10,742 research outputs found
The role of sign in students' modeling of scalar equations
We describe students revising the mathematical form of physics equations to
match the physical situation they are describing, even though their revision
violates physical laws. In an unfamiliar air resistance problem, a majority of
students in a sophomore level mechanics class at some point wrote Newton's
Second Law as F = -ma; they were using this form to ensure that the sign of the
force pointed in a direction consistent with the chosen coordinate system while
assuming that some variables have only positive value. We use one student's
detailed explanation to suggest that students' issues with variables are
context-dependent, and that much of their reasoning is useful for productive
instruction.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, to be published in The Physics Teache
Potential Energy Surface for H_2 Dissociation over Pd(100)
The potential energy surface (PES) of dissociative adsorption of H_2 on
Pd(100) is investigated using density functional theory and the full-potential
linear augmented plane wave (FP-LAPW) method. Several dissociation pathways are
identified which have a vanishing energy barrier. A pronounced dependence of
the potential energy on ``cartwheel'' rotations of the molecular axis is found.
The calculated PES shows no indication of the presence of a precursor state in
front of the surface. Both results indicate that steering effects determine the
observed decrease of the sticking coefficient at low energies of the H_2
molecules. We show that the topology of the PES is related to the dependence of
the covalent H(s)-Pd(d) interactions on the orientation of the H_2 molecule.Comment: RevTeX, 8 pages, 5 figures in uufiles forma
Few-body physics in effective field theory
Effective Field Theory (EFT) provides a powerful framework that exploits a
separation of scales in physical systems to perform systematically improvable,
model-independent calculations. Particularly interesting are few-body systems
with short-range interactions and large two-body scattering length. Such
systems display remarkable universal features. In systems with more than two
particles, a three-body force with limit cycle behavior is required for
consistent renormalization already at leading order. We will review this EFT
and some of its applications in the physics of cold atoms and nuclear physics.
In particular, we will discuss the possibility of an infrared limit cycle in
QCD. Recent extensions of the EFT approach to the four-body system and N-boson
droplets in two spatial dimensions will also be addressed.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, Proceedings of the INT Workshop on "Nuclear
Forces and the Quantum Many-Body Problem", Oct. 200
Surface pressure measurements at two tips of a model helicopter rotor in hover
Surface pressures were measured near the tip of a hovering single-bladed model helicopter rotor with two tip shapes. The rotor had a constant-chord, untwisted blade with a square, flat tip which could be modified to a body-of-revolution tip. Pressure measurements were made on the blade surface along the chordwise direction at six radial stations outboard of the 94 percent blade radius. Data for each blade tip configuration were taken at blade collective pitch angles of 0, 6.18 and 11.4 degrees at a Reynolds number of 736,000 and a Mach number of 0.25 both based on tip speed. Chordwise pressure distributions and constant surface pressure contours are presented and discussed
Microjansky sources at 1.4 GHz
We present a deep 1.4 GHz survey made with the Australia Telescope Compact
Array (ATCA), having a background RMS of 9 microJy near the image phase centre,
up to 25 microJy at the edge of a 50' field of view. Over 770 radio sources
brighter than 45 microJy have been catalogued in the field. The differential
source counts in the deep field provide tentative support for the growing
evidence that the microjansky radio population exhibits significantly higher
clustering than found at higher flux density cutoffs. The optical
identification rate on CCD images is approximately 50% to R=22.5, and the
optical counterparts of the faintest radio sources appear to be mainly single
galaxies close to this optical magnitude limit.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted by ApJ Letters 4 May 199
Comparing the Host Galaxies of Type Ia, Type II and Type Ibc Supernovae
We compare the host galaxies of 902 supernovae, including SNe Ia, SNe II and
SNe Ibc, which are selected by cross-matching the Asiago Supernova Catalog with
the SDSS Data Release 7. We further selected 213 galaxies by requiring the
light fraction of spectral observations 15%, which could represent well the
global properties of the galaxies. Among them, 135 galaxies appear on the
Baldwin-Phillips-Terlevich diagram, which allows us to compare the hosts in
terms of star-forming, AGNs (including composites, LINERs and Seyfert 2s) and
"Absorp" (their related emission-lines are weak or non-existence) galaxies. The
diagrams related to parameters D(4000), H, stellar masses, SFRs
and specific SFRs for the SNe hosts show that almost all SNe II and most of SNe
Ibc occur in SF galaxies, which have a wide range of stellar mass and low
D(4000). The SNe Ia hosts as SF galaxies follow similar trends. A
significant fraction of SNe Ia occurs in AGNs and Absorp galaxies, which are
massive and have high D(4000). The stellar population analysis from
spectral synthesis fitting shows that the hosts of SNe II have a younger
stellar population than hosts of SNe Ia. These results are compared with those
of the 689 comparison galaxies where the SDSS fiber captures less than 15% of
the total light. These comparison galaxies appear biased towards higher
12+log(O/H) (0.1dex) at a given stellar mass. Therefore, we believe the
aperture effect should be kept in mind when the properties of the hosts for
different types of SNe are discussed.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
The Formation of Large Galactic Disks: Revival or Survival?
Using the deepest and the most complete set of observations of distant
galaxies, we investigate how extended disks could have formed. Observations
include spatially-resolved kinematics, detailed morphologies and photometry
from UV to mid-IR. Six billion years ago, half of the present-day spiral
progenitors had anomalous kinematics and morphologies, as well as relatively
high gas fractions. We argue that gas-rich major mergers, i.e., fusions between
gas-rich disk galaxies of similar mass, can be the likeliest driver for such
strong peculiarities. This suggests a new channel of disk formation, e.g. many
disks could be reformed after gas-rich mergers. This is found to be in perfect
agreement with predictions from the state-of-the-art LCDM semi-empirical
models: due to our sensitivity in detecting mergers at all phases, from pairs
to relaxed post-mergers, we find a more accurate merger rate. The scenario can
be finally confronted to properties of nearby galaxies, including M31 and
galaxies showing ultra-faint, gigantic structures in their haloes.Comment: Proceedings of the annual meeting of the French Astronomical Society,
2011, 6 pages, 1 Figur
Galaxy disks do not need to survive in the L-CDM paradigm: the galaxy merger rate out to z~1.5 from morpho-kinematic data
About two-thirds of present-day, large galaxies are spirals such as the Milky
Way or Andromeda, but the way their thin rotating disks formed remains
uncertain. Observations have revealed that half of their progenitors, six
billion years ago, had peculiar morphologies and/or kinematics, which exclude
them from the Hubble sequence. Major mergers, i.e., fusions between galaxies of
similar mass, are found to be the likeliest driver for such strong
peculiarities. However, thin disks are fragile and easily destroyed by such
violent collisions, which creates a critical tension between the observed
fraction of thin disks and their survival within the L-CDM paradigm. Here we
show that the observed high occurrence of mergers amongst their progenitors is
only apparent and is resolved when using morpho-kinematic observations which
are sensitive to all the phases of the merging process. This provides an
original way of narrowing down observational estimates of the galaxy merger
rate and leads to a perfect match with predictions by state-of-the-art L-CDM
semi-empirical models with no particular fine-tuning needed. These results
imply that half of local thin disks do not survive but are actually rebuilt
after a gas-rich major merger occurring in the past nine billion years, i.e.,
two-thirds of the lifetime of the Universe. This emphasizes the need to study
how thin disks can form in halos with a more active merger history than
previously considered, and to investigate what is the origin of the gas
reservoir from which local disks would reform.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables. Accepted in ApJ. V2 to match proof
corrections and added reference
Improvement of the Performance of Graphite Felt Electrodes for Vanadium-Redox-Flow-Batteries by Plasma Treatment
In the frame of the present contribution oxidizing plasma pretreatment is used for the improvement of the electrocatalytic activity of graphite felt electrodes for Vanadium-Redox-Flow-Batteries (VRB). The influence of the working gas media on the catalytic activity and the surface morphology is demonstrated. The electrocatalytical properties of the graphite felt electrodes were examined by cyclic voltammetry and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy. The obtained results show that a significant improvement of the redox reaction kinetics can be achieved for all plasma modified samples using different working gasses (Ar, N2 and compressed air) in an oxidizing environment. Nitrogen plasma treatment leads to the highest catalytical activities at the same operational conditions. Through a variation of the nitrogen plasma treatment duration a maximum performance at about 14 min cm-2 was observed, which is also represented by a minimum of 90 Ω in the charge transfer resistance obtained by EIS measurements. The morphology changes of the graphitized surface were followed using SEM
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