3,680 research outputs found
Multidimensional analysis of nexus technologies I: diffusion, scaling and cost trends of desalination
Temperature chaos in 3D Ising Spin Glasses is driven by rare events
Temperature chaos has often been reported in literature as a rare-event
driven phenomenon. However, this fact has always been ignored in the data
analysis, thus erasing the signal of the chaotic behavior (still rare in the
sizes achieved) and leading to an overall picture of a weak and gradual
phenomenon. On the contrary, our analysis relies on a large-deviations
functional that allows to discuss the size dependencies. In addition, we had at
our disposal unprecedentedly large configurations equilibrated at low
temperatures, thanks to the Janus computer. According to our results, when
temperature chaos occurs its effects are strong and can be felt even at short
distances.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Dynamical streams in the solar neighbourhood
The true nature of the Hyades and Sirius superclusters is still an open
question. In this contribution, we confront Eggen's hypothesis that they are
cluster remnants with the results of a kinematic analysis of more than 6000 K
and M giants in the solar neighbourhood. This analysis includes new radial
velocity data from a large survey performed with the Coravel spectrometer,
complemented by Hipparcos parallaxes and Tycho-2 proper motions (Famaey et al.
2004). A maximum-likelihood method, based on a bayesian approach, has been
applied to the data, in order to make full use of all the available data
(including less precise parallaxes) and to derive the properties of the
different kinematic subgroups. Two such subgroups can be identified with the
Hyades and Sirius superclusters. Stars belonging to them span a very wide range
of age, which is difficult to account for in Eggen's scenario. These groups are
thus most probably "dynamical streams" related to the dynamical perturbation by
spiral waves rather than to cluster remnants.
In this scenario, the Hyades and Ursa Major clusters just happen to be in the
Hyades and Sirius streams, which are purely dynamical features that have
nothing to do with the remnants of more massive primordial clusters. This
mechanism could be the key to understanding the presence of an old metal-rich
population, and of many exoplanetary systems in our neighbourhood. Moreover, a
strong spiral pattern seems to be needed in order to yield such prominent
streams. Since spiral structure is usually baryonic, this would leave very
little room for dark matter. This may be an indication that the era of the
dark-matter paradigm explaining the dynamics of the Galaxy may come to an end,
and is being superseded by modified gravity.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, to appear in The Three Dimensional Universe with
GAIA, eds M. Perryman & C. Turo
Experimental Evidence for Quantum Interference and Vibrationally Induced Decoherence in Single-Molecule Junctions
We analyze quantum interference and decoherence effects in single-molecule
junctions both experimentally and theoretically by means of the mechanically
controlled break junction technique and density-functional theory. We consider
the case where interference is provided by overlapping quasi-degenerate states.
Decoherence mechanisms arising from the electronic-vibrational coupling
strongly affect the electrical current flowing through a single-molecule
contact and can be controlled by temperature variation. Our findings underline
the all-important relevance of vibrations for understanding charge transport
through molecular junctions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Global m=1 modes and migration of protoplanetary cores in eccentric protoplanetary discs
We calculate global modes with low pattern speed corresponding to
introducing a finite eccentricity into a protoplanetary disc. We consider disc
models which are either isolated or contain one or two protoplanets orbiting in
an inner cavity. Global modes that are strongly coupled to inner protoplanets
are found to have disc orbits which tend to have apsidal lines antialigned with
respect to those of the inner protoplanets. Other modes corresponding to free
disc modes may be global over a large range of length scales and accordingly be
long lived. We consider the motion of a protoplanet in the earth mass range
embedded in an eccentric disc and determine the equilibrium orbits which
maintain fixed apsidal alignment with respect to the disc gas orbits.
Equilibrium eccentricities are found to be comparable or possibly exceed the
disc eccentricity. We then approximately calculate the tidal interaction with
the disc in order to estimate the orbital migration rate. Results are found to
deviate from the case of axisymmetric disc with near circular protoplanet orbit
once eccentricities of protoplanet and disc orbits become comparable to the
disc aspect ratio in magnitude. Aligned protoplanet orbits with very similar
eccentricity to that of the gas disc are found to undergo litle eccentricity
change while undergoing inward migration in general. However, for significantly
larger orbital eccentricities, migration may be significantly reduced or even
reverse from inwards to outwards. Thus the existence of global non circular
motions in discs with radial excursions comparable to the semi-thickness may
have important consequences for the migration and survival of protoplanetary
cores in the earth mass range.Comment: Accepted for publication by A &
Directional cell movements downstream of Gbx2 and Otx2 control the assembly of sensory placodes
Cranial placodes contribute to sensory structures including the inner ear, the lens and olfactory epithelium and the neurons of the cranial sensory ganglia. At neurula stages, placode precursors are interspersed in the ectoderm surrounding the anterior neural plate before segregating into distinct placodes by as yet unknown mechanisms. Here, we perform live imaging to follow placode progenitors as they aggregate to form the lens and otic placodes. We find that while placode progenitors move with the same speed as their non-placodal neighbours, they exhibit increased persistence and directionality and these properties are required to assemble morphological placodes. Furthermore, we demonstrate that these factors are components of the transcriptional networks that coordinate placode cell behaviour including their directional movements. Together with previous work, our results support a dual role for Otx and Gbx transcription factors in both the early patterning of the neural plate border and the later segregation of its derivatives into distinct placodes
Spin Glasses on the Hypercube
We present a mean field model for spin glasses with a natural notion of
distance built in, namely, the Edwards-Anderson model on the diluted
D-dimensional unit hypercube in the limit of large D. We show that finite D
effects are strongly dependent on the connectivity, being much smaller for a
fixed coordination number. We solve the non trivial problem of generating these
lattices. Afterwards, we numerically study the nonequilibrium dynamics of the
mean field spin glass. Our three main findings are: (i) the dynamics is ruled
by an infinite number of time-sectors, (ii) the aging dynamics consists on the
growth of coherent domains with a non vanishing surface-volume ratio, and (iii)
the propagator in Fourier space follows the p^4 law. We study as well finite D
effects in the nonequilibrium dynamics, finding that a naive finite size
scaling ansatz works surprisingly well.Comment: 14 pages, 22 figure
The Spitzer search for the transits of HARPS low-mass planets - II. Null results for 19 planets
Short-period super-Earths and Neptunes are now known to be very frequent
around solar-type stars. Improving our understanding of these mysterious
planets requires the detection of a significant sample of objects suitable for
detailed characterization. Searching for the transits of the low-mass planets
detected by Doppler surveys is a straightforward way to achieve this goal.
Indeed, Doppler surveys target the most nearby main-sequence stars, they
regularly detect close-in low-mass planets with significant transit
probability, and their radial velocity data constrain strongly the ephemeris of
possible transits. In this context, we initiated in 2010 an ambitious Spitzer
multi-Cycle transit search project that targeted 25 low-mass planets detected
by radial velocity, focusing mainly on the shortest-period planets detected by
the HARPS spectrograph. We report here null results for 19 targets of the
project. For 16 planets out of 19, a transiting configuration is strongly
disfavored or firmly rejected by our data for most planetary compositions. We
derive a posterior probability of 83% that none of the probed 19 planets
transits (for a prior probability of 22%), which still leaves a significant
probability of 17% that at least one of them does transit. Globally, our
Spitzer project revealed or confirmed transits for three of its 25 targeted
planets, and discarded or disfavored the transiting nature of 20 of them. Our
light curves demonstrate for Warm Spitzer excellent photometric precisions: for
14 targets out of 19, we were able to reach standard deviations that were
better than 50ppm per 30 min intervals. Combined with its Earth-trailing orbit,
which makes it capable of pointing any star in the sky and to monitor it
continuously for days, this work confirms Spitzer as an optimal instrument to
detect sub-mmag-deep transits on the bright nearby stars targeted by Doppler
surveys.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics. 23 pages, 21
figure
- …
