21,031 research outputs found
The dynamics of internal working surfaces in MHD jets
The dynamical effects of magnetic fields in models of radiative, Herbig-Haro
(HH) jets have been studied in a number of papers. For example, magnetized,
radiative jets from variable sources have been studied with axisymmetric and 3D
numerical simulations. In this paper, we present an analytic model describing
the effect of a toroidal magnetic field on the internal working surfaces that
result from a variability in the ejection velocity. We find that for parameters
appropriate for HH jets the forces associated with the magnetic field dominate
over the gas pressure force within the working surfaces. Depending on the ram
pressure radial cross section of the jet, the magnetic field can produce a
strong axial pinch, or, alternatively, a broadening of the internal working
surfaces. We check the validity of the analytic model with axisymmetric
numerical simulations of variable, magnetized jets.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures. ApJ in pres
Gravitational power from cosmic string loops with many kinks
We investigate the effect of a large number of kinks on the gravitational
power radiated by cosmic string loops. We show that the total power radiated by
a loop with N left-moving and right-moving kinks is proportional to N and
increases with the typical kink angle. We then apply these results to loops
containing junctions which give rise to a proliferation of the number of sharp
kinks. We show that the time of gravitational decay of these loops is smaller
than previously assumed. In light of this we revisit the gravitational wave
burst predictions from a network containing such loops. We find there is no
parameter regime in which the rate of individual kink bursts is enhanced with
respect to standard networks. By contrast, there remains a region of parameter
space for which the kink-kink bursts dominate the stochastic background.
Finally, we discuss the order of magnitude of the typical number of sharp kinks
resulting from kink proliferation on loops with junctions.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figur
Tunneling transport in NSN junctions made of Majorana nanowires across the topological quantum phase transition
We theoretically consider transport properties of a normal metal (N)-
superconducting semiconductor nanowire (S)-normal metal (N) structure (NSN) in
the context of the possible existence of Majorana bound states in disordered
semiconductor-superconductor hybrid systems in the presence of spin-orbit
coupling and Zeeman splitting induced by an external magnetic field. We study
in details the transport signatures of the topological quantum phase transition
as well as the existence of the Majorana bound states in the electrical
transport properties of the NSN structure. Our theory includes the realistic
nonperturbative effects of disorder, which is detrimental to the topological
phase (eventually suppressing the superconducting gap completely), and the
effects of the tunneling barriers (or the transparency at the tunneling NS
contacts), which affect (and suppress) the zero bias conductance peak
associated with the zero energy Majorana bound states. We show that in the
presence of generic disorder and barrier transparency the interpretation of the
zero bias peak as being associated with the Majorana bound state is problematic
since the nonlocal correlations between the two NS contacts at two ends may not
manifest themselves in the tunneling conductance through the whole NSN
structure. We establish that a simple modification of the standard transport
measurements using conductance differences (rather than the conductance itself
as in a single NS junction) as the measured quantity can allow direct
observation of the nonlocal correlations inherent in the Majorana bound states
and enables the mapping out of the topological phase diagram (even in the
presence of considerable disorder) by precisely detecting the topological
quantum phase transition point.Comment: 34 pages, 7 figures, 1 table. New version with minor modifications
and more physical discussion
Phase noise in pulsed Doppler lidar and limitations on achievable single-shot velocity accuracy
The smaller sampling volumes afforded by Doppler lidars compared to radars allows for spatial resolutions at and below some sheer and turbulence wind structure scale sizes. This has brought new emphasis on achieving the optimum product of wind velocity and range resolutions. Several recent studies have considered the effects of amplitude noise, reduction algorithms, and possible hardware related signal artifacts on obtainable velocity accuracy. We discuss here the limitation on this accuracy resulting from the incoherent nature and finite temporal extent of backscatter from aerosols. For a lidar return from a hard (or slab) target, the phase of the intermediate frequency (IF) signal is random and the total return energy fluctuates from shot to shot due to speckle; however, the offset from the transmitted frequency is determinable with an accuracy subject only to instrumental effects and the signal to noise ratio (SNR), the noise being determined by the LO power in the shot noise limited regime. This is not the case for a return from a media extending over a range on the order of or greater than the spatial extent of the transmitted pulse, such as from atmospheric aerosols. In this case, the phase of the IF signal will exhibit a temporal random walk like behavior. It will be uncorrelated over times greater than the pulse duration as the transmitted pulse samples non-overlapping volumes of scattering centers. Frequency analysis of the IF signal in a window similar to the transmitted pulse envelope will therefore show shot-to-shot frequency deviations on the order of the inverse pulse duration reflecting the random phase rate variations. Like speckle, these deviations arise from the incoherent nature of the scattering process and diminish if the IF signal is averaged over times greater than a single range resolution cell (here the pulse duration). Apart from limiting the high SNR performance of a Doppler lidar, this shot-to-shot variance in velocity estimates has a practical impact on lidar design parameters. In high SNR operation, for example, a lidar's efficiency in obtaining mean wind measurements is determined by its repetition rate and not pulse energy or average power. In addition, this variance puts a practical limit on the shot-to-shot hard target performance required of a lidar
Perfect fluid cosmologies with varying light speed
We have found exact constant solutions for the cosmological density parameter
using a generalization of general relativity that incorporates a cosmic
time-variation of the velocity of light in vacuum and the Newtonian gravitation
constant. We have determined the conditions when these solutions are attractors
for an expanding universe and solved the problems of the Standard Big Bang
model for perfect fluids.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX 2.09. To be published in International Journal of
Modern Physics
Scalar Field Cosmologies with Viscous Fluid
We investigate cosmological models with a free scalar field and a viscous
fluid. We find exact solutions for a linear and nonlinear viscosity pressure.
Both yield singular and bouncing solutions. In the first regime, a de Sitter
stage is asymptotically stable, while in the second case we find power-law
evolutions for vanishing cosmological constant.Comment: 8 pages, LaTeX. To be published in International Journal of Modern
Physics
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