51,623 research outputs found
Understanding the assembly of Kepler's compact planetary systems
The Kepler mission has recently discovered a number of exoplanetary systems,
such as Kepler-11 and Kepler-32, in which ensembles of several planets are
found in very closely packed orbits (often within a few percent of an AU of one
another). These compact configurations present a challenge for traditional
planet formation and migration scenarios. We present a dynamical study of the
assembly of these systems, using an N-body method which incorporates a
parametrized model of planet migration in a turbulent protoplanetary disc. We
explore a wide parameter space, and find that under suitable conditions it is
possible to form compact, close-packed planetary systems via traditional
disc-driven migration. We find that simultaneous migration of multiple planets
is a viable mechanism for the assembly of tightly-packed planetary systems, as
long as the disc provides significant eccentricity damping and the level of
turbulence in the disc is modest. We discuss the implications of our preferred
parameters for the protoplanetary discs in which these systems formed, and
comment on the occurrence and significance of mean-motion resonances in our
simulations.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in Monthly
Notices of the Royal Astronomical Societ
Gate-controlled one-dimensional channel on the topological surface
We investigate the formation of the one-dimensional channels on the
topological surface under the gate electrode. The energy dispersion of these
channels is almost linear in the momentum with the velocity sensitively
depending on the strength of the gate voltage. The energy is also restricted to
be positive or negative depending on the strength of the gate voltage.
Consequently, the local density of states near the gated region has an
asymmetric structure with respect to zero energy. In the presence of the
electron-electron interaction, the correlation effect can be tuned by the gate
voltage. We also suggest a tunneling experiment to verify the presence of these
bound states.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Strong eigenfunction correlations near the Anderson localization transition
We study overlap of two different eigenfunctions as compared with
self-overlap in the framework of an infinite-dimensional version of the
disordered tight-binding model. Despite a very sparse structure of the
eigenstates in the vicinity of Anderson transition their mutual overlap is
still found to be of the same order as self-overlap as long as energy
separation is smaller than a critical value. The latter fact explains
robustness of the Wigner-Dyson level statistics everywhere in the phase of
extended states. The same picture is expected to hold for usual d-dimensional
conductors, ensuring the form of the level repulsion at critical
point.Comment: 4 pages, RevTe
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