66,673 research outputs found
New technique for determination of cross-power spectral density with damped oscillators
New cross-power spectral density computation technique has been developed, as well as a technique for discrimination between periodic and random signals. This development is applicable to analysis of any stationary random process, and can be used in the aerospace and transportation fields
Mapping a star with transits: orbit precession effects in the Kepler-13 system
Kepler-13b (KOI-13.01) is a most intriguing exoplanet system due to the rapid
precession rate, exhibiting several exotic phenomena. We analyzed
Short Cadence data up to Quarter 14, with a total time-span of 928 days, to
reveal changes in transit duration, depth, asymmetry, and identify the possible
signals of stellar rotation and low-level activity. We investigated long-term
variations of transit light curves, testing for duration, peak depth and
asymmetry. We also performed cluster analysis on quarters. We computed
the autocorrelation function of the out-of-transit light variations. Transit
duration, peak depth, and asymmetry evolve slowly, due to the slowly drifting
transit path through the stellar disk. The detected transit shapes will map the
stellar surface on the time scale of decades. We found a very significant
clustering pattern with 3-orbit period. Its source is very probably the
rotating stellar surface, in the 5:3 spin-orbit resonance reported in a
previous study. The autocorrelation function of the out-of-transit light
variations, filtered to 25.4 hours and harmonics, shows slow variations and a
peak around 300--360 day period, which could be related to the activity cycle
of the host star.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, accepted in MNRA
Peres-Horodecki separability criterion for continuous variable systems
The Peres-Horodecki criterion of positivity under partial transpose is
studied in the context of separability of bipartite continuous variable states.
The partial transpose operation admits, in the continuous case, a geometric
interpretation as mirror reflection in phase space. This recognition leads to
uncertainty principles, stronger than the traditional ones, to be obeyed by all
separable states. For all bipartite Gaussian states, the Peres-Horodecki
criterion turns out to be necessary and sufficient condition for separability.Comment: 6 pages, no figure
CHEOPS performance for exomoons: The detectability of exomoons by using optimal decision algorithm
Many attempts have already been made for detecting exomoons around transiting
exoplanets but the first confirmed discovery is still pending. The experience
that have been gathered so far allow us to better optimize future space
telescopes for this challenge, already during the development phase. In this
paper we focus on the forthcoming CHaraterising ExOPlanet Satellite
(CHEOPS),describing an optimized decision algorithm with step-by-step
evaluation, and calculating the number of required transits for an exomoon
detection for various planet-moon configurations that can be observable by
CHEOPS. We explore the most efficient way for such an observation which
minimizes the cost in observing time. Our study is based on PTV observations
(photocentric transit timing variation, Szab\'o et al. 2006) in simulated
CHEOPS data, but the recipe does not depend on the actual detection method, and
it can be substituted with e.g. the photodynamical method for later
applications. Using the current state-of-the-art level simulation of CHEOPS
data we analyzed transit observation sets for different star-planet-moon
configurations and performed a bootstrap analysis to determine their detection
statistics. We have found that the detection limit is around an Earth-sized
moon. In the case of favorable spatial configurations, systems with at least
such a large moon and with at least Neptune-sized planet, 80\% detection chance
requires at least 5-6 transit observations on average. There is also non-zero
chance in the case of smaller moons, but the detection statistics deteriorates
rapidly, while the necessary transit measurements increase fast. (abridged)Comment: 32 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in PAS
Citation Statistics from 110 Years of Physical Review
Publicly available data reveal long-term systematic features about citation
statistics and how papers are referenced. The data also tell fascinating
citation histories of individual articles.Comment: This is esssentially identical to the article that appeared in the
June 2005 issue of Physics Toda
Lifting a Weak Poisson Bracket to the Algebra of Forms
We detail the construction of a weak Poisson bracket over a submanifold of a
smooth manifold M with respect to a local foliation of this submanifold. Such a
bracket satisfies a weak type Jacobi identity but may be viewed as a usual
Poisson bracket on the space of leaves of the foliation. We then lift this weak
Poisson bracket to a weak odd Poisson bracket on the odd tangent bundle,
interpreted as a weak Koszul bracket on differential forms on M. This lift is
achieved by encoding the weak Poisson structure into a homotopy Poisson
structure on an extended manifold, and lifting the Hamiltonian function that
generates this structure. Such a construction has direct physical
interpretation. For a generic gauge system, the submanifold may be viewed as a
stationary surface or a constraint surface, with the foliation given by the
foliation of the gauge orbits. Through this interpretation, the lift of the
weak Poisson structure is simply a lift of the action generating the
corresponding BRST operator of the system
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