the transition disk. The source has a brightness of
L'=12.2+/-0.5 mag, whereas it is not detected in the J band (J>13.8 mag). If
its L' brightness arose solely from the photosphere of a companion and given
the J-L' color constraints, it would correspond to a 28-32 MJupiter object at
the age of the star, according to the COND models. Ongoing accretion activity
of the star suggests, however, that gas is left in the inner disk cavity from
which the companion could also be accreting. In this case the object could be
lower in mass and its luminosity enhanced by the accretion process and by a
circumplanetary disk. A lower mass object is more consistent with the observed
cavity width. Finally, the observations enable us to place an upper limit on
the L'-band flux of a second companion candidate orbiting in the disk annular
gap at ~50 AU, as suggested by millimeter observations. If the second companion
is also confirmed, HD169142 might be forming a planetary system, with at least
two companions opening gaps and possibly interacting with each other.Comment: Accepted to ApJL, see also Biller et al. 201
Microscopic analysis of shot-noise suppression in nondegenerate diffusive conductors
We present a theoretical investigation of shot-noise suppression due to
long-range Coulomb interaction in nondegenerate diffusive conductors.
Calculations make use of an ensemble Monte Carlo simulator self-consistently
coupled with a one-dimensional Poisson solver. We analyze the noise in a
lightly doped active region surrounded by two contacts acting as thermal
reservoirs. By taking the doping of the injecting contacts and the applied
voltage as variable parameters, the influence of elastic and inelastic
scattering in the active region is investigated. The transition from ballistic
to diffusive transport regimes under different contact injecting statistics is
analyzed and discussed. Provided significant space-charge effects take place
inside the active region, long-range Coulomb interaction is found to play an
essential role in suppressing the shot noise at . In the elastic
diffusive regime, momentum space dimensionality is found to modify the
suppression factor , which within numerical uncertainty takes values
respectively of about 1/3, 1/2 and 0.7 in the 3D, 2D and 1D cases. In the
inelastic diffusive regime, shot noise is suppressed to the thermal value.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figure
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