2,372 research outputs found
Transport anomalies in a simplified model for a heavy electron quantum critical point
We discuss the transport anomalies associated with the development of heavy
electrons out of a neutral spin fluid using the large-N treatment of the
Kondo-Heisenberg lattice model. At the phase transition in this model the spin
excitations suddenly acquire charge. The Higgs process by which this takes
place causes the constraint gauge field to loosely ``lock'' together with the
external, electromagnetic gauge field. From this perspective, the heavy fermion
phase is a Meissner phase in which the field representing the difference
between the electromagnetic and constraint gauge field, is excluded from the
material. We show that at the transition into the heavy fermion phase, both the
linear and the Hall conductivity jump together. However, the Drude weight of
the heavy electron fluid does not jump at the quantum critical point, but
instead grows linearly with the distance from the quantum critical point,
forming a kind of ``gossamer'' Fermi-liquid.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures. Small change in references in v
MEM application to IRAS CPC images
A method for applying the Maximum Entropy Method (MEM) to Chopped Photometric Channel (CPC) IRAS additional observations is illustrated. The original CPC data suffered from problems with repeatability which MEM is able to cope with by use of a noise image, produced from the results of separate data scans of objects. The process produces images of small areas of sky with circular Gaussian beams of approximately 30 in. full width half maximum resolution at 50 and 100 microns. Comparison is made to previous reconstructions made in the far-infrared as well as morphologies of objects at other wavelengths. Some projects with this dataset are discussed
Extended far-infrared emission and star formation in Seyfert galaxies
An investigation into the extended distribution of far-infrared (FIR) emission associated with nearby Seyfert galaxies is made using a set of MEM reconstructions of IRAS Chopped Photometric Channel (CPC) data (Marston 1993). The data is compared to a set of HII/starburst galaxy images similarly processed in order to compare distributions and FIR color properties. It is shown that the central 1 kpc or so of Seyfert galaxies show extended FIR emission. FIR colors suggest that the bulk of this emission is not directly associated with an active nucleus. They further suggest that the origins of the majority of the emission is from heated dust associated with star formation surrounding the nucleus rather than dust heated by the active nucleus. Nearby Seyfert galaxies are shown to have a higher concentration of far-infrared emission from their centers than the HII/starburst galaxies and a number appear to reside in disk galaxies with relatively low ongoing star formation in their disks. An example of this is NGC 7582 which has a smooth disk but an active nucleus/starbust center
Staggered Flux Phase in a Model of Strongly Correlated Electrons
We present numerical evidence for the existence of a staggered flux (SF)
phase in the half-filled two-leg t-U-V-J ladder, with true long-range order in
the counter-circulating currents. The density-matrix renormalization-group
(DMRG) / finite-size scaling approach, generalized to describe complex-valued
Hamiltonians and wavefunctions, is employed. The SF phase exhibits robust
currents at intermediate values of the interaction strength.Comment: Version to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Threshold Star Formation Effects in the Peculiar Galaxy Arp~10 (=~VV 362)
We present images of the peculiar galaxy Arp~10 which reveal two rings of
concurrent star formation. Apart from a bright ring visible on early
photographs of the system, an even brighter inner ring of \ion{H}{2} regions is
found within the nuclear bulge of the galaxy. A very faint ring-arc of
\ion{H}{2} regions is also seen associated with a third outer ring or shell. An
investigation of the H fluxes in the rings reveals an increase in the
emission where the ring surface density in the R-band light exceeds
21.30.2 mag arcsec. If the R-band light is dominated by old stars
in the underlying density wave, then the results suggest evidence for a Star
Formation law which exhibits a threshold dependence on the strength of the
density wave in the rings. Even if the R-band continuum in the ring is heavily
contaminated with red light from the underlying young stars then a smaller, but
still significant non-linear enhancement in the star formation rates (SFR) in
one segment of the second ring is required to explain the results. In either
case, strong trends in the SFR with azimuth around Ring~2 are in good agreement
with off-center collisional ring galaxy models.Comment: 14 Pages, LaTeX AASTeX macros v3.0, 11 figures (available upon
request), Ap.J. (accepted, to appear 09/1/93), ISU-VC-93-
New observations and models of circumstellar CO line emission of AGB stars in the Herschel SUCCESS programme
CONTEXT: Asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars are in one of the latest
evolutionary stages of low to intermediate-mass stars. Their vigorous mass loss
has a significant effect on the stellar evolution, and is a significant source
of heavy elements and dust grains for the interstellar medium. The mass-loss
rate can be well traced by carbon monoxide (CO) line emission.
AIMS: We present new Herschel HIFI and IRAM 30m telescope CO line data for a
sample of 53 galactic AGB stars. The lines cover a fairly large range of
excitation energy from the line to the line, and even the
line in a few cases. We perform radiative transfer modelling for 38
of these sources to estimate their mass-loss rates.
METHODS: We used a radiative transfer code based on the Monte Carlo method to
model the CO line emission. We assume spherically symmetric circumstellar
envelopes that are formed by a constant mass-loss rate through a smoothly
accelerating wind.
RESULTS: We find models that are consistent across a broad range of CO lines
for most of the stars in our sample, i.e., a large number of the circumstellar
envelopes can be described with a constant mass-loss rate. We also find that an
accelerating wind is required to fit, in particular, the higher-J lines and
that a velocity law will have a significant effect on the model line
intensities. The results cover a wide range of mass-loss rates (
to ) and gas expansion
velocities (2 to km s), and include M-, S-, and C-type AGB stars.
Our results generally agree with those of earlier studies, although we tend to
find slightly lower mass-loss rates by about 40%, on average. We also present
"bonus" lines detected during our CO observations.Comment: 36 page
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